VOLUME 2. REYXOLPSVILLE, PEXN'A., WEDNESDAY M)VEMI,KK 8, 1)3. NUMBER 2(5. The Mrallel SUCCESS! o Of our sales Men's and Is due wholly to the fact that we give you 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 f IN 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. II a efj) Vprf 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 BoyB' Good, Durable and Stylish Cassimere, Cheviot and Jersey SuitB, 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. ' for Summer of o Boy's Suits s SUITS SUITS, GRANDMOTHER 8AID. "Always trt yonr etmlr buck when yon are going awny; Don't leave It In the middle of the room or standing carelessly." Thil Is what grandmother said, as often, when a boy, I Jumped np and ran nnt of doer a reckless hobble-de-hoy. "Always act yonr chair back when yon are going awayi Don't leave It In the middle of the room or standing carelessly." These words, repeated long ago, come ever fresh to mind. When little duties are o'erlooked or left to lag behind. In the dally walks of busy life, when we think we haven't time To be orderly and almost look npon politeness as a crime. We are qnlte too apt, from carelessness, to think, If not to say. That it mutters not tf we forget to let our chairs away. But ft wilt be fonnd that dally life will be more worth the living If we blend. In harmony, the precepts of re ceiving and of giving; tf We heed the tender chldlngs dealt ont in childhood's day. And always "set our chair back when we are going away." Clark W. Bryan In Good Housekeeping. AN OCEAN TRAGEDY. THE TERRIBLE FATE WHICH BEFEL THE CENTRAL AMERICA. A Contest Between Angry Waters and a Backet Mne, In Whlrh the Latter Lost. A Cowardly Engineer A Bird (lulded the Kile te the Rrwu, And who that tew. hear without a thrill the name nf the steam ship Central America, which Bnnk in a great storm on Sept. 12, 1857, with most of her officers and crew, nearly 400 pas sengers and 11,800,000 in gold? The Central America was crowded with treasnre laden people from Cnli fornia on their way to New York. Aft er leaving Havana on Sj)t. 8 she ran into a storm. The steamer began to leak, and Captain Hernden called npon the passengers to form lines and pass the backets. Honr after honr the tem pest howled, and the huge vessel groaned as the Immense seas broke Hgitinst her. Honr after honr the men with the buck ets toiled for their lives; slowly the wa ter gained on them. The officers exhorted the bncket gangs not to pause for a moment if the ship was to be saved. The wind ronred nnd the storm increased in fury. Every pas senger stuck to his post and worked un til he fell to the deck exhausted. Then the women offered to take the plnces of their wornout, fainting husbands and brothers, but none of the men would h1 low it. As the horror of the situation gradually dawned on the minds of the women and children the air was filled with sounds of terror, but alxve the raging hurricane and the cries of lamen tation rose the chorus of the bncket men: Heave, oh I heave, oh I stomp and go. We'll be lolly blather, oh! All day long they sang this song and fought for life against the steadily ris ing water. Mrs. Enston, a bride on her honeymoon trip, passed bottles of wine to the heroio men to strengthen them in their desperate work. All night long the struggle was continued, and still the ocean gained inch by inch. The women begged, with tears in their eyes, to be allowed to help. They cheered the brave fellows and wept when they saw them fall to the deck with white faces and trembling limbs. During the next day the peril of the steamer was increased by the lack of food and water. The hurricane tossed the inking hull about and shattered her spars and masts. While the tired and sleepless men stack to the buckets the women knelt and prayed to God for as sistance. About 2 o'clock in the afternoon a sail was seen to wind warrt. Guns were fired and signals of distress hoisted. The strange vessel, which turned out to be the brig Marine of Boston, answered the signals and tried to approach, but the gale blew her about three miles away. Then the boats were made ready, and the women and children prepared them selves. They had to strip off nearly all of their clothes and pot on life preserv ers. Many of the women had gold, which they could not carry with the them. Two of them went to their state rooms and took out bags of 30 gold pieces, which they threw down in the cabin, inviting the others to take what they pleased. The money rolled and jingled about on the floor, while the two weeping women explained that thoy were returning home to enjoy the fortune which they had made in California, and that they would be beggars if the ship was lost. None of the women dared to take more than two pieces of gold lest it might weigh them down. The men still remained at their work, Baying that they would remain on board until another ship arrived, as the Murine could not take all the passengers, and the women and children must be saved first. Among those heroes was Billy Birch, the famous minstrel. Two of the lifeboats were smashed by the sea, but three boats were filled with women and children, many of the latter being infants. The last boat to leave carried the chief engineer. He solemnly promised the captain to return, but the moment he got into the boat be drew a knife and threatened to kill any one who followed him. Later on, when the wom en and children were put on board the Marine, the ohief engineer, like the cow ard and liar he was, refused to return. Now the sinking steamship was so low In the ocean that almost every wave swept her deck. Some of the passengers got into the rigging, while others tried to build a raft. Night enme on. The storm continued to rago. The ship quiv ered and careened. Rockets soared up into the bellowing, angry henvens. Slow ly the vessel filled with water, and the doomed host clinging to her deck and rigging prepared for death. There was no weeping and no shrieking, no wring ing of hands. The captain stood at the wheel to the last. All at once the ship, as if in an agony of death herself, made a plunge at an angle of 43 degrees, and with an appall ing shriek from the engulfed mass she disappeared, and nearly 000 human be ings were left struggling among the fierce waters. The scene was horrifying, and many who were saved afterward fainted at the mere memory of it. A few held on to planks and spars all through the wild night, and as the day broke the Norwegian bark Ellen arrived and picked np 49 of the men, "1 was forced ont of my course just before I met you," said the captain of he Ellen to the rescued passengers, anA tl-1 I altered my course a bird flew across the ship once or twice, and then darted into my face. A few min utes later the bird repeated its move ments. I thought it an extraordinary thing, and while thinking on it in this way the mysterious bird reappeared, and for the third time flew into my face. This induced me to alter my course back to the original one, and in a short time I heard noises in the sea and discovered thnt I was in the midst of shipwrecked people." Who shall say what power guided the flight of the frail messenger through the Stormy air? New York Herald. Cannibalism In Rngliallen. The Vladivostock, a newspaper pub lished in eastern Siberia, reveals a terri ble state of affairs among the convicts on the island of Saghnlien. It would ap pear that the convicts there have been treated by some of the subordinate prison authorities so harshly that the governor of the island has been obliged to inter fere for their protection. A warder named Khanoff and some of his assistants, who at one time were convicts themselves and had been raised to the rank of jailers, have been removed from their posts. Khanoff s treatment of the prisoners was so abominable that a number of them crippled themselves, cutting off fingers and toes, in order to be treated as invalids and to be freed from his terrible cruelties. Others fled to the impenetrable forest, where they suffered all the horrors of hunger. In a satchel belonging to a fugitive convict who had -been hunted down were found some pieces of human flesh. Investigation revealed that this man had been one of a party of four, and that only one of them now remained. The others had been killed and devoured by their comrades. Similar cases of canni balism are, according to the Siberian journal, not infrequent In Frosen Bussl. In Russia, where the cold is very in tense, the markets are very curious things. The meat is frozen; the carcases of dead animals, as sheep and pigs, stand upright outside the stalls; everything, even game and poultry, requires to be thawed before it can be cooked, and the market people's dress is as picturesque as it is warm and comfortable. Then the rivers are frozen over all the winter long, and so thick is the ice that every one can skate, anywhere and any time. Stalls are put up on the ice and busy markets held there. In the Asiatio part of Russia the peo ple live chiefly by hunting and fishing, and the fur of the Russian animals is very beautiful the ermine, fox, sable, sea otter and others. At the end of the winter, when the snow melts, the huntsman pi' 'ties the elk, wearing long shoes, in which he can glide over the snow very quickly, while the poor elk sinks into the snow deeper and deeper every step and is at last overtaken and killed. Good Words. A Widow. Our house servant is a Japanese, po lite as are most of his race. Among his duties is taking care of the chickens. One day he chanced to find a nest of fine eggs at the barn, away from the chicken yard, contributed by a hen that had es caped from the others, and as a conse quence the eggs were not fertile. In Ig norance of this fact, however, an old lady of our household a widow imme diately put a hen to "set" on them. Bid dy stuck to business, but to no purpose. When the required time hod more than elapsed, the lady was very much put out and puzzled that no chickens had been hatched. Turning to the Jap, she said, "What do yon suppose is the mat ter of those eggs, George?" George (bowing low): "Excuse me, ma'am, ex cuse me, bat I t'ink bows again, I t'ink that hen was a widow." Widow satisfied. California Review. Tola at the Liars' Club, "No sooner was I seated in the chair than the barber commented on the weather and directed a current of dis course into my ears. " 'Je ne comprend pas,' said I, with an inward chuckle, thinking his volu bility would be checked. "In very good French he started In afresh. I looked at him as if bewildered and then interrupted him by asking) ' 'Was sagen Sie? 'He began to repeat In Gorman all that he had been saying, when I shut him off witht ' " 'Oh, talk to me with your fingers. Fm deaf and dumb!' "Truth. THE STUDY OF A WORD. Hie Tie sources nnd Variety of Information It Is I.Ik, ly to Fnrnlsh. The great dictionaries are a library in themselves and furnish an exhaustless source of information. A study of a single word like cross in fTie Century Dictionary shows the resources ntid va riety of information that a familiar word may furnish. There are 15J col umns devoted to this word and its com binations. There are 24 pictorial illus trations. All in all thero are 257 differ ent words made ont of cross - fetch have to be defined. In the great Oxford Dic tionary there are 11 pages given to this word, or twice as much as in the Cen tury. In the Century the study is highly fascinating. There are 14 radical ly different sets of definitions to the word Itself. The fundamental Idea is, of course, the cross, the crux for crucifying, but it has come to 'have a variety of meaning as a monument, a crucifix, the atone ment, the Christian religion itself, any suffering for Christ's sake, anything that thwarts or vexes, a mixing of breeds in animal breeding, a term used in chang ing plants, a joint in a pipe, the acci dental contact of two electric wires, a sportsman phrase for a contest dishon estly decided. Then cross becomes an adjective, with several meanings, as falling, athwart, passing from ono of two positions, per verse, etc., to the other, being opposed, being peevish or fretful, ill tempered, thoroutihly contrary, in the breeder's vocabulary. Then it becomes an adverb, meaning transversely or adversely. Then it becomes a verb, with alllnds of sig nificance, from the running of a line to cross a thing, to cancel by crossing, to cross one's self in devotion, passing from side to side of a man, to go over a body of water, to obstruct, to cause to inter fere, to cross plants, to hoist from the deck to its place on the mast any of the lighter yards. Then there is the preposition, in riding cross-country or walking cross-lots. All this with the simple word itself, which goes cavorting from the most sacred thought in the world to the breeder's and the sportsman's language of the coop and ranch. After this the mysteries begin. There are crosses anserated, arellane, bezan ty, bretesse, catoosed, comtuisse, ere nele, estoile, fitche, fleury, gringole, lain beaux, moline, nowyed, nyle, quatre foil, saltier, sarele, resarcelcd. hen there are the innumerable compounds of cross from cross-armed, cross-bated, cross-biter, cross-bar and cross-bun. through cross-flucon, cross-ruff, cross sower and cross-spale to cross-wort. Then there are a cross-grained set of crosses, such as croRsarchiual, cross archus, crossotte, crossopinal, crossop terygia, crossopterygian, crossoptorygi dae, crossopturygii, crossopturygia, cross opterygium, crossopus, crossorhined unil crossorhininae. It is incomprehensible that a word sc simple should have gone rollicking nil over the earth, into the bowels of the earth, into tho depths of the sea, among the fowls of the air, the horse upon the turf, to card table, to the ships upon tho sea, to the fishes in their glee, to thu sharks in their ferocity, to the architect and plumber, to the farmer in his har rowing, to the railroad in its building, to the engine in its working, to the seam stress in her labors, to the spider in his webbing, to the spinner at his loom, to the lawyers in their pleading, to a shrew in her wrangling, to the gunner in tho fort, to the miner at his lode, to the Turk as he sits, to the sword of the glad iator, to the expert with his telescope, to the woman in her gazing and in hei dressing, to the athletes in their wres tling and to the swindler at his arts. A. E. Winship in Journal of Education. Queer Phenomena of railing Bodies. I am unable to say who first noticed the peculiar caprices of a stone or other heavy body dropped from the top of a high tower, but it is nevertheless a curi ous fact that such objects invariably fall slightly to the east of the perpendicular line. Tersons of inquiring turn of mind who ask why this is as it is may find an answer in the following: All falling bod ies partake of the earth's eastward mo tion to a greater or lesser extent. There fore during the time occupied by a stone in falling from the top of a high tower or other eminence the earth's rotary mo tion has carried it an appreciable dis tance to the east. The initial impetus of the stone has carried it to the east ward also, therefore it strikes the earth to the east of the perpendicular, vary ing in degree according to the height from which it has fallen. A curious article on this subject may be found in thelipsio Zeitung of May 9. 1889, page 8. The author of the ar ticle, who has given it the title of "The Nonperpendicularity of High Towers," claims that the tower on St. Peter's ca thedral at Rome leans 18 inches to the east. St. Louis Republio. She'll Know aim Again. When the king of the Belgians stopped in tavern ut Spike during a recent rain storm be overheard the hostess remark: "I've seen the mug of this tall fellow be fore." Ere leaving the place the king presented the hostess with a bust of himself and later forwarded a large photograph, with his uutograph. Ex change, Improving the Breed. "Why do you out np such antics when yon feed your turkeys, Mr, Former?" "Oh, I'm trying to make game of them," Washington Star, PULLED OUT HAIR BY HAIR. A Remarkable Story nf Indian Cruelty Su perinduced by Jealousy. Living near this town is n woman whose prefectly bald hend tells a curious story of jealousy and Indian cruelty. In 1859 Oswald Thurwald, a Swedish fann er, had a home in the territory close, to the Texas border, and his family con sisted of his wife, two daughters and a son. The Indians seemed friendly, pass ing over the Thnrwalds even when slay ing the other settlers about nnd fre quenting their place to sell their wares and to purchase such goods ns Thur wald brought out from the states for barter. He was rapidly growing rich and had mode his preparations to move to Dallas, where he intended to extend his business, when the tragedy occurred that destroyed his home and scattered his family. It seems that the chief of the Tonkawa Indians, who visited that part of the country from the south on raid iug ex peditions, had seen Elsa, the elder daughter, and fancying her offered to buy her of her father. But Thurwald, though fond of money, refused, which gave great offense to the chief. Return ing home, he incited his people against the Thurwald, and the following spring they made an attack on him. Ho and his son succeeded in escaping, but the wife and younger daughter, though they eluded ca'pture the first few days, were overtaken finally. Mrs. Thurwald sank under the fatigue of her flight through a rugged country, and when the Indians came up with them it was to find the girl holding her mother in her arms, the poor woman having just expired. The next day the girl herself, lagging on the march from an arrow wound in her ankle, was shot in the presence of her sister, who had been seized and held from the moment of the attack till now. She was taken to a village and given into the charge of the squaws until the men should have returned from the war trail. In the meantime the Klckapoos de clared war on the Tonkawas and raided the village, when Elsa Thurwald wus carried ct with such of the Indian women as were spared as slaves. The Tonkawas, on returning, found the . smoking remains of the house and started after the despoilers, overtaking them close to the Colorado, where an obstinate battle ensued, but both bides then consented to a trace. The chief of the KickupooB, however, stipulated that the white woman should be given him. This was opposed by the Tonka wa chieftain, who claimed her by right of priority. This brought on a quarrel, which was terminated by a baud to hand fight between the rivals, resulting in the chief of tho Tonkawas bfing killed and the bone of contention full ing to the victor. He carried her home and confided her to the care of his squaw with the injunc tion that if she were injured in any way the life of the woman would pay for it. But, fired by jealousy for her successor, tho woman took advantage of her lord's absence to wreak her vengeance on the detested object Binding her to a tree, she deliberately palled oat the unfor tunate beauty's hair thread by thread. This torture lasted several hours, until the white woman's head was covered with blood and she shrieking with agony. When the chief returned and learned what had occurred, he ordered the witch burned at the stake. She escaped into -the bash, but was recovered and the sentence executed. Thnrwald had now died, but his son, hearing of his sister being in tho hands of the Indians, organ ized a rescuing party and succeeded in liberating her after 18 months of captiv- -ity. Her head took weeks to heal, and it is thought her mind was affected by her savage treatment, though in 1873 she -married a farmer in this vicinity. Her bair has never grown again. Oklahoma Letter in Philadelphia Times. A Singular Coincidence. The chaplain of an American jail vouches for the following, A little boy was taken by his parents to visit the prison, and on passing one of the cell in which a notorious criminal had been incarcerated his father playfully pushed him in and closed the door upon him. The child, overcome by some vague tcr-i ror, screamed aloud and could scarcely be comforted by his mother's caressed. Years passed. The lad half thought lessly fell into crime and was only re called to his better nature on finding himself, having been sentenced to u tcriu of imprisonment, in the identical eel) into which he had been momentarily thrust as a child. A Hard Problem. A certain debating society is discuss ing the question as to which is the an grier the htibbuud who goes homo and finds that the dinner is not ready or the wife who has dinner ready and whose husband does not come homo. It is be. lieved that the debate will ond in a draw. Worthington's Mugazino. Just the Time. Jack How would it do for me to, speak to your father touight? Jess Bust time in the world. He got the bill for my new bonnet just before we started for our drive. Fachauo. Their Belluf. Bloomfleld There are very few infi dels in Arizona, New Mexico ud the other territories. Bollefield Is that so? Bloomfleld Yesj every man there believes in a future state. Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph.