I f?ir VOLUME 2. nEYNOLDSVILLE, PEXN'A., W! ! M SDAY I I ( I 5IIIKK U 1U93. NIIJUJEI. :K. -Bell's- REMARKABLE Holiday Offers! Men's and Boys' doming. Two Wonderful Special Offers that will make it eapy for any man to treat himself to a Suit or Overcoat for a Christinas Gift. $IO.OO. FOR CHOICE Men's fine double breast ed Cheviot and Cassimer Suits, eolid colors and mixtures, reg ular price $12, now $10. . Men's fine black Dress Suits in sack and cutaways, regular price t $12, now $10. Men's strict ly all-wool Bus iness Suit, the latest pattern, now $10. $10.00 FOR 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. BOYS' CLOTHING. Two surprising bargains which should induce every mother of a boy to make a bee line for BELL'S. $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; $5.00 for Choice. 350 B.SeeligfcCo. 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. 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. TIES! TIES! TIES! Tied or Untied, 50c. at eBEeLL'S A PRELUDE. In ronth, beside tho Inneljr sra, Voices and vision, rntno In me. Tltanlaand her furtive broods Were my familiars In the wood. From every firmer 1 lint broke In flame Some half artltulnle whisper came. In every wind I full the Mir Of some celestial messenger. Later, amid the city's din And toll and wealth and want and tin. They followed me from street In street. The dream, that made my boyhood tweet At In the alienee haunted glen. Bo mid the crowded way. of men. Strange lights my errant fancy led, rttranse watchers sat be.ide my bed. Ill fortune had no shafts tor me In this aerial company. Now one by one the visions fly. And one by one the roices die. More distantly the accents rlnf. More frequent the receding wins;. Full dark shall be lbs days in store. When Tnlce and vision ennie no morel Thomi Unlley Aldrlch In Scrlbner'eV AN ODD REGULATION. HOW THE HOUSE OF COMMONS GETS MEMBERS TO PRAYERS. Piety Not Always the Incentive to Punctu ality Spurred by the Desire ta Hit Dor Ins; the Day's Proceedings The Cere monlnl of Opening the House. The house of commons In unique among the legislatures of tho world in having no complete accommodation for Its members. There are altogether 870 members uf the house, and there are Uactly 430 seats, of which only 800 are on the floor. The speaker tukes the chair at I o'clock, except on Wednes days, and unless the house has agreed to what are called "morning sittings," which begin at 9 o'clock. Three o'clock is sufficiently lato in the afternoon, judging by the example of other legis latures, but it is too early for tho men of business, the practicing lawyers and the men of fashion, who still form so large a factor in the membership of par liament. It ia rarely therefore that there are more than a few members in attendance at that hour. Another rea son for this abstension may be that this is the hour of derotion. Each sit ting of tho house is begun by tho sol emn reading of prayers by the speaker's chnplain, at present the well known Archdeacon Farrur. Those who attend prayers reap an immediate and earthly reward. On the large tablo that stands in front of the speaker's chnir there is box which contains a number of cards with tho word "Prayers" printed upon them. The member who lias attended pray ers writes hia name on this card and thereafter places it in the small slot which is at the back of each seat in the house, and for that particular evening that seat is his. lie may leave the seat far hours, but lie is entitled to it when ever he returns and can expel any per son who may have taken it during his absence. There are only two classes of persons in the house who have any set tled rights with regard to seats. The front bench on the right hand sido of the speaker's chair is called the treas ury bench, and on this sit the various members of tho existing administration. The bench immediately opposite is call ed the front opposition bench, and on this sit the members of the previous administration. There are, it will be thus easily un derstood, two peculiarities under these circumstances about the attendance at prayers. First, the gentlemen usually present are not always those most dis tinguished for their piety. The caustic editor of Truth has taken in recent years to laying the foundation stones of nonconformist places of worship, but nobody woald be less likely to set up a claim for special piety than Mr. Laboo chere. Nevertheless, every night of the week Mr. Labouchere listens with pious attention to the ministrations of the chaplain. The secret reason is that the first seat on the front bench below the gangway is a place peculiarly well suited for the guerrilla that is ever cm the watch for the moment to make am onslaught on a wicked administration, and Mr. Labouchere, as the chief of the guerrillas, is especially fondof this seat and has occupied it for years. This incumbency, though sanctified by so many years of usage, has still to be won by regular attendance at every even ing's prayers. The rule is inflexible, except in the cases already mentioned, that a seat can be held only for one night, and that then it shall be won by attendance at prayers. The second pe culiarity is that the men who are most in want of the assistance of prayers, as having the heaviest responsibility upon their shoulders the members of the ad ministration and the leaders of parties are always conspicuously absent. Just before prayers are begun the procession of the speaker to his place in the house takes place. Enough of the old ceremonial still exists to make this a quaint and interesting spectacle. The speaker still wears the lurge, full bottomed wig of state occasions, is dressed in a short tailed coat, covered by a sweeping robe, wears knee brooches and low shoes with large buckle. Bo bind and before him is a small cohort of attendants the sergount-at-arms bearing the mace, the chaplain with prayerbook in hand, the trainbearor holding up the train and two or three other attendants, tho exact purpose of whom it is impossible to tell beyond the desire to make the procession more imposing in point of numliers. The sergeant-st-arme, like the speaker, is knaed in knee breeches, with low shoes. He carries n sword by his side, but Is allowed todlspenso with the wig. The ceremonial Is made more imposing by the ioliceineu and attendant, who shout along the corridors which sepa rate the speaker's house from the house of commons: "Speaker I Hpeakerl" a shout which has a strange, indefinable affect, however often heard, and stirs Vie blood somewhat as the dreams of l)o (jnincey were moved by the recol lection of tho Roman consul passing over the Appian way. It sounds like a reminiscence and momentary embodi ment of all the fierce struggle, oratorial triumphs, tragic and world shsking events which are associated with the history of the august parliament of Great Britain. When the speaker reaches the lobby, the chief of the police force attached to the house repeats the cry, "Hpeakerl" With the additional words, "Hats off, strangers," and it is rarely that the lobby, however noisy and tumultuous before, does not fall into a certain timid silence as this black, solemn and pic turesque group sweeps by. When the spenker enters the house, every member rises from his seat. The spenker bows two or three times as he walks up the floor, and some of the country gentlemen and the more cere monious members of tho house bow at the same time. Thomas Power O'Con nor in Harper's Magazine. In Defense of the Weed. The American silver weed, or tobac co, is an excellent deienso against bad air, being smoked in a pipe, either by itself or with nutmegs shred and rew seeds mixed with it, especially if it be nosed, for it cleanseth tho air and chonketh, supprcsseth and disperseth any venomous vapor. It hath singular and contrary effects, it is good to warm one being cold, mid will cool one being hot. All flges, nil sexes, all constitu tions, young or old, men and women, the sanguine, the cholerick, the melan choly, tho phlegmatick, take it without any manifest inconvenience; ttqnench eth thirst, and yet will make one more able and fit to drink; it abates hunger, and yet will get one n good stomachs it is agreeable with mirth or sadness, with feasting and with fasting; it will ninko ono rest that wants sleep, and will keep one wnking that is drowsie; it huth an ofTentiivo smell to some, and is moro desirable, than any perfume to others. That it is a most excellent pres ervation, both experience and reason do teach. It corrects the air by fumigation, and It avoids corrupt humors by salivation, for when one takes it either by chew ing it in the leaf, or smoking it in the pipe, the humors are drawn and brought from all parts of the body to the stom ach, and from thence rising up to the mouth of the tobacconist, as to the hclmeof a sublimatory, are avoided and spittenont. "A Brief Treatise," 1603. How Do Ton Gross Tour "T'sT" A graphologist has discovered that chnracter can lie read from the letter "t" alone, according to an English pa per. He claims that the vertical line represents the fatality of life, and tLj horizontal bar the Influence human will exercises over this fatality. In addition, ho claims that the higher or lower a writer crosses the "t" is a guide to the amount of Ideality contain ed in hia nature, and that the lower part of the letter corresponds to the practical and material part of the man's character. For instance, the optimist crosses bis t's with a line that slopes upward from the ground to the sky, as it were. The poet often crosses his t's quite above tb vertical line In other words, in the sky The pessimist crosses his t's with downward sloping stroke. The line which is below the ideal portion of tbt letter descends little by little until it is lost among the sad realities of earthly existence. The practical man, it appears, always steers a middle course, and crosses hia t's neither in the ideal nor in the ma terial manner, but exactly midway be tween both. Boston Globe. The Barrister's Retort. A case was once tried in Limerick before Chief Baron O'Orady. A bar rister named Bushe was making a speech for tho defense, when an ass be gan to bray loudly outside the court. "Wait a moment," said tho chief bar on. "One at a time, Mr. Bushe, if you please." The barrister waited for a chance to retort, and it came presently. When O'Orady was charg ing the jury, the ass again began to bray, if possible moro loudly than be fore, "I beg your pardon, my lord," aid Bushe. "May I ask you to repeat your last words? There is such an echo in this court I did not quite catch them. " ' ' Seventy Years of Irish Life. " Bui in or nilead. The real balm of Gilead is the dried Juice of a low shrub which grows in Syria. It is very vuluable and scarce, for the amount of balm yielded by one shrub never exceeded 60 drops a day. According to Jostphus, the balm or balsam of Oilead was one of the pres ents given by the quoen of Shaba to King Solomon. The ancient Jewish physicians prescribed it evidently for dyspepsia and melancholia. Methodist Protestant. CAPTURED BY MOONSHINERS. Two Drummers Have an FCiperlcnco la the Mountains nf Kentucky, Two drummers, Alf Hill of Chicago and Tom Johnson of Baltimore, decided to take a few days oft and go fishing on the Cumberland river near Harlan, Things went smoothly while there. The natives were hospitable and kind. But they were not so fortunate on their re turn trip, as they missed the road and became lost in the mountains. While wandering hopelessly about they ran into a body of mountaineers. They were promptly arrested, and after a con ference on the part of the mountain people they were blindfolded. After what seemed to them an all dny's tramp the blinds were suddenly removed, and they found themselves in a cave lighted by lamps. About 80 rough men and women surrounded them. They were asked many ques tions about their business, and after they succeeded In showing they wore not revenue officers the attitude of their captors changed A meal of their best was set before them. After this the fiddle and banjo were brought out, and the "light fantastic" was indulged in for several hours. The drummers were then blindfolded again and led from the cave. After what seemed to them an endless march the blinds were again re moved, and thoy were told that they were on tho main road. They were also told that the fate of the informer was death to go and never return. In the cave were several small stills with a capacity of several barrels a week. The cave bad several depart ments for sleeping. As to where the cave is located Hill and Johnson have not the remotest idea. Louisville Courier-Journal. RECENT BRIGAND OUTRAGES. Bold and Drutal Robbers In the Caucasus Itob and 111 Treat flood Man. Brigands in the Caucasus are becom ing bolder than ever before. Extraor dinary stories of their recent outrages uro coining to hand. Tho following is a typical instance: The other day a band of 24 men, with a pack horse and ammunition, ap-" proached the village of Zaturoff in the Baku naphtha region. They met four peasants and asked where the richest man lived. The first peasant refused to say and was immediately cut down. The second, declining to give any infor mation, wus stabbed. Tho other two led the brigands to the house of a be nevolent wealthy man, Hadshi Hus sein. The latter hesitated to say where his money was kept, but u dagger driv en through the muscles of his right arm and left there induced him to lead the robbers to his safe, where they found 10,000 rubles iu gold and valuables worth an equal amount. Hadsbi Hus sein was afterward decapitated. His bonsekeeper wore gold earrings, which attracted the attention of the murderers. In a moment her ears were cut from hor head. She sprang to the door, but was stabbed, Hor cries had alarmed tho villagers, who opened a fusillade upon the robbers. The latter mado a desperate sortie, regained their horses and made good their retreat, leaving four dead victims. All efforts have failed to unearth the band. Mos cow Letter. Ad Indian Treasury Looted. A grave scandal has come to light at Indore. Treasure which has long been supposed to be guarded in the Kbasgi treasury, amounting to 900,000 rupees, is missing. Her late highness Ma Sabeb told the maharajoh that she had pre sented a few of the gold ornaments from the Jawahir Khana to some of her servants, and that the younger Ma Sa hebs the stepmothers of his highness knew all about the jewelry and silver articles and cash in the treasury, and that he would get all information re specting them from the younger prin cesses. But no one of them has been able to furnish any explanation respect ing the missing sum of rupees, or the jewels, ornaments and silver articles which were with them. On this as' count the allowances of theraaharajah's stepmothers have been partially with hold while the mystery is under inquiry. St. James Gazette. Cam Look In and Bee Bis Heart Beat. A remarkable case was presented to tho students of Starling Medical col lege a couple of weeks ago by Dr. Lov ing. The patient had been subjected to an operation for pleurisy by a Buffalo physician, and five ribs in front and four in the rear were removed. The left lung was entirely gone; an open cavity extended through the chest The heart was laid bare, covered only by the per icardium and could be clearly seen puls ing in its normal activity. Dr. Lov ing stated that there was probably not auothor case like it in the United 8tates. The man is 88 years old and is in fairly good health. It is a marvel that he is alive. Columbus (O.) Dispatch to Cleveland Leader. A Pistol Shot Brings Down an Eagle. Captain F. 8. Robertson, uncle of W. R. Blackford of this city, made a re markable pistol shot several days ago while riding on horseback with a party of friends from Saltville to Red Rock, Vs. A large eagle flew across the path 00 yards ahead of the party, when Cap tain Robertson, with one shot of a 83 caliber revolver, brought the bird to earth. Tho eagle weighed nearly 10 pounds and measured 6 feet 7 inches from tip to tip. Baltimore Sun, GREAT Reduction! A Reduction of from 10 2D ner cent -IN- Ladies,' Missses' and Children's NGOflTSN- -AT N. Hanau's. M AKTKK AND EXAMINKIt'8 NOTICE. The Ilorouph of West lteynoldHVllIu VH. Winnlow Towniihlp. In the Court of Coro I'leiiH of Jefferson County. No. 1, Kcb'y Term. IW4. Hit I Inn In Kuiill. Having been, on Ileo. 11, Into, appointed Mauler mid Kxamlner, In alxive rune, ioiftilfc nbly adJiiHt and apportion IndchtcdncHH be tween paid Itoroinli of Wet Itc ynoldsvlllc mid the towimhlnof Wliwlow, all persons In letestcd are hereby notified that 1 will per form the duties of above appointment ul my olHce, In the Borough of Hrookvillo, on MONDAY, THR 2TH DAY OF MARCH, A. D. H94, ' AT TKN O'CLOCK, A. M., And all person having claims airnlnst the Hiild township of Wlnslow are hereby notlflcft to present them on or before the date aliovo mentioned, or they will lie forever burred. Iec. In, IrtW. John M. VanVmkt, Master and Examiner. H Oottle. OTEL McCONNELL, HEYNOLDSVILLE. PA. FRANK J. BLACK I'nyrietnr. The leading hotel of the town. Heiiditiur tem for commercial men. Htenm heat, free -huH, bath room and closets on every floor, . Hample roomii, bllllurd room, telephone con nection Ac. JJOTEL BELNAP, HEYNOLDSVILLE, PA. GREEN & CONNER. PrnpHctw. First das In every purtlrultir. Located In, the very centre of the business part of town. Free 'bus to and from trains andconimodlous. sample rooms for commercial travelers. QOMMEnClAL HOTEL, BnOOKVILLE, PA., P1I1L i. CARRIER, Pnrprktm', Sumple rooms on the ground floor. lloue heated by nutural gas. Omnibus to and from all trains. ftiecsllantous). Q MITCHELL, ATTOHNEY-AT-LAW. Office on West Main street, opposite the Commercial Hotel, Keynnldsvlllc, Pu. J)H. B. E. HOOVER, REYNOLDSVILLE, PA. ' Resident dentist. In building near Met ho dist church, opposite Arnuld block. Uuutle mtas In opurutfiig. First National Bank OF REYNOLDS t 'lLLE CHPITHL $80,000.00. ' mtrhell, Prealdeutl Ncolt .TlcClcllaiid, Vlcv Prea. ' John If. Kttiiclirr, Cashier. Directors)! V. Mitchell, rVott McClellund, J. t King. Joseph Htritusa, Jom'uIi Henderson, 0. W. Fuller, J. If, Kuucher. ft Wei U criiliiif ill hiiiibl.,,, K....I.. 1 n i, furmerH, imviimiirH, uiintrn, lumberim-n hucJ ?"jyri,i i PKMhMiik Hia nuwt cttroful tttu-atiou Urst National Uank building, Nuluu block First Proof Vault.