VOLILMK 2. ItKYNOLDSVILLE, PENN'A., WEDNESDAY FEHIJUAUY 21, 1IWI. NllMIlEIt 40. -Bell's- REMARKABLE SPECIAL OFFERS AT EVEN-SONQ. Men's and Boys' doming. Two Wonderful Special Offers that will make it easy for any man to treat hiniHelf to a Suit or Overcoat. $10.00 KOK CHOICE Men's fine double breast ed Cheviot and Cappimer Suits, Holidcolorsand liiixturen, reg ular price $12, now $10. Men'B 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. $I.00O FOR CHOICE Men's celebrat ed Cans trobe twilled Melton and Kersey Over coat h, 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 HELL'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 breasted double 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, Litest long English cut, now $5. Young men's fine and durable Met in 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, 60c. at B'E'LL'S. If I could call you bru-k for one brief hour, Tt is at nven-sonif tlmt hour Humid lie. When belle nre chiming Irom tin old grar tows Across the Irnmjuil sea. Just when the fields nre tweet nnd cool with dew, Just when the last roM lingers In tlin westt Would 1 rerall you lo the world you knew Ueforo you wont to rent. And where the starry Jnsmlno hide, the wall We two would ntand together oore ngiiln. I know your atlenrc-l would ti ll you all My tnleof love and pain. And you would listen, with your lender smile, Tracing the lines upon my tenrworn faro, And finding, eren for a little while. Our earth weary place. Only one little hour. And then one more The hitter word, farewell, heset with tears And all my pathway dnrkened, as Ix-fore, With shades of lonely yenrs, Tar better, dear, thnt you, tinfelt, utieeen. Should hover near mo In the quiet air And draw my spirit through this mortal screen Your higher llfo to share. I would not call you hark, and yct-nli, me! Faith Is so weak and human love sotitrong That sweet It seems to think if v hut mlh'ht be This hour nt even-rumr. New York ledger. A WONDERFUL TOWN. ITS NAME IS WAYNE, AND IT IS NEAR PHILADELPHIA. Pounded by Anthony J. Dretel and Oeorge W. Child. A Place of Unlet Itesldetiee, Away From the Marts of Trade Police men Are Not Needed. About a dozen tulles from Philadel phia, on the main line of the Pennsylva nia railroad, is the wonderful town of Wayne. The wonderful town of Wayne is a product of the philanthropy of George W. ChlldB, who, toother with Anthony J. Drezel, planned to bring it Into existence for the benefit of such Phil adelphlans as yearned for more suburban life than was ufforded by the shady thor oughfares and placid highways of their native city, and ns Kir. Chi Ids unci Mr, Drexel had unlimited capital with which to carry out the plan for an ideal sub urban settlement Wayne was founded on the firmest of foundations and has flourished in a manner calculated to cause the proverbial bay tree to wither with envy. Tho inhabitants of Wayne number several thousand and are all inordinate ly proud of being Wnynoites. They ure proud with the pride which flushes tiio obsequious head salesman of the suspen der department when tho firm recognizee, his worth and promotes him to tin' dizzy altitude of second floorwalker in chief, and their pride is a thorn in lheidos of all the snrrouuding settlements and less ostentatious suburban stations. Most of them that is,most of the males nre wor thy clerks under uiidillu ago and blessed with wives and rapidly accumulating olive branches, and if they am not wor thy clorks they are worthy in some other lino, for none but worthy persons have ever found a foothold in Wayne, and the breath of ncandal has never smirched the polish of its purity. Their wives are as typical of tho quiet middle fluss Phila delphia women and girls uh they them selves are representative of the average spotlessly conventional Philadelphia tuuacnliiie being. Physically regarded, Wayne is as fair to look upon as it is from a moral stand point, Jt is an exposition of thooKsencoof Queen Anne in urchitccluro, tempered with the colonial and the other popular forms of rurul residence design which buve intiie hist decade run riot through out the length and breadth of tho hind. There are durk red houses and bright red ones, there are those which are red and green, and pink and green, und ca nary and green, and there areorangeand white ones, and there are pearl colored types with dove tinted trimmings. And there are just as many unconventional designs in shape as there are in color, and altogether the woudorful town of Wayne is a most satisfying spcctaclo to any one who seeketh the beautiful, the odd or the abnormally hideous iu inex pensive but conspicuous dwellings. Naturally such a settlement is above reproach iu its government. It has broad roads, perfectly laid, fine, broad sidewalk's, a waterworks and splendid drainage, all of which were provided by Messrs. Childs and Drexel. and it has a president and council, a fire engine equipment, an athletic club and ground for both sexes, a debuting society, a series of winter dances, a sewing circle, a whist club and a lot of other such at tractions provided by the residents them selves, and all these things are managed without a hitch or a jar, and peace reigns supreme from Jan. 1 iu any given year uutil the hour of midnight on the following 81st of December. Wuyno has no stores of any kind, and of course a saloon is as foreign to its confines as a snow-storm would be in an equatorial jungle. On the other side of the railroad there is also a Wayne an old fushioued Revolutionary times Wayne named after tho American gen eral who was known as Mud Anthony Wayne, and there may be found shops ami stores and saloons and business offices, but iu the new and beautiful Wayue such things are unknown and must ever be unknown unless the laws of its organization be ruthlessly shatter ed and the dictates of its title deeds ig nored. Nor has it any police, but then why should it have? No one is bad, no one is other than faultless, the very dogs don't bark at night, the cats remain indoors after sunset, and a policeman would be as much out of place in Wayne as prizefighter at a little girls' pner doll party. Hut the sweet sense of security which iervadcs the place is not without its insurance clause., so to speak. Even Wayne might be invaded by a reckless tramp lient on securing n squnre meal or (horrible as the thought is to the Wayne ites) by a nocturnal prowler seeking to enter and rob a happy home. And then, too, the business hours of the day find its adult male population away in the city, and the women have not their nat ural protectors at hand. Therefore each family has a huge tin born on which a mighty blast can be sounded as an alarm when aid is needed to repulse a tramp or to fight the Are fiend. At first the alarms were frequent, because the children could not resist testing the tin horns at unseemly hours, but a meeting of the council fixed a fine of 3 on false alarms, and now, through the agencies of repeated spankings and also of hanging the horns too high for the children to reach, no more false alarms come to startle the community, Wayne came very near being called Mentone, which was to have been pro nounced Me-'u-tony as a pleasant recog nition of the intimate friendship between Mr. Childs and Mr. Drexel, but the idea was abandoned. As it stands now it is an enduring monument to both these men, and it has not only fostered their fame, but increased their fortunes as well. New York Mail and Express. Women ns Farmers. California boasts of n number of wom en farmers who manage large estates, make money and keep healthy and hap py. Tho comforts of farm lifo hero are greater than they are in tho east, aud there is a possibility of gaining more than n mere living. Some of the wom en farmers have won more than mete local tamo. Mrs. Theodosiu Shepherd of Ventura is known in the oast ns a cultivator of California flower seeds aud bulbs. Mrs. Strong is known far and wide as tho woman who makes a good incomo by raising and selling pampas grass. Mrs, 12. P. Buckingham of Vu cuvillo is an orchnrdist whoso fruit commands tho highest price in eastern markets. Another successful agriculturist is Mrs. Georgia MeBrido A dozen yutrs ago slio was an invalid, a widow, poor, with four boys tn bring up. She know nothing of fruit raising, but with fem inine recklessness slit: purchased !.! j acres of land near San J use and pot it tint as an orclmtd. Now slio is prosperous, healthy und wealthy, as tho wage earn ers uo, and nn iiithiiNiatiu advocate of funning for women. San I'limoisco Cui respondent. lllrnill Mtixltu's Youth, When Hiram Maxim, Iho tumora in ventor, lived in '.-ungcrvillii, imvious ruamiiiUM used to warn their hopciula not to piny with "Mint wicked Ma.im boy." In fact, young Maxim grew up wilder tho doubtful reputation of being tho very worst boy in tho neighborhood. This isn't said l'.r tho purpoan of en--oouraging any other Muino incurrlg'bi'n 'Who are in the depths of their tuljtl.ds. If Hiram had been perfectly gcy.l lit tlo boy and had devoted Ilia time to studying bis lessons, lie ini,;ht hive hud that flying machiuo ull con.plctod by this turn). Hiram used to v. "rk nt carriage painting in Abbot and was hired by D. D, Flynt. He wan im artist with tho brush. One day a mini culled, to seo Flynt wliilo the latter was out. "Thcro has been a man in to seo yon, said young Maxim. "What's his name?" "I don't know, but that's how ho looks, " and tho boy pointed to a board on which ho bad ronghly daubed a faco. "I forgr.t to ask him his rnme, " suid the boy, "and so I drew that." Flynt knew lira man. Lowiston Journal. Not la Her Ret. A lady wont to get a check cashed at a bank whore sbs was entirely un known. "It will be impossible for me to give yon the money, madam, " said tho tell er politely, "unless you can identify yonrself in some way." "But I am Miss C 1" said the lady, "Certainly, but it will be necessary for some one whom we know to givo yon an introduction to us." She dsew back and regarded him .'haughtily. "But, -sir," she said in what has ibeen called "a tone of spurn," "I do not wish to know you!" Life. Japan's Great Artist. Meiznn is the name of Japan's great est decorator of Satsuma art wore. A writer on the subject suys Meizan is be yond question the first Artist in Japan. No sue can blend colors as harmonious ly or paint flowers so delicately. Noone is such a master of desigu as applied to borders. No ouo save Meizan, to put the case concretely, knows bow to fill a bowl t inches in diameter with 3,000 cho-chu, or butterflies, making euch dis tinct und a thing of beauty, Phila delphia Press, Ilia CeiillaWtt. She shook her head sadly when he had asked a fateful question. "I wish you were all the world, " he sighed. " You said I was that to yoa once, " he ventured coqncttishly. "Yes, but I don't think so now." "NoV" "No, for all the world loves a lover," and bis gentle wit won her over to a reconsideration of the question, De troit Free Press. THE GREAT PACIFIC. Him Advantage iiM'ireln Hullliigon nn Area of Water Nn Vast, Tho Pacific Is the great ocenti of our planet. In coinpariiion with it tlin north Atlantic id n mere utrait nnd tho Indian ocean nothing morn than Hid sub merged bench of n congeries of drowned islands. Along tho lino of 70 degrees south latitude the width of the Pacific is 131 degrees of longitude, over one-third of the cirenmference of the globe. Be tween It and the south polar continent nothing Intervenes. Its northern ex tremity was probably at one time round ed off by tho country which is now di vided between Alaska and Siberia. When tho glacial masses moved to the pole, the polar current clovo Its way through D( bring straits and Interposed Behrlng son between tho Pacific and the polar ocean. It presents every form of ocean geog raphy. At the two extremities It Isshnl low. There is a bench running along the Aleutian islands into tho gult of Alaska which comrs within 100 fathoms of tho surface, with occasional holes so deep that no apparatus can find the bot tom and be recovered without breaking tho wire, and there is a corresponding bench in the southwest portion of the sea west of the meridian of 180 degrees where 100 fathoms is nUa the average. Between this last bench and the latitude of 88 degrees north there Is a rsngo of tibmnrine rocky mountains with steep cliffs and sharp descents. Three or four distinct mountain ridges with from two to three miles of water between them have been counted between the Ha waiian Islands and AtiBtrnlia. On the Pacific can bo found every va riety of temperature and meteorology. Out of Bnhring sea pours the icy cur rent which cools our slioro In summer; from the equator flow mi miner currents warmer than the Atlantic gulf stream, Whilo the current which sweeps around the south cape of Tasmania bears on its bosom the longest icebergs ever seen. As its name indicates, It Is a pacific: ocean, swept by gentle trade winds, but the most terribln typhoons descrilied in meteorological records huvo varied the chronicles of its placid surface. On a sea of such extent cirelo sailing must become a mattor of moment. Tho Canadian steamers, sailing from Yoko hama in 1)5 degrees to Victorln in 40 de grees, cro'stho meridian of 100 degrees in 53 degrees, having covered 4,200 miles on the voyage, while tho Pnciflo Mail steamers, sailing by whet appears on tho map to be tho straight lino, huvo to cover 4, 700 miles between Han Fran Cisco and Yokohama. Assuming tho vcshoIh to be equal in speed and tu steam nt tho usual rate of seagoing steamers on the Paeiic, tho Canadian lino enjoys an ni'vantago of about 11(1 hours over tho American lilies. This in reduced ul most to nothing when our ships pnruso tho iioi tin rn course and tuku tho ad van tago of circle sailing. San Francisco Call. WARWICK CASTLE. The "Dens" of Famous Authors. A French chrouiclei has collected some very curious statistics on a subject that has interest even outside Paris, He was anxious to know how several select ed great men furnished what wo should call their dons, what ho calls tho.ii workrooms. To gain access to all the rooms was not easy, but fortunately muny of them were photographed, and so tho evidence was complete), Tho chronicler's loaning was evidently to wurd men of letters, and his results nre, on tho whole, surprising, Daudet's study was sovero in its simplicity, tho furuitui'O tho scantiest and tho plainest That of Pumas had n few pictures on tho wall, small panel pictures, and on his table a sphinx in bronzo. Cop pee, tho poet, tins his books in ex traordinary disorder, and bis appliances for tobacco abundant and well filled, Pierre Lot! has his workshop fitted up like an eastern bazaar; De Goncourt's is i icli in curious books and bindings; Sardon's is absolutely plain and very untidy; Zola's crammed with bric-a brae; Massenet's austere and empty a notebook, a thermometer and a water bottle; Meilhao's crowded with books. reviews and journals, and by the hearth rug two armchairs, one for the master of the house, the other for his friend and collaborator, Halevy, both of a size and impartially comfortable. West minster Gazette. Ilerlln Public Kitchen.. A public kitchen for tho working classes wus inaugurated in 18110 by a German woman, Han Morgenstein, She has established many of these kitchens, each one having a public dining room, comfortably warmed and furnished and supplied with the daily papers. Each kitchen, supplying perhaps from 300 to 400 people with daily meals, is managed by a local committee, the wbolo scheme being under tho control of a central council. All the paid cooks aro on the premises by 0 in tho morning, and tho vegetables and meat have been brought In heforo them. Waste of any kind is strictly forbid den. A subscription of fit, 950 was suffi cient to start this scheme; tho reserve fund set asido for providing new kitch ens increases each yeur, whilo the council pays fair wages and ia nblo to pension off its old servants. For a sum varvimr from 11 to fl cents tlm rwiin workman can obtain a satisfactory meal at any of theso restaurants. A diuuer for 4 cents allows a basin nf thick mil.. stantiul German sonn. a olnto tables and a plate of pudding, and a roll of bread iu addition costs a Httlo over one-fourth of a cent. A Peep Into the Famous Kngll.h Palars of the "Kingmaker." Ono could spend days looking at tho pictures nt Warwick and ntthosculn turo and curios. There Is a table, the dab of which is tniido of fine marble mosaic, lapis lazuli, and precious stones which belonged to Mario Antoinette, In the red drawing room are rare speci mens of L'monain enamels, also Bohe mlnn glass and Venetian crystals. This room leads to tho cedar drawing room, whose walls are 10 feet In thickness. One of the many valuable and beautiful ornaments In this room is a bust of Proserpine, by onr American sculptor Power. Tho "living rooms" of the castlo ex tend 830 feet in length, and each win dow gives charming views of the grounds, in one of these rooms, the gilt diawing riHiin. Is a Florentine mo aio tablc.enriched with precious stones, brought from the Grlinani palace in Venice. Its vnlue is fl0,000, which, pleaso remember, is f 50, 000 of Yankee money. Tho Gritnani arms, tho pope's triple crown, lion of St. Mark, doge's cap, keys of St. Peter nnd cnrdinnl's hat are illustrated in jasper, onyx, am ethyst, nialucblto and cornelian on its surface, A moment after leaving the gilt draw ing room nnd we are in the state bed room, where good Queen Anne slept, and in which her big dreary looking bed still stands. We don't seem to know much about Queen Anne's belongings, thus her bed and traveling trunks at its foot arouse our interest. In these trunks wero her majesty's clothes. They are sens! bio, ponderous trunks, covered with brown leather and studded with brass nails. Even an American baggage smashing porter would have found Queen Anne's trunks "too largo an or der" to destroy. Oeorgo III presented this bedstead, with its faded crimson enrtuinsand its 19 feet high posts. Over the fireplace hangs a fine portrait of the queen herself painted by Sir Godfrey Kncller. It is in this state bedroom that Queen Victorln slept when she visited Warwick castlo with the lato prince consort. 1 don't know whether she occupied Anne's bed, but if so I hope it was moro comfortublo than it looks. From tho bedroom is a boudoir, lit erally crammed with paintings, llere is Holbein's "Henry Villi" "A Boar Hunt," by rtnbens; "A Dead Christ," ou copper, by n follower of Correggio; "Charles II 'a Beauties," by Lely; a "Han Sebastian," by Vandyke; "Card Players. " by Teni as, und a Snlvator Hosa landscape. Tho castle's stato dining room was burned out in 1S71, hut it lins been re produced on tho old lir.es and is n truly royal upai tment. On cither sido of tho massive fireplace, wliero many a Yulo log has slowly burned itself out to white ashes, there are gilt Venetian figures. Above tho fireplace hangs Ruben's sketch of lions. Thcro is also in this room a droll portrait of George III in tho arms of his mother. Tho castlo bousts a Shakespeare room, designed and added by tho bite earl, and to which the county of Warwick presented tho Kcnilworth buffet in an cient oak. Into this room have been col lected nil procurable Shakespeare rel ics, nnd resting on an old claw tooted ouk table aro all tho works, with the ndmirablo edition of Shukespcaro of the lata ilnlliwell Phillipps. Tho placo has been called tho castlo of tho kingmaker. Who can visit this historic house and not desire to reread Lord Lytton's or Bulwer's, as you plunge "Tho Lust of tho Darons," whoso text of composition is furnished by the annals of this wonderful castle and its wonderful carl, Richard Nevil. Boston Herald. Your Itest Youug Man. I "You can't always just toll what your, best young man is going to develop in to," said tho girl in the bluo jacket, ' "Now, 1 know a young man, nnd when I first met him 1 said to myself: 'At last! Hero bo is! A real live man without n fud.' And I was happy in tho thought that ho wouldn't talk foot- ' ball or theosophy to mu. But it didn't tuko mo long to find out my mistake. Of all tho fuds I ever heard of that man's fud is the very worst. "He does tricks with curds and can jugglo things," continued tho girl in the blue jacket, as her eyes grow bright and her cheeks pinkish. "At luncheons ho fishes his handkerchief out of my mull and finds bis gloves in my jacket pocket. If you hand him u glass of water, he'll turn it upsido down and aak you blandly why tho water doesn't run out. At homo ho makes lifo miserublo for me. and when ho goes away I call in the girl and have her sweep up tho rem nants of the teucups that hu breuks. Ho balances parasols, guitars, vuses In fact, everything thut ho can find on tho end of his nose, 1 cun't do any thing with him. 1 um trying very hard io make him ungry so ho'U quit cull ing, but ho ia so absurdly good naturod (hat 1 fear I shall never succeed. "St. Louis Republic. How Sue UoU Along With Him. "There Is oue thing I likeubout your husband: he never hunieti von u-liun getting ready for a walk. " "Precious little credit ilt,., K, hi,,, r... thut, my dear. Whenever I see that I am not likelv to be reariv in ti,u I i,l hide his hat or gloves out of the way aud let him hunt for theut up and down till I have finished iliwsaino VI.1. News.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers