&I)c 3ttmc0, Bloomftclir, 3 Bloomficld Academy! An linylish and Classical School FOIl LADIES AND GENTLEMEN I TIIH AVINTKK NKHSION (if this Institution commenced December !th. Tim course of study embraces Latin. (!rcek, KliKllsh liraiichrs, . Mathematics. Natural Science. &.. and is designed to furnish a thorough lCtifillsli Kducation, or a complete Preparation for a Colle giate Course. Vacations: .July and August, and one week at Christmas. Terms: Knr Hoardine. rurnlshed ltoom. Wash liifr. Tuilliin In Latin, (Jreek, Kildish Ilraiichesand Matheinaties, for the seolastic year, except board In vacations. S-'ikuhi. The Hoarding l)eiartnient Is at the institution, under the supervision of Willnm drier. Ksi., by whom good ami substantial board will be fur nished: anil the pupils will be under the strict tare of the l'rincipal. Address T. A. SM VKl.Y. A. ., rrlnclpal, or W 1 1,1, 1 AM (ililKH. Sltfl New liloomlield, J'erry county, Pa. N(5AV HtSl'0 JluillO 15ETWEEN IJLOOMFIELD and NEWFORT ! WIXl'ER ARRAXOEMEXT. TIIK subscriber is now running a hack between Hlonmlleld and iewport. leaving Hlooinlleld at u a in., arriving at Newport in time to connect witli the lixpress train Kast. Heturning. leaves Newport at 2..T0 p. tu., or on the arrival of the Mail train West. - He has also opened a 1,1 VICKY in til ' Stables belonging to Hinesmith's Hotel, where he is pre pared to furnish horses and buggies at moderato prices. AMOrt ItOMNSON. CHEAP GOODS! Til E subscriber having opened a now Store, ono door Kast of Sweger's Hotel, solicits a share of the public patronage. He has Just received a full supply of TV o w C2 o o i ss , ami will constantly keep on bund, a complete as sortment of DRY-UOODS, GROCERIES, Q UEEXSWARE, HARD WARE, HOOTS & SHOES, IIATS& CAPS. And Everything else usually kept in Stores. Call and sec, my stock. ltOB'T. X. WILMS. New liloomlield, Pa. 3 42 New Carriage Manufactory, On Hiou Stiucet, Kast op Caki.isi.e St., New Bloomficld, Pcun'a. THE subscriber lias built a large and commodi ous Shop on High St.. Kast of Carlisle Street, New liloomlield. l'a., where lie is prepared to man ufacture to order Oji i r i a g c s Of every description, out of the best material. Sleighs of every Style, liulll to order, and finished in the most artistic and durable manner. Having superior workmen, he is prepared to furnish work that will compare favorably with the best City Work, and much more durable, and at much more reasonable rates. 49-ItGlMIKINC: of all kinds neatly and prompt ly done. A call is solicited. SAMUEL SMITH. 3 itr JAMES 33. CLARK, MANUFACTUltKK AJil) DliALKH IN Stores, Tin and Sheet Iron "Ware, New Bloomficld, Terry co., Va., KKEl'S constantly on hand every article usuallf kept in a llrst-class establishment. All the latest styles and most Improved Parlor ami Ititclicn Stoves, TO HUKN EIJEU COAL Oil WOOD ! M- Spouting atWv Hoofing put up in the most durable manner and at reasonable prices. Call and examine his stock. 3 1 BELLS. ( ESTABLISHED 1 IJi 1837. BUCKEYE BELL FOUNDRY! c HURCH. Academy, Factory, Farm, Kle- Alarm Kelts, &c, &e., made of PURE BELL METAL, (Conner and Tin,) warranted in quality, tone, da rabllky, &c, and mounted with our Patent IM PROVED ROTATING HANU1NUS. Catalogues sent Free. illustrated VAND UZEX cC TIFT, Not. 103 and 104 E. 2nd St., CINCINNATI, 0. UOlypi JJartrcal jSrlfctions. 4? OVER THE RIVER. OVKlt the river tliey beckon to me, Loved ones who've passed to the other Bide, The gleam of their snowy robes 1 see, lint their voices are lost In the dashing tide, There's one with ringlets of snniiv miiil And eyes the reflection of heaven's own Mao ! own Mao ! ld, M irtal TtojffJ there, T sec; U Jle crossed In the twilight gray and cold And the pale mist hid him from inor We saw not the angels who met him there, The gates of The City we could not sec Over the river, over the river. My brother stands ready to welcome me. Over the river the boatman pale, Carried another tlio household pet; Her bright curls waved it the gentle gale; Darling Minnie, I see her yet! She crossed on her bosom her dimpled hands, And Tearlessly entered the phantom bark; We watched it glide from the silver sands, And all our sunshine grew strangely dark. We know she is safe on the other side, Where all the ransomed and angels be; Over the river; the Mystic river. My childhood's idols are waiting for inc. For none return from those quiet shores Who cross with the boatman cold and pale; We hear the dip of the golden oars, We calch the gleam of the snowy sails, And lo! they have passed from our heart Tliey cross the stream and are gone for aye: We cannot sunder the veil apart. That hides from our vision the gates of day: We only know that their bark no more Shall sail with ours on life's stormy sea, Yet somehow I hope on the unseen shore They watch and beckon and wait for me. And I sit and think when the sunset's gold Is flushing river and hill and shore, 1 shall one day stand by the water cold, And list to the sound of the boatman's oar, I shall watch for the gleam of the flapping sail, I shall hear the boat as it gains the strand. I shall pass from sight with the boatman pale. To the better shore of the spirit land : I shall know the loved who have gone before, And Joyfully sweet the meeting shall be When over the river, the peaceful river, The angel of death shall carry mo. A Geographical Enigma. I am composed of Fourteen letters. My 1, !), 13, 3. and 4, is a town in Ireland. My 3, i, and 13, is a river in liavaria. My 4. 2, (i, 10, 3. 9, and 12, is a town in Austria. My , 8, 2, 14. 9, and 12, is a town In Arkansas. My ti, 9, and 13, is a Cape in the United States. My 8, 2, and 7, is a mountain in Colorado. My 9, , and 4, Is a town lu Sweden. My 11, 14, 4, 5, 3. and 9, is a town in Arabia. My 10, 0, 2, 12, and 4, is a river in Turkestan. My whole Is the name of a celebrated explorer. IN THE WRONG ROOM: on Nat. Harrison's Experience. IN early days old Nat. Harrison was elected to the Legislature from this county, said a fellow as wo are all seated around the stove, in a little hotel at McLainsboro', Hamilton county Illinois. Old Nat. was a regular old brick! He was elected just because there was no one to run ngainst him. Our county was rather bad off for intelligent people in those days. A few days after old Nat. had gone to Springfield, to attend to tho duties of his office. I happened to bo there on business of a private character, and thinking ho would bo glad to hear ironi tnc toiks at home, 1 concluded to call on him at the " J' inquire after his health. ' " I ve becu well. Tom," 'said he, " but I got awfully sciired the firstnight Istayed in this 'ere darned place." "How was that?" I inquired. " Well," said Nat. " I'll tell you all about it. You see that fellow there behind tho counter; tho fellows here call him the bard well, I told him I wanted to see my bed, so I'd know where to sleep when I'd come in after a while. Ho took me up stairs to a littlo room, and said I could sleep there, and then ho went down. I took good notico of it brown door with yaller streaks here and there, and white earthern lock handle. " I started down stairs a-thinkin" a bout this, and I wouldn't look at another door' for fear I'd get 'em kinder mixed up in my head, and then forget which was mi no. " About twelve o'clock that night I came in with a kind of half-grown hum min' in my head, and the very first thing I found at tho top of tho stairs was my own identical door, with tho yaller streaks and white lock handle " Good," says I, and in I lumbers. I walked up to the bed, and what do ye think ? Why, I finds some one of your long-legged, black-whiskered town fellers in it fast asleep. 1 takes him by tho beared, reared him up on his end, and gives him a short sarment tells him to leave as quick as double triggers, or I'll be d d if I wouldn't kick him down stairs tolls hint I don't want to Jo it nuther, for I am a member of tho Legis lature the Representative from Hamilton but if I git to fighting he'd find mo a full team. The fellow looked awfully scared, and without saying a word ho got up very humble like, and started for his dry goods, which hung on a chair tip in ono comer. I sot down the light and began to undress ; and says I to him. draw on them duds and toddle from hero for I'll bo cussed if I 'turning around at tho same time to look fierce at him I see's him a comin' at mo with ono of the drottcst butcher knives iu tho world. " Well, thought I, Nat. you've got your self in a close place, by Jingo ! and so we begun to lumber around the room like tho very nation. Hero I went here he conic . At last I got between him and tho door, and out I phot. " This beats tho devil, says I, a Rep resentative to the Legislature treated in this way. I went clown stairs and told the fellow behind the counter that some cuss was in my room No' I guss not," said ' perhaps room is there is some mistake number eight." your " Thinks I perhaps there may be some mistake ; and so I goes back. When I got up to the top of the stairs I began to count at tho first door, and on till I counted eight. I found than they all looked axactly alike. I opened the eighth door and went in, feeling certain that it was picked out for me. A candle was burning on the table, by the light of which I saw that some person was in the bed. Not fooling inclined to kick up another fuss, I conoluded to crawl in with him and say nothing about it. In a very short time I was in bed and ready to go to sloop. I had not been iu bed long before the door opened, and a young man and woman came into tho room and took seats by the candle stand. " Something else on hand, Nat," thought I to myself, "but let 'em rip." " They looked very serious at first, but finally it wore off, and they got to chatting very lovingly, and tohuggiu' and kissin a little. I was delighted "with tho performance, and thought the feller iu bed with mo ought to see it and enjoy the. fun too : so I whispered to him '"Say, Captain aid boss, just look up.' " They both started up, like a shakin mill had touched 'cm, and they seemed to bo awfully scared, till the gal said, ' it was only tho wind blowin agin the winder. " They soon got to hoggin' and kissin' again, and as I could not rouse our friend I thought I would jest have a littlo fun to mysult. " Slips,' says I, jest as they was a fetching their lips together, and up they sprang like lightning and loped lor the door; but as fortune would have it, the young feller had dropped the key, and ho couldn't get out. "Never mind says,' I , it's fun for mo as well as you. I love to see sich things a-goin' on.' " This seemed to scare 'em more than ever. " It was rich, too rich to enjoy alone, and I deterniiucd to wako up my bed feller. I slapped my hand on his chin it was cold as ice. ' Thunder and St. Louis, Nat,' said I, 'you'ro in bed with a dead man,' and without wait ing to consider tho matter 1 sprang to tho floor. The youngsters gave a loud squall, fetched up again the closed door, and I pitched with 'em which resulted in smashing tho darned thing open. Without waiting for ceremony or formal ities wo all bolted for the stairs. Hearing tho racket, tho landlord who occupied a room still further back, came boltingafter us. Catching a glimpse of him I took him to be tho dead man, and so I put all the steam on, and ran close in tho wake of tho lovers. I could not pass them, how ever, for they were frightened out of their souses, having no idea but what I was the deceased in close puruit. In this condition we all tumbled promiscuously down stairs into tho bar-room. "Now let's go and take something, boss," said Nat, but don't say anything about this wlion you got home, or Sally may bo uneasy about me,' " B, A young man at Muscatine, Iowa, lately crawled into a boiler to clean it out, but tho engineer, being ignorant of the fact, closed the door and fired up. The young man becaino uncomfortably warm, and to his horror discovered tho boiler filling with water. His shrieks were unheard, but fortunately tho engineer opened tho door and the half-Buffocated prisoner was released. THE BRIDAL HANDKERCHIEF. "Y7E all prepared to go to tho wed T T ding, lwas going, father was going, the gals was going, and wo was going to take the baby. But como to dress the baby, I couldn't find its littlo shirt. I'd laid a clean one out of the drawer a-purposc ; I knew jest where I'd ,1 1 n . . put ii, om como 10 iook ior it, it was gone. " lor mercy s sake, says I, " gals, has any of you seen that baby's shirt ?" Of courso none of em had seen it, and I looked again, but it wan't no where to bo foutid. " It's the strangest thing in all nature," says I ; " here I had this shirt in my hand not niore'n ten minutes ago, and now it's gone, nobody knows where! Gals," says 1, " do look around, can t ye : But fretting and fuming wouldn't find it; so I went, to tho bureau and fished up another shirt, and put it onto the baby, and at last we were ready ior a start. Lather had harnessed up the double team, and the gals was all having a good iimo going to see iMary Ann married but somehow I couldn't get over that baby's shirt. 'Twant so much the shirt : but to have anything sperrited away right ironi unuer my laco and eyes, 'twas too provoking. " What be you thinking about, mam ma i says copnrony. What makes vou so sober V says she. " I'm pestered to death thinking about that baby's shirt," says I. " One of you must a took it, 'm sartain," I says. " Now, ma," says Sophrony says she, "you needn t say that." And, as I had laid it onto 'em a good many times, they was beginning to get vexed, and so we had it back and forth, all about that baby's shirt, till wo got to tho wedding. Seeing company kind o' put it out o' my mind, and I was get-tin good natur'd again though I couldn't help but say to myself, every few minutes, what could have become of that baby's shirt t till they stood up to be married, and forgot all about it. Mary Ann was a real modest creature, and was niore'n half-frightened to death when she came into tho room with Ste phen, and tho minister told them to jino hands. She fust gave her left hand to Stephen. " Your other hand," says the minister : aud poor Steve, ho was so bashful, too, ho didn't know what ho was about : ho thought 'twas his mistake, so he gave Mary Ann his left hand. That wouldn't do, any way ; but by this time they didn't know what they was about, and Mary Ann jined her left hand with his left, then tho left with his right, then both their loft hands again, till I was all in a fidgit, and thought they would never get fixed. Mary Ann looked as red as a turkey; and to make matters worse, she began to cough to turn it off I s'pose and called for a glass of water. The minister had just been drinking, and the tumbler stood right there. I was so ner vous, and in such a hurry to see it all over with, that I kctched up the tumbler and ruu with it to her ; for I thought to goodness she was going ier faint. She undertook to drink. 1 do not know how it happened, but the tumbler slipped and gracious me ! if between us both, we didn't spill the water all over her collar and sleeves. I was frustrated, for it looked as though 'twas all my fault, and tho first thing I did was to out with my handkerchief and give it to Mary Ann. It was uicely done up. Sho took it and shook it out. Tho folks held in putty well up to this time, but then such a giggle and laugh as there was. I didn't know what had given thorn such a start till I looked and see. I'd give Mary Ann that baby's shirt. (Hero Mrs. Jones, who is a big, fleshy woman, undulated and shook liko a eighty jolly with mirth ; and it was some time before sho could proceed with her narrative.) " Why," continued she, whilo tears of laughter ran down her cheeks, " I'd tucked it into my dress pocket, instead of a handkerchief. That came of being absent-minded and in a fidget." " And Mary Ann and Stephen were they married after all V " Dear me, yes," said Mrs. Jones ; " and it turned out the gayest wedding I ever 'tended.' A wedding party was lately block aded in a narrow street by two loads of cradles and buby wagons. iSF Lovo is a good thing, but it will not survive more than two years without a basis of bread and beef. SUNDAY READING. For Tht Bloomficld Times. LIFE'S DECAY. BY O. J. 8- 0! kNE beautiful summer evening, as the sun was sinking in the Western horizon, tinting everything with its de parting rays, a yonth and fair maiden were sitting in a delightful grove, enjoy ing the rctrcslnng breeze, and sweet per fume that surrounded them. Everything seemed dazzling to their youthful visions, and never, lor a moment, did they dream that anything was in store for them, in the future, but unalloyed pleasure and uninterrupted bliss. Many were the lov ing words spoken, and the air-castles built by them. Tho fact that they were mortal, and that death not only cut dowo the aged who are tottering on the verge of eternity ; but also tho young, amidst all their hopes and plans for the mysteri ous future, did not seem to be realized by them ; and the future appeared as clear and unclouded as the past. A few years have passed since the youth and maiden were sitting in that delightful bower years fraught with many changes. The bell in the church tower is tolling, sending abroad the sa intelligence that a soul has been sum moned by the dark angel of death, am that the body was being borne to its fina resting place. . " Who lies beneath that coflin-lid ? said I, to my companion ; " Ls it an agc person or a youth; a male or a female!"' " Do you remember," replied ho, " the happy, youthful couple, we saw in that lovely grovo, ono fine summer evening, years ago 1" " Well do I remember," I replied. " I can yet, in imagination, see them at that very spot, smiling,and beaming with joy." " That coffin," resumed he, " contains all that is mortal of that fair maiden. All her earthly hopes have been blasted, arid sho has been cut off in the beauty of her womanhood. This is the day on which sho was to have been married. But, alas ! how sad the change ! Instead of her bridal day, it is the day on which she is to be consigned to the dark, dreary tomb." We followed the cortege into the church yard, and stood around the open grave, prepared for the reception of that once fair and flourishing, but now cold and lifeless maiden. Wc saw the coffin low ered, and heard the words of the minis ter, " Earth to earth, ashes to ashes, and dust to dust," as he committed tho body to its mother earth. We lingered around the sacred spot, and when the sound of the clods, as they fell upou the coffin, came to my ears, I thought, as 1 never thought before, ot tho instability of all that is earthly ot the perishable nature of everythinp whieh surrounds us in this world ! " What is life ; and what js gained "by the struggle for wealth, and ambition, and worldly honor V thought I, " when ib the course of a comparatively few shor years, we, too, liko this fair creature, wili fall asleep in tho icy embrace of death, and be laid in tho dismal confines of th grave. Then only one thing will bo ire portant, and that will be, whether w have devoted ourselves to a life of virtur and lived according to the precepts of ou Maker. Tho reward of such a life i eternal happiness in the society of Gd and His holy angels. But if, on th other hand, wo have lived a life in dircc conflict with tho teachings of the Grea Author of our existence, the Lor shall say unto us, " Depart from me in' Everlasting Fire, prepared for the Dc and his angels." Choose ye now whii portion yo will strivo to obtain. Three Steps to Heaven. Tho Ilev. Rowland Hill once visited poor man, of weak intellect, and on cor versing with him, said : " Well, llichard, do you lovo the Lor Jesus Christ?" " To bo sure I do, don't you ?" " Heaven is a great way off," said ti minister, " and the journey is difficult.'' " Do you think so ? I think Heave is very near." " Most people think it is a very difti cult matter to got to Heaven." " I think Heaven is very near," sa: Richard again, " and the way to it very short ; there are only three Btei there." ' Mr. Hill replied : " Only three steps ! Richard ropeuted : " Yes, only thrt . steps." " And pray," said the pastor, " whatd, yon consider those three steps to be t" " Those three steps are : out of reU! into Christ, into glory." '