3 NEW STOIJE ! CHEAP GOODS! TI1E siihserlher having owned a new Store, one door Kant of Hweiter's Motel, solicits a share f tlio public; patronage. Ilo lias Just received a lull supply ot TV e av GJ o o 1 s , and will constantly keep on hand, a complete as sortment ol DRY-GOODS, GROCERIES, Q VEENS VA RE, HARDWARE, SOOTS & SHOES, HATS & CAPS. And Everything else usually kept in Stores. S Call and see my stock. KOH'T. N. WILLIS, New ISloomllelrt, l'a. 3 42 New Carriage NIaimfuclory, On High Stueet, East op Cakusle St., New Bloomficld, Pcnn'a. THE subscriber lias built, a large and commodi ous Shop on High St., Kast of Carlisle Street, New Hloomlicld, l'a., where ho Is prepared to man ufacture to order On r r i a g e s Of every description, out or the host material. Sleighs of every Style, built to order, and finished In the most artistic and durable manner. Havinn superior workmen, ho is prepared to furnish work iliat will compare favorably with tlio best City Work, and much more durable, and at much more reasonable rates. -REPAIRING of all kinds neatly and prompt ly done. A call is solicited. SAMUEL SMITH. Sltf J-HVEES 33. CLARK, MANUFACTURER AND DEALEK IN Stoves, Tin and Sheet Iron "Ware New Blooiiifield, Perry co., Pn., KEEPS constantly on hand every article usually kept In a first-class establishment. All the latest styles and most Improved Parlor and Kitchen Stoves, TO BURN KITIIEIt COAL OR WOOD! VL. Spouti up; and Hoofing put up In the most durable manner and at reasonable prices, ('all and examine his stock. 3 1 BELLS. f ESTABLISHED IN 1837. BUCKEYE BELL FOUNDRY! CHURCH. Aeademv, Factory, Farm, Fire Alarm Bells, &c, &c, made of PUBIS BELL METAL, (Copper and Tin.) warranted In quality, tone, du rability, Kic., and mounted with our Patent IM PROVED ROTAT1NU HANGINGS. Illustrated Catalogues sent Free. YANDVZEN . TIFT, Not. 103 and! 104 E. 2nd St., 41101 ypd CINCINNA TI, 0. BETWEEN BLOOMFIELD and NEWPORT! WINTER ARRANGEMENT. THE subscriber is now runninK a hack between Bloomlleld ami Newport, leavlnx Ulooinlleld at 9 a m., arriving at Newport in time to connect with the Express train East. Returning, leaves Newport at 2.30 p. m., or on the arrival of the Mail train West. - He lias also opened a U VERY In th ' Stables DelonRinu to Rinesmith's Hotel, where ho is pro pared to furnish horses and buggies at moderate prices. AlUOS ROMNSON. ?. P. Miller. T. Rickert. C. II. Miller. MILLER, RICKERT & CO., 8UCCE3SOH3 TO , GRAY BILL & NEWCOMER, Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in HATS, CAPS, FURS, STKAW-COODS, &?., No. 349 North Third Street, 2d Floor, PHILADELPHIA. 11 ly 10 PATTERSON & NEWLIN, Wholesale CSrocera, AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS No. 120 ARCH STREET, Philadelphia. pedaUty 8a'e ' EbB8' Beea5 Graln nd Wo1' Please send for a Circular. 4 13 8 , THE BACHELOR AND THE BABY MR. ELLERY CORBAN was an ex cecdingly nervous man. 11c came honestly by it. for his mother was ner vous beforo him. Mr. Corban was a bachelor of forty-five, remarkably well reserved, and rather fine looking, lie ad a portly figure, a florid complexion, and a head of dark brown hair, which any man might have been excused for fooling proud of. Mr. Corban was very well off. lie had never kept a house, perhaps because jhe knew that elderly bachelors and widowers wcro generally fated to marry their house-keepers; and Mr. Corban regarded marriage and the gallows about on a par. Women and ba bies ho considered a very unnecessary part of creation. The mystery of their having boon allowed an existence he could not help regarding their creation as a grave mistake somewhere. Ilo boarded at Mrs. Gregg's and had made his home there for fifteen years. Mrs. Gregg was ns much like a man as she could be, and still bo a woman. One day last summer it became evident to Mr. Corban that he must take a jour ney west. The interest of his business demanded it; so ho put a few things into a valise, said good morning to Mrs. Gregg, and set out for the depot. lie was five minutes late, for his neck tie had given him a great deal of trouble, and he had boon unable to find a pair of stockings which were not destitute of toes IJut he had comforted himself with the reflection that, as ho had boots on, nobody would bo wiser in regard to the unclad condition of his toes and he at last got off. lie heard the whistle and started upon the run. If there is any thing especially calculated to put one out of temper, it is having to run to catch the cars ; and our hero may be excused if, when dripping with perspiration and completely out of breath, he rushed into the first car which offered, ho was irrita ted with the world, himself included. The car was well filled. In fact, there was only one vacant scat, and that was beside a woman. Corban turned to seek the next car, but was met by the conduc tor at the door. " No room in there, sir ! All full. Anniversary meeting at Par kersburg. There's a seat sir !" indica ting the one beside the woman. Corban was troubled with a touch of the rheum atism in the left knee, and could not stand comfortably nothing else could have forced him to get so near one of the sex. lie stepped up to her and made the stereotyped inquiry: " Is this scat engaged ?" " No, sir," replied a sweet voice ; and Corban saw that the speaker had blue eyes and golden hair. lie took a seat and the lady drew the bundle she had been resting on the cush ion into her lap. " Better let mo put your bundle upon the rack ?" suggested 5lr. Corban. The lady opened her eyes in indignant amazement, whipped off a layer of flannel from the package, and displayed to the horrified gaze of our bachelor friend, the red, puffy face of a moon-eyed baby. " Muzzar's ittle, 'tweety sugar dar ling!" she exclaimed in the dialect which is perfectly intelligible to all babydom. " Muzzar won't let the naughty man put the 'ittlo laminio, lumpy baby ud on the rack!" J The baby struck out menacingly with his fat fists in the direction of Mr. Cor ban, and give utterance to a yell of tri umph. Mr. Corban broke into a cold perspiration. He had never been so near a baby before in his life. It was almost too much for him. He had a strong mind to stand the remainder of the way, or un til somebody vacated a seat, but his knee gave an extra twinge and decided him to try and endure the terrible state of things. He took a paper from his pocket and es sayed to read, but the baby had launched out in one of those baby refrains, which is like music in the ears of all mothers, and the cooing so confused our bachelor hero that ho could make no sense of his paper, so he pocketed it with the savage determination to petition the next Con gress for women with babies to be kept in a car by themselves. At tho first stopping place ho was on tho lookout for a seat, and to his joy dis covered the gentleman in the next seat making preparations to leave ; but before he was fairly out of his seat, an old lady in a green shawl and a poke bonnet had edged into it, and cut off Mr. Corban's hopes. Of course, she turned around and began at once to talk to tho baby. " Dear little chicken ! how old is it, marm ?" " Almost eight months," said the proud mother. " Well, I declare 1 Wrhat a large child of his age 1 Why there was my Enoch, when ho was a year he warn't a mite nor a grain bigger than that 'ere child ! But then Enoch; he had the whooping cough, and the measles, and the nettle rash, and collarctta infanticide beforo he was eleven months I And 1 expect the diseases had some effect upon his constitution !" " I should think so," replied the baby's mother. " You look tired dear," went on the old lady; " the baby must bo dreadful heavy. Why don't you let its pa take him ?" with a reproachful glance at the savage countenance of Mr. Corban. " I'm not his pa," grumbled Mr. Cor ban, pulling hisMiat a little farther down over his eyes. "Oh! You ain't. Wal, now, that's curis !" said the old lady. ' I should have thought you wor for sartin. The baby is the image of you jest the same kind of nose ; and its eyes has got tho same expression. Expression, indeed ! Mr. Corban was boiling over ! He always peculiarly pri ded himself on his expression ; and here was this old ogre comparing him to that dumpling faced, hucklebury-eycd baby! " Well," said the old' lady slowly, as though she had reached the conclusions after some thought, " I s'pose as its likely this is a poor mortem child, which means one as is born after the death of its la ther and you married its mother soon after her husband departed this vale of tears. Well, that's got to be dreadful! common. But my Elijah has been dead nigh onto nineteen months, and I ain't begun to think of a second partner; though Squire Hudson, has been left so helpless and unfortunate, with them six children of his, that I don't know. I hope the Lord will show me my duty, and give me strength to take in the Squire for better or for worse, if it's right and best ! I don't never want to shrink no duty, marm. When did your first hus band die, marm?" " Parkersburg!" screamed the conduc tor. "Stop five minutes for refresh ments! Change cars for Wallingford, Amsterdam and Myrtle Ridge !" The woman with the baby rose quickly. A thrill of joy went through Mr. Cor ban. He thought she was at her jour ney's end. 11c, too, rose with alacrity. " Can I assist you in any way, mad am ?" he asked. "Thank you. I will just trouble you to hold the baby while I go and get a cup of coffee. I breakfasted early and I need something warm. Be careful and hold his head high, he is subject to the croup." And, before Corban could utter one word of refusal, she had put the baby in his arms, and was running off with the crowd. Our hero felt himself growing cold and hot alternately. lie had served two' years with credit in tho war, and had been in a score of battles, but through it all, he had never experienced suckj a sinking at the stomach as came over him now. Most of tho passengers left the cars; and Carbon would have done like wise, but he feared that ho might lose sight of tho baby's mother, arid tho train would start without him. So in an agony of terror, lest something should happen ho stood thera in tho aisle, hold ing the baby at arms length, and fixing his frantic gaze on the door through which his deliverance would come. " All aboard," cried the stentorian voice of a new conductor and tho peo ple rushed in. But the passengers were most of them new ones, for there wa3 a junction at Parkersburg; and worst of all , tho baby's mother was not among them. Tho bell ran ; the cars were moving ; the door was shut wath a bang, aud the train went off. Corban waxed desperate. " Halloa, there !" ho shouted to the conductor. " Stop ? This train cannot go on; there'B a woman left behind; she went to get a cup of coffee. Stop ! I tell you this instant sir 1" " What's up?" inquired the conductor. " She's left the baby !" " Your wife ? Oh, never mind, Such things occur frequently. She'll come in the next train." " I tell you to stop ! I shall go crazy. And . Oh, Lord, what shall I do with the baby ? Say, I'll give yon five dollars ten dollars twenty yes, fifty dollars, if you'll put back and let me off at Parkersburg !" " I should havo no objection to the money, but I couldn't oblige you if you were one of tho Rothchilds 1" And the conductor passed on his way. " Bless your soul, sir 1" said the old la dy in tho next seat, giving Corban a nudge with her parasol, " you'll suffocate that baby. You're holding its head where its foot ought to be I He's wrong side up !" Corban hastily rescued the youngster, which uttered a Bhrill yell at his treat ment. " You'd orter be ashamed of yourself," went on the old lady, indignantly, " to toss that blessed child around in such an on-human way. A man never orter have no children that don't have no nateral feelings towards 'cm. Sir, you was a ba by once yourself." Just then a yellow-faced woman slip ped into the seat in front of Corban. She was middle-aged, but her dress had the gnshingncss of sixteen. " Lovely child," she exclaimed insinuatingly. The baby began to squizzlo up its face and flourish its fists. "Dear me, how forward it is. How old is it, sir ?" inquired tho spinster for such she was. " I don't know," growled Corban. " Been a widower, long, sir ?" inquired the lady. " No. I never had a wife." " Bless me ! then she's run away and left you. Dear ! dear ! how could she leave such a nice man, aud such a dear, darling little baby?" " What's that?" inquired a middle aged gentleman near by, who was evident ly a little deaf. " Your wife gone and left you, sir ? Just my case exactly. My poor Jane departed this life last May. I got her tho handsomest gravestone money could buy. There's an angel on it with all her wings spread and this Latin descrip tion Requires her cat in peace. The gravestone maker said it was a good epi gram, and I consented as she was fond of cats. By this time the baby began crying lustily, and the whole car sympathized, especially the females. " It's got the cholera morbus !" said the old lady. It'll die for sartin if some thing hain't done !" "Die? You don't think so?" cried Mr. Cordan. " Dear me !" said the littlo thin-faced woman, " what an inhuman ereature its mother must be." " Take it, my good lady, do !" cried Corban, imploringly. " I'll give you a hundred dollars to take it." " What is all this row about?" said a sharp-nosed man, with a newspaper m his hand. " A child is it ? Fall back, gen tlemen, and let me look at it. If it should prove to be the one." "How? what do you mean?" queried a dozen voices at oucc. " It is, it is ! It can be no other ! ex claimed the sharp-nosed man. " How strange that I should chance upon it ! " Listen to this, and he read from a pa per in his hand, this notice : "Stolen. Supposed to have been stolen from its carriage in Central Park, on the morning of the 8th inst., a male child about nine months old. Said child had blue eyes and rather dark hair ; and is a remarkable forward child. Any per son who will return him to his afflicted parents, at No. Forty-ninth street, or give information that will lead to his recovery, shall receive a reward of $300. Louis Roscoe. " Wal, I never ?" exclaimed tho old la dy. " It must bo tho very same baby. This child has blue eyes and dark hair, and 'pears remarkable forw'd !" " Yes, ma'am, unquestionably the very same," remarked the sharp-nosed man, confidingly; " I consider it my duty to take possession." " Oh, take it, do ?" cried Corban, im ploringly ;" I'll give a hundred dollars to get it off my hands." No doubt you would, my man ; But it ain't took in in that way. My. name is Smithers Peter Smithers, sir; and I live in Albany. I'm a magistrate, and arrest you for child stealing." " I tell you I didn't steal it. She went off after a cup of coffee." " Don't trouble yourself to repeat that story again. I understand the case ful ly," said Mr. Smithers, promptly. " Conductor, is there a place on the train where tho rascal would be any safer than hero ?" " We don't run prison vans," respond ed that wurthy, sulkily. " Well, gcntlemon," said Mr. Smithers blandly, " you are all men of honor, and have wives and children, or ought to have, and you all have feelings of sympa thy, doubtless ior the parents of this un lucky babo; und I depend upon you, gen tlemen, to assist me in guarding him un til wo reach a station where I can place him in charge of the proper officials. At the next stopping-place I will telegraph to BridcBwcIl, aud have constables ready to take possession of him the moment w arrive." " Yon shall pay dearly for this 1" roar ed Corbon, now fairly infuriated. " Yes. sir, I'll take the law on you tho moment we get anywhere where there is any law. Call me a rascal indeed I" Just nt that moment the sharp signal of " down brakes" sounded, and in a few moments there was a shock, and the train como to a sudden stop. Everybody rushed out to ascertain th difficulty ; and it was found that a wheel of the engine had broken, and the loco motive was off tho track. No one was injured but it would take some time to get things so that the next train could run ; and in tho meantime Mr. Corban thought, with rapture, he could make his escape. lie formed the plan of dropping the unfortunate baby and fleeing to the woods. In the bnstlo and confusion it could only be accom plished. But he had reckoned without his host. Mr. Smithers was right at his elbow. lie had no notion to allow that tempting reward to slip through his fin gers ; and a couple of other gentlemen kept guard with him. And there stood poor Corban holding the whimpering ba by, and expostulating, swearing and blus tering in a way thatnade all the ladies declare that he was a monster, and they gave him a very wide berth. Suddenly the whistle of the next train from Parkersburg was heard. A bright hope sprung up in Corban's breast. It was possible the baby's mother might be on board. Ho rushed forward, but Smithers seis ed his arm and held him back. " Be quiet, sir !" said he. " Remem ber you are under arrest." The train had been warned of deten tion of the first express, and came to a halt a little distance behind, and the mo ment it did so, the. door of one of the carriages was burst open, and out leaped the mother. A cry of joy came from Corban ; and with one bound he broke the grasp of Mr. Smithers upon his arm, and rushed to ward her. " Oh, my baby ! My precious baby !" she screamed, snatching the baby from Corban's arms. "My darling! My lit tle angel darling !" And she fell kissing it in a way that set all the ladies round pulling out their handkerchiefs and ex claiming, " Did you ever!" "Nay 1 never !" " God bless you !" I never was so glad to sec a mortal being beforo." " Oh, you dear, delightful man!" she said, shaking hands with him. " I am so much obliged to you for taking care of my lamb. You see I got belated a mo ment, tho coffee was so dreadfully hot." Mr. Smithers' face had grown very long. " Then it is not Louis Roscoc's child ? .And it has not been stolen ?" he asked, dubiously. " I should rather think not," replied the mother, indignantly. " It is my own child, sir ! All I have left of the dear husband who gave up his life at Cold Harbor, two months after baby's birth." " I must heartily beg your pardon, sir," said Mr. Smithers. " I I that is, I didn't think. You see " "Mind your own business, sir!" said Mr. Corban, shortly; "and continue minding it the rest of your life that is my advice, sir." Mr. Corban aud Mrs. Bent, for that was tho young widow's name, got very friendly and familiar while the train was getting ready, and Mr. Corban took the next seat by her side with a real feeling of delight now. She was going on a visit to the very city where his business callod him ; aud he obtained permission to call on her and inquire about the baby. And in due time I cannot tell how it came about, for there is no accounting for things of this kind Mr. Corban con cluded that ho was tired of boarding Mrs. Gregg had become so neglectful of her boarders' comfort ; so he led Mrs. Bent to tho altar, and set up a . homo of his'own with a wife and baby. Go to him now and utter one word against women and babies, and you would get shown to tho door without ceremony. Imitation Dark Woods. Tho appearance of walnut, may be given to white woods, by painting or sponging them with a concentrated warm solution of permanganate of potassa. Th effect is different on different kinds of timber, some boing stained very rapidly, others requiring more time fur this result The permanganate is decomposed by th woody fibre; brown parioxyd of mangan ese is precipitated' which is afterward re moved by washing with water. Th wood, when dry, may be varnished, and will be found to Kemblo very closely the naturally dark woods.