tljc fttmcs, Ncuj Bloomficlir, )rt. BANKING HOUSE OP HENRY CLEWS & CO., (United States Treasury Buildings) 1V0. 32 Wall Street, X. Y. rpiIK business of our House Is the samp, In nil respecls, as that of nn Incorporate Hank. lng House 1 ll'Ga "s 1,!ls" "-oubIi tlie Clear Corporations, Finns, anil Individuals kecpliiR ii?.m !;:"n with . either lu Currency o? Uold. will be allowed Five 1'er Cent. Interest per ?il.Wf""m,M ?" (.l,aily billl',i'". nnd ran check at HlRht without, notice. Interest credited and Ac count Current rendered Monthly. We are prepared at ll times to make advanms rto"r urs " "I'l'roved Collaterals, at market Certificates of Deposit Issued, payable on dc Mand, or after fixed date, bearing interest at tlie earrent rate, and available In all parts of the coi i m r i v n.ri'.,ll,icti?".'' m?!' I,rnn,l,,IY Pverywhern in tlie V n ted States, Oanadas and Kurope. Dividends and Coupons promptly Collected, We buy sell and exchange all Issues of Govern ment Ronris at current market prices. Orders execuh-d for t he purchase or sale of Hold SS;! fr ly,a all other We are prepaivd to take Gold Accounts on terms the same as for Currency : to receive (Jold on " ? ' i ' "K ln.VT.st, nm s,,,,J(ct " check at 1 i lHS,le ,'M ;"-tlN'ntes of Deposit; to 7. n V1 M T l"Kl- currency and other collaterals, and to afford Hanking facilities generally upon a iou Basis. 17 lm 'M-"ll,LS lllio has a House to Paint ? READY-MADE CO LOBS, Known an "rati be more ecnnonilcn iROAD" Colors, rilini-nntnfwl in al, more durable and more con- Tenient than anv book entitled PI j-Biin, ever oeiorc nllered. A a!n Talk with l'rw.ii,.,! ni., rs." with samples, tlm. Globe White Lead 1st.. New York. i, sent free by mall on applica- and Color Works. Ill Fulton imitations. 1 17 Kstablished 1835. Beware of 3iu WATER WHEELS. TIIE DUPLEX TURBINE. nj"OT Equaled by any Wheel In exlstcnco. It,i'ire.nt C(!l,,n1",my. of Wilter- The only HVeW f.f Mnu'0T,Mi'W1"V'?,"'"-'-,, A(lal,1,'1 '" kin.ls iIilIs- Illusttcd l'amphlet with tTseful Tables Kent free. j". k. STKV EXSON, 4 17 3m 83 Liberty St., N. Y. " TT,WSIL,WErAINT UB HOUSES.' , 1Jy J- W. Masury, CI.. 22(ip., $1 60. Free w'oVk'Tilm.0' Prle- MMur Chiton! TTITS ON HOUSE FAINTINO." By J. W. , Jl . Masury, !l. 4Sp.. 40c. Free bv mail on re celptof price. MASUIt& WIIITON, W173?n $114:0 LIow ma,'e!tln mos.with Stencils. , Samples mailed free. 173111 A. J. Fl'LLAM, N. Y. J AMES 33. CLAHK, MANCFACTUKEIl AND DEALElt IN Stoves, Tin and Sheet Iron Ware Kew Bloomileld Perry co.J Ta., 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 BUHN EITHER COAL OR WOOD! Spouting and Roofing put up In the most durable manner and at reasonable prices.- Call and examine his stock. 31 2Vew Carriage Manufactory, On nion Stiieet, East of (Cabliblk St., New Bloomileld, Fenii'n. THE subscriber lias built a largo and commodl oiis Shop on High St.. East of Carlisle Street, New Blooinllcld, Fa., where lie is prepared to man ufacture to order On, r p i ji g o s , Of every description, out of the best material. Sleighs of every Style, built to order, and finished in the nst artistic and durable manner. r . Having superior workmen, lie Is prepared to furnish work that will compare favorably with the best City Work, and much more durable, and at much more reasonable rates. AS" It MM IKING of all kinds neatly and prompt ly done. A call Is solicited. SAMUEL SMITH. 31tf JOTICE TO LAND OWNERS! ..u'liW 1ritll ;l!y ,f August of this year. (1870) Milts will be liable to be brought in the Court of . auphln County for money due oik lands in Ferry i.'ouiity. unpatented. " wij For information relative to the Fatentlng of I'inds, call on or addrexs H. II. (1 ALI1KA1TH. Attorncy-at l.aw County Survevor Bloomileld, March 8, 187u.-tf. " m"Cor' THE WORLD'S WONDER! Equalizing Oil I THIS OH for Rheumatism in all its forms, Sprains, Bruises. Cuts, Wounds of all descrip ,..,. tlons. Cramp, etc., etc., etc., ?, u?.';QUAM,i:D by any now ottered to the pub lic. It is for sale at SO cents per bottle, by NORTH E. BOLINGEIt, Millerstown, Perry county, Pa. AW F. MORTIMER fi CO., New Bloomileld, Pa. Relief glwn almost instantly, and permanent resclleeted. ' 4 19 3m lor tJu Bloomfleld Timet. CUPID'S PRAYER. BT WILSON, JR. MAT roses o'er thy path be strewn, And every kindly flower With fragrance that may prove as sweet As those In Eden's bower. May blossoms on thy pnth be found, And grain upon tliy fields t Mny fruit on every tree abound, And fields abundant yield. May ever in thy heart be found A virtue pure and high ; May sunshine In thy heart abound, And tmo love never die. May wo a happy couple be In Love's dear arms caressed ; May I In thee, and thou In me Be always happy blessed. O ! what a life of love and joy, And, O I what spirit free j A blessing, mny I find In you, A blessing, thou in me. O, Mollie let us ever prove True to each other here, That I may always call you " Love," And you may call me "Dear!" Don't think me green for writing this 'Tis " love" Impels me on ( My loving darilng ! dearest mips I You friend of George not John. TIIE DOOR IN THE HEART. A Good Temperance Story, "But far nwny up a great many pnirof wind ing stairs In her heart, was a door easily pass ed by, and on that door was written, Woman.' " And so it is with the drunkard j far away up a great pair of winding stairs in his henrt there is a door easily passed by, and we must knock nt that door once, twice, seven times, yea, seventy times seven, to open it." John B. Gougii. HE WAS an old man. Not so very old, either, for the wrinkles that marked his visage were not the autograph that time's finger had laid there, and the hand that placed upon the low pine table the well-drained glass did not tremble bo with the weakening that ago induces; yet very old and very wretched looked the sole occupant of that narrow room, with its red curtain, and floor stained with tobacco saliva, and au atmosphere abundantly seasoned by the bar-room in to which it opened. A hat it must have been intended for one half-concealed the owner's uncomb ed locks; and unmistakable evidence of ajamiliar acquaintance with brickbats Und the gutter did that same hat produce. Then there was a coat, out of whose sleeves peeped a pair of elbows in rejoic ing consciousness that they " could afford to be out." Add to these, reader, a tat tered pair of trousers, and yon have a picture of the wretched being who had just commenced his daily potations in the only " grog shop" he was allowed to enter. And yet the wretched, friendless man sat there, under the stupefying effects of his morning dram, had a heart, and far away up a great many pair of winding stairs in in that heart was a door easily passed by, and on that door, covered with cobwebs 'of time and neglect, was written, 'Man.' Hut nobody dreamed of this ; and when the temperance man had gone to him, ajid promised him employment and re spectabjlity if ho would " sign," and oth ers (well-meaning men) had rated him soundly for his evil ways, and ho had turned a deaf ear' to all these things and gone back with pertinuity to his " cups," eerybtjdy said old Ufll String's case was a hopeless one. Ah ! nonfe of these had patiently groped thyir way up the heart's winding stairs and read'the inscription on the hidden door there. Hut while the unhappy man sat by the pine tahlo that morning, the bar-keeper suddenly entered, followed by a lady with a pale, high brow, mild, hazel eyes, and a strangely winning expression on her mild face. The man looked up with a vacant air of astonishment, as the bar keeper tendered the ludy a scat, and point ed to the other, Buying, "That's Bill Strong, ma'am," and with a glance that indicated very plainly his wonder at what she could want there, left her alone with the astounded and now thoroughly sober ed man. The soft eyes of the lady wandered with a sad, pitying expression over old Bill's features, and then, in a low, sweet voice, she asked : " Am I rightly informed ? Do I ad dress Mr. William Strong V Ah, with those few words the lady had got farther up the winding stairs and nearer the hidden door than all who had gone beforo her. " Yes, that is my name, ma'am," said old Bill, and ho glanced at his shabby at tire, nnu actually tried to hide the elbow that was peeping out. It was a longtime since he had been addressed as Mr. Wil liam Strong, and somehow it sounded very pleasaut to him. " 1 am very glad to meet you, Mr. Strong," responded the lady ; I have heard my father speak of you so often, and of the days when you and he were boys together, that I almost feel as if we were old acquaintances. You surely cannot have forgotton Charles Morrison ? " Oh, no. Charley and I used to be great cronies," said old Bill, with sudden animation, aud a light in his eye, such as had not shone there for a long time, ex cept when rum gave it a fitful brilliancy ! Ah 1 the lady did not know, as perhaps the angels did, that she had mounted the stairs and was softly feeling for that un seen door; so she went on : "I almost feel,Mr. Strong, as if I could see the old spot upou which your home stead stood. I have heard my father de scribe it so often. The hill, with its crown of old oaks at the back of your house, and the field of yellow harvest grain that waved in front. Then there was the grass before the front door, with the huge apple-tree that threw its shad ows across it ; and the old portico, with the grape-vine that climbed over it, and the white roses that peeped in at bedroom window, and the spring went shining and bubbling through bed of green mint at the side of the that the the house. Old Bill moved uneasily in his chair, and the muscles around his mouth occa sionally, but unmindful of this, the lady kept on in the same low, melting voice : " ' Many and many were the hours,' so father would say, 'that Willie and I used to pass under the shadow of that old apple-tree playing at hide and seek, or loll ing on the grass and telling each other the great things we meant to do when we became bigmcn, while Willie's blue eyes would sparkle wjth hope and happiness; and when the sunset laid a crown of gold on the top of the oaks on the hill, Wil lie's mother might be seen standing in the portico, with her snowy cap, and checked apron, and we would hear her voice calling, ' Come, boys, come to sup per.' " One after another the bis, warm. blessed tear.s went rolling down old Bill's cheeks, and falling on the pine table. Ah ! the lady was at the door then. . " ' I was always at home at Willie's,' father would say, ' and used to have my bowl of fresh milk and bread, too; and when these had disappeared, Willie would draw his little stool to his mother's feet, and she would tell him some pleas ant story of Joseph or David, or some good boy who afterward became a great man, and then she would part WUfts's brown curls from off his forehead, tfnd say in a trembling voice I can never forget, ' Promise me, Willie, when you are a man, and the gray hairs of your mother are resting in the church-yard yonder, you will never disgrace her memory.' And Willie would draw up his slight form, lift his blue eyes proudly to his mother nnd say, ' Never fear, mother, I will make a good man, and a great one, too,' and then, after we had said our evening prayers, we would go contented and happy as the bird that nestled in the old.opje tree, to rest. Then, just as we were sinking into eome pleasant dream, we would hear a well-known footfall on the stairs, and a kind face bending over would inquire if we were nicely tucked up. It is a long, long time,' father would say, ' since I heard from Willie, but I am sure he has never fallen into any evil ways. The words of his mother would keep him from that.' " Hap ! rap ! rap 1 went the words of the lady at the door of old Bill's heart. Creak! creak! creak! went the door on its rusted hinges. The lady could only see the subdued man bury his face in his clasped hands, and while his frame shook like an aspen leaf, she heard him murmur among childlike sobs, " My mother ! . oh, my mother !" With a silent prayer of matiKiuincss sue resumed : " But there was one thing my father loved to talk of better than all the rest. It was of the morning you were married, Mr. Strong. ' It was enough to do one's eyes good to look at them,' he would say, ' as they walked up the old church aisle ; he, with his proud, manly tread, and she, a delicate fragile creature, fair as the or ange blossoms that trembled in her hair. I remember how clear and confident Wil liam's voice sounded through the old church, as he promised to love, protect and cherish the bright, confiding crea ture at his side, and I knew ho thought, as ho looked down upon l.er, that the winds of heaven would never visit her face too roughly ;' and then thy father would tell us of your pleasant home, and of the bright-eyed boy and the fair-haired girl that came after a while to (gladden it; and then, you know, he removed to another part of the country, Mr. Strong, and lost sight of you." Once again the lady paused,for the ago ny of the strong man before her was fear ful to behold ; and then, in a lower tone she thus spoke : "I did not forget the promise I made my futhcr previous to his death, that if ever I Visited his na tive place, I would seek out his old friend. But when I inquired for you, they un folded a terrible story to me, Mr. Strong. They told me of a desolate and broken household ; of a blue eyed boy that a father's heart might so well delight in, who had left his homo in disgust gust and despair, for one on the homeless waters; of the gentle, suffering wife, who, faithful to the last, went down with a pray er on her lips for her erring husband, broken-hearted, to the grave, and of the fair haired orphan girl, who followed her mother in a little while. Oh ! it is a sad, smt. story I have heard of my father's old friend." "It was II it was I that did it! I killed them !" cried old Bill, lifting his bowed head, and gazing on the lady, every fea ture expressive of such wild ngony and helpless remorse, that she shuddered at the despair her own words had caused. Wide, wide-open stood the door then and the lady passed in. A soft hand was laid soothingly upon old Bill's arm, and a voice full of hope murmured " Even for all this there is mercy. There is a redemption through the atoning merits of Jesus, and you well know your first step toward it. Sign the pledge. In the name of the last prayer of your dying wife, and of the child that sleeps by her side, I ask you, as your friend, will you do it?" " I will," said old Bill.while he brought down his closed hand with such force on the rickety pine table that it rocked be neath it; and a gleam of hope lighted up nis ieaiurcs, as lie seized the pen and paper the lady placed beforo him, which paper contained a declaraton. binding all who signed it to obstain from the use of intoxicating beverages ; and when he re turned it to her in bold legible char acters, there lay written beneath it the namo ot William Strong. There was an expression, almost ludic rous from its intensencss of curiosity on the barkeeper s physiognomy, as the lady, after her long interview with old Bill, passed quietly through the shop and tne expression was not lessened when old Bill, a few moments after, walked through without taking another glass of grog ; snd he never passed over the thresh hold again. "Not Lelting." There were two little sisters at the house whom nobody could see without loving, for they were always so happy to gether. They had the same playthings but never a quarrel sprang up between them, no cross words, no pouts, no slaps no running away in a pet. Ou the green before the door, trundling hoop, playing with Kover, helping mother, they were always the same sweet tempered little girls. " You never seem to quarrel," I said to them one day ; " how is it you are always so nappy together f J. hey looked up, and the oldest answered. "I'sposo 'tis cause Addie lets mo and I let Addie." I thought a moment; " Ah, that is it." I said, "she lets you, and yon her; that's it." Did you ever think what an apple of discord " not letting" is among children ? Even now, while I have been writing, a great crying was heard under the window. I looked out. " Gerty, what is tho matter?" " Mary won't let me have her ball," bellows Gerty ;" well, Gerty wouldu't lend me her pencil in school," cried Mary, "and I don't want she should have my ball." " Fie fie ; is that the way sisters should treat each other t " She shan t have my pencil," muttered Gerty; "she'll lose it." " Anou will only just lose my ball," rctoi! Mary, " and I Bhan't let you have it." The " not letting" principle is down right disobligingness, and a disobliging spirit begeta a great deal of quarrelling. These little girls, Addie and her Bister havo got the true secret of good manners. Addie lets Rose and Hose lets Addie. They are yielding, kind, unselfish, always ready to oblige each other; neither wish es to have her own way at tho expense of tho other. And are they not happy ? O, yes I And do you not love tlem already ? "Fetch on Your Rate." AVERY GOOD STORY is told of our German friend. Adam Bcnler. wlw keeps a tavern in AlWhrnv ln rather gloomy evening recently, whea Adam was in rather a gloomy humor (as ne seiaom is,; a stranger presented him self about bed-time, and asked to stay all night. "Certatnlv." said Adam, min h rather seedy looking stranfrer. " Tf take breakfast, it will be yonst one -dol lar. "But I have no money," said the man. " I am dead broke, but if you will trust me " " Ah," said Mr. Eenlnr. " T dnn't lit-. that kind of customer. I could fill mine house every night mit dat kind, but dat won 1 neip to me run dis house." " Well," Said the strnno-or nffor pause, "have you got any rats here?" " Yes." replied Adam. " vnn K lieve we have. Why the place is lousv uuii ueui i "Well." reioined tho nn "T'llli you what I'll do. If you let me have lodging and breakfast, I'll kill all your rats to-morrow." "Done," said Bepler, who had long been desperately annoyed by the number of old Norwaysthat infested his premises. So the stranger, a gaunt, sallow, mel ancholy looking man, was shown to bed, and no doubt had a good sleep. After breakfast, next morning, Mr. Bepler took occasion in a very gentle manner to re mind his guest of the contract of the previous night. " What ! Kill your rata ! Certainly," said the melancholy stranger. " Where are they tho thickest ?" " Dey are putty dick in do barnyard," answered Adam. " Well, let's go out there," said the stranger. " But stop I Have you got a piece of hoop-iron ?" A piece about fifteen feet long was brought to the stranger, who examined it carefully from one end to the other. Ex pressing himself entirely satisfied, at length, with its length and strength, he proceeded to the barn, accompanied by Mr. Bepler and quite a party of idlers, who were anxious to see in what manner the great rat-ki!ler was going to work. Arriving there the stranger looked around a little, then placed his back firmly against the barn-door, aud raised his weapon. "Now," said he to Adam, "I am ready. Fetch on your rats I" How this scene terminated, wo are not precisely informed. It is said that, al though no rats answered the appeal of the stranger, Mr. Bepler began to smell one pretty strongly at this juncture, and he became very angry. One thing is certain, and that is that the new boarder was not at Adam's table for dinner, nor for any subsequent meal. He had sud denly resolved to depart, probably to pursue his avocation of rat-killing in other quarters. Taking a Drink. The different manners of proposing tu take a drink is well shown in tho follow ing : The sentimental method of asking a person to drink, is in the formula, "Sup pose we shed a tear." The operation, strange as it may seem, is identical with "taking a smile." The id n fpn,.ini toast in some places, weich seems to con tain considerable truth, viz: " Well, here is another nail in my coffin." On the Mississippi river they take a very practi cable view of the ceremony, and say to their friends, " Won't you come and wood up ?" Thus implying that strong pota tions supply the fuel of life. In cholera times a false notion prevailed that imbibi tion would prevent 0110 from taking that disease, and a popular style of invitation was, " Let's disinfect." This may as well bo offset by a mention of tho West ern bar-room salute, " Won't you hist La some pizen ?" The last form, however, is almost too strictly correct and literal in its character, to be appropriate in this ar ticle. Circumstances alter Cases. Boy. Do you want a dog skin ? Tanner. Was it a fat dog. . Boy. -Oh yes, he was a fat dog. Tanner. was he very fat ! 1 Boy. Oh yes, sir, he was worry fat. Tanner. Verv fat. eh ? How fnt vnn, ho? Boy. Well, he was the fattest dog' I ever eee. , .1 Tanner. Oh if ho was so ve.rrv ft his skin is not good, 1. ' Jioy. Well, he wasn't aich an Hlmi1 fat dog after all. .