l)c imc5, Nero Bloomficli), 3 A MCE GAME. An Editor Tells His Experience. riHIK delightful ninl tcnilcr gamo of I Base bull having broken nut with f resli virulence this season, tho following sketch is in order : The doctor said we needed exercise. Doctor knows, lie told us to join a base bull; we joined. Hough t, a book of in structions, iind for five days studied it wisely, if not too well. Then we bought n sugar-scoop hat, a red belt, a green shirt, yellow trousers, pumkin colored shoes, a paper collar, and a purple neck tie, and with a lot of other delegates, moved gently to the ground. There were two nine.--. These two nines were antagonists. The hall is a pretty little drop of softness, s-izo of u goose cgir. and five degrees harder than a rock. The two nines play against each other. It is a imict name, much like chess, only a little more iltusr than chess. There was an umpire. His position was a hard one. He sits on a box, and yells 11 foul." His duly is severe. I took the bat. It is a murderous: play thing, descended from J'oeahontas to the head of John finith. The man in front of me was a pitcher. He was a nice " pitcher" he sent, the halls hot. The man behind me was a catcher, lie caught it too ! Umpire s:iid u p'ay." Tt i s the most radical play I know of, this base ball. Sawing cord wood is moonlight rambles beside basis ball. So the pitcher sent a ball towards me. It looked pretty com ing, so I let it come. Then be sent an other. I hit, it with (he dub and hove it gently upward. Then I started to walk to' the first base. The ball hit the pitcher's hands, and somebody said he caught a fly. Alas ! poor fly. I walked leisurely toward the base. Another man took the bat. I turned to see how he was making it. and a mule kicked me on the cheek. The man said it was the ball. It felt like a mule, and I reposed upon the grass. The ball went on : Pretty soon there were two more flies, and three of us flew out. Then the oth er nine conic in, and us nine went out. Tills was better. Just as I was standing on my dignity in the left field, a hot ball, as the.y call it, came skyrocketing toward inc. My captain yelled " take it. !" I hastened gently forward to where the ball was aiming to descend. I have a good eye to measure distances, and I saw at a glance where the little aerolite was to light. I put up my bands. IIuw sweetly the ball descended 1 Everybody looked. 1 felt something warm in my eye. " Muffin !" yelled ninety fellows. " Muflln be d 1 ! I'ts a cannon ball !" Tor three days I've bad two pounds of raw beef on that eye, and yet it paineth ! Then I wanted to go home, but my gen tle captain said "nay." So I nayed and stayed. Pretty soon it was my strike. To bat !" yelled the umpire. I went, but not all serene, as was my wont. Tho pitcher sent in one hip high. It struck me in the gullet. " Foul," yelled tho umpire, lie sent in the ball again. This time I took it square and scut it down the right field through a parlor window, a kerosene lamp and rip up against the head of an infant, who was quietly taking its nap in his or her mothers arms. Then I slung tho bat, and meandered forth to the first base. I heard high words, and looked. AVhen I slung the bat, 1 had with it broken the jaw of the unipiro,and was fined ten cents. The game went on. I liked it. It is no much like fun to run from base to base just in time to be put out, or to chase a ball three-fourths of a mile down hill, while all the spectators yell "Muffin!" " "o it !'' " home run go nrount again !" or, " go around a dozen times !" I3aso ball is a sweet little uumo. When it came my turn to bat again, I noticed everybody move back about twelve rods ! The new umpire retreat d twelve rods. Jc was timid. The pitcher sent 'cm in hot. Hot balls in time of war are good. Hut I don't like 'em too hot for fun. After a while, I got a fair clip at it, and you bet it went cutting tho daisies down the right field. A fat man and a dog sat in the shado of an oak, enjoying tho game. The ball broke one leg of the dog, and landed, like a runaway engine, in the corporosity of the fat man. He was taken home to die. Then I went on a double quick to tho field, and tried to stop a hot ball. It came toward me from the but at tho rate of nine miles a minute. I put up my hands the ball went sweetly singing on its way, with all tho skin of my palms with it. More raw beef. That was an eventful chap who first in vented base ball. It's such fun. I've played five games, and this is the result : Twenty-seven dollars paid out for things. One bunged eye badly bunged. One broken little finger. One bump on the head. Nineteen lame backs. A sore jaw. 'One thumb dislocated. Three sprained ankles. Five swelled legs. One dislocated shoulder, from trying to stop hot balls. A lump the size of a hornet's nest on left hip, well back. A nose sweet jammed, and five uni forms spoiled from rolling in the dirt at the basses. 1 have played two weeks, and don't think I like the game. I've looked over the scorer's book, and find that I've broken several bats, made one tally, bro ken one umpire's jaw, broken ten win dows in adjoining bouses, killed a baby, broke the leg of a dog, mortally injured the bread-baskets of a spectator, knocked five of her players out of time by slinging my bat, and knocked the water-fall from a school inarm, who was standing twenty rods from the field, a quiet looker-on. I've used up fifteen bottles of. arnica limimcnt, five bottles of lotions, half a raw beef, and am so full of pain, that it seems as if my limbs were but broken bats, and my legs the limbs of a dead horse die.-1 nut. Something About Wheels. IlELTCIOUS journal relates the following incident about a sermon A which might probably be repeated with, profit : " A brother in the ministry took oc casion to preach on the passage in Luke 10 ' lie that is unjust in the least is un just also in much.' The theme was, that men who take advantage of others in small things, have the very clement of character to wrong the community and iudiduuls in great things, where the prospect of escaping detection or censure is as little to be dreaded. The preacher exposed the various ways by which people wrong others ; such as borrowing; by mistakes in making change; by errors in accounts; by escaping taxes and custom house duties; by managing to escape postage; by finding articles and never seeking owners; and by injuring articles borrowed, and never making the fact known to tho owner when returned. " One lady the next day met her pastor and said, " I have been up to Mr. 's, to rectify an error he made in giving me change a few weeks ago, for I felt bitter ly your reproof of yesterday.' Another individual went to Huston to pay for an article not in her bill, which she noticed was not charged when she paid it. " A man, going home from meeting said to his companion, ' I do not believe that there was a man in the meeting house to-day who did not feel condemned.' "After applying tho sermon to a score or more of his acquaintances, bo contin ued : ' Did not the pastor utter some thing about finding a 2""'1' f filter wheel ?' " ' I believe not, neighbor spoke of keening little things A. that He bad been found.' " ' Well, I thought he said something about finding a jtui'r of whrch, and I supposed he meant mo. I found a pair down in my lot a while ago.' "Do you know," said his companion, "whom they belong to? Mr. 15. lost them a shoit time ago.' The owner was soon in possession of his wheels." patient Yaiting. At t. lie Hotel in uairo, they are -Hotel in Cairo, they noted for despatch in filling orders for meuls. If a warm dinner is ordered, some time is taken to cook it. Not long since I stopped there, and sat down at the table with an elderly gentleman, who ordered a squirrel. I waited some time for my dinner, but was almost through and tho old gentleman was still waiting for his squirrel. 5ut his patieueo was at last exhausted, and he beckoned steward to him and said : " Mas the man got a good gun ?" " What man '" asked tho steward. " The man that's gone to shoot tho the squirrel I ordered," said tho old gentle man with gravity. Just then I choked, and did not hear steward's answer ; but I saw him disap pear and in a few seconds tho old gentle man was devouring his squirrel with ap parent relish. HOT Texas has $500 miles of railroad and wishes more. Iioiniincc of the Whisky Ring. A RECENT letter from Cincinnati relates the following strange story : A day or two hj;o a despatch from this city announced with telegraphic brevity the arrest of three persons charged with whisky and revenue frauds extending over two years and aggregating $!,00U,00. To New-Yorkers this despatch convey ed nothing of more than passing interest but. to the knowing few it was tho sequel to the story of marvelous success and ingenious triumph. Of success hav ing its rise in nothing, and of triumph over the most persistent efforts of reve nue officials for the e'etection of fraud. One of the persons named was Peter Schwab, a citizen of Hamilton, IJutler county, a flourishing m auufacturiii 2) miles north of C ncintiati. years ago Schwab was it poor and trious mechanic, earning daily oity, Seven wit h a growing iamilv. -aim Intle tiros peel in life beyond hard work and the ordinary competence of ar. artisan. The county was, and still is a Democratic stronghold, and Schwab one tho firmest adherents of unterrilied faitl i. In lSGbe was rewarded for bis party ilevotion by election to the office of con stable, and the sun of his prosperity rose. Ho or ganized a Itiug, and, by shrewd twisting of the law relative to Criminal Costs made his office pay him at the rate oi' 10,tiUU a year, whereas it had scarcely be en worth as many cents to his stupid predecessors, who had served warrants and chased horse thieves ever since the days of Syni uies's purchase, in ignorance of the rich mine they were neglecting. In short Pe ter managed to save about $10,000, and his success was only cheeked by pai-snge of a law expressly framed by the Legis lature at its next session to meet the pro pensities of like ingenious constables. Schwab had by nature plenty of nerve, and having acquired by art $10,000 cap ital, he determined to back his natural nerve with his artful capital. Ho put his money in his pocket, and went into Northern Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois. In a short time he was back home, with no money, but the holder of 100, 000 gal lons of whisky, on which he paid 10 cts. a gallon margin with his $20,000. Just in the nick of time for him, Congress clapped on the additional tax of $2 per gallon, and Peter found himself the win tier of a snug $200,000 on the 100,000 gallcins he held. Ambition grows by what it feeds on, and Schwab resolved to be the head of the greatest whisky ring in the country in fact, to be a ring of himself ami alone. Tho Great Miami valley in which ho lives is famed as one of tho fairest in the West, and the coun ty of IJutler stands in the census returns as among tho richest rural counties in the Union. Through this valley and county runs the Miami Canal, connecting the lakes at Toledo with the Ohio at Cincin nati, and 202 miles in its entire length. Along this lino are numerous distilleries. Schwab went to work quietly. He show ed great discernment in tho selection of his agents. H.is men never betrayed him, and ho always stood by them in case they got into any snarl with the rev enue officials. Indeed, it was for a time difficult to say whether ho was not run ning tho revenue department in that sec tion himself. He also had the rare gift of talking a great deal, and talking very frankly, and yet not saying anything that any body could turn to his serious disad vantage. A detective sworo in a trial before Judge Leavitt that Schwab once told him that if ho wished to " he could sit on a pile of Five-Twenties and cut tho coupons." That was all that tho de tective had to show for some weeks of hard trial to trap Peter, and ho couldn't swear what that expression really meant. It was the nearest any body ever came to getting any criminal committal out of him. But to return to tho distilleries. One by one a controlling interest in those along the line of tho canal was bought up, until this individual King conducted tho operations of most of them between Troy and Cincinnati. One by ono tho old managers of those distilleries were won over, or removed or replaced by new men. Tho lock-tenders and other offi cials, whoso duty it was to scrutinize the manifest of passing boats, wero taken from their posts and others substituted, through somo unseen and mysterious re commendation. Tho distillery watchmen and inspectors wero cither personal friends or men who could be trusted. In ono instance tho brother of a Collector of ltevenuo was appointed distillery watchman at $5 a day. This brother was notoriously dissipated had been for years and at the same tinio of his ap pointment couldn't have bought a pilot house with steamboats at only a cent a a dozen in the market. Yet he contrived in six months to save money enough out of $" a day to buy a snug property cost ing $3,000 a pretty financial trick worth study. During all this time of preparation our hero had few confidents. He worked alone in the dark. It is doubtful if the very men bo employed knew each other to be in his employ. There was no one to betray operations. When all was in readiness, the distillery fires blazed night Aid day. The distillery watchman of course saw nothing. They wero for purposes of justice; and justice is blind so how could they see. The inspec tors branded the barrels in tho night. The boats made their trips at night. The lock-tenders and canal officials were all justice men, and of course as blind as owls in the day time. The whisky was run into Cincinnati at night and from the boats had quick transit to the spa cious mo street warehouse. In eight months his sales were $1.7")0,000 the largest of any establishment in any line of business in the city. In two years from beginning operations be was worth at the lowest estimate $1,000,000, and was known as tho greatest whisky mag nate in the West, while his influence in the politics of Southern Ohio is felt and recognized. His story is almost a ro mance of sueciss. In the choice of his agents, tho secre cy of his operations, the depth of his plans, the magnitude of his schemes, the audacity and prudence demanded and displayed, there ;ire qualities developed sometimes wanting in the Ccnerals of armies. Of the many marvels of the Whisky Ring, his career has been the jnost. marvelous. It will hardly be ex pected that the present investigation of h.is operations w ill amount to much. Well paid agents are almost as poor as dead men at telling tales. A Moral Well roinfed. Sophronius, a wise teacher, would not. suffer his grown-up sous and daughters to associate with those whose conduct was not pure and upright. " Dear father," said the gentle I'hilalia to him ono day. when be forbade her, in company with her brother to visit the volatile hucinda, " you must think us very childish it you imagine that we would be exposed to dan ger by it. The father took in silence dead coal from the hearth and reached it to his daughter. "It will not burn you my child, take it." She did so, and be hold, her delicate white hand was soiled and blackened, and her dress soiled too. " We cannot be too careful in handling coals; even if they do not burn, they blacken. ,So it is with tho company o! the vicious." JCSf" A boy on a farm near Norristown lay down in a field not long since, and went to sleep. When ho awoke there was a certain numbness in his leg which surprised mm somewhat. Upon casting his eye along the afflicted member be was surprised to observe that a gigantic blaeksnake had succeeded in swallowing his big too, and was preparing to dispose or the entire boy in the same manner. Now, what wo want to call tho attention of tho society for the Prevention of Cru city to animals to, is this : Instead of lying still and encouraging the snake to satisfy its natural cravings, this depraved and degraded outcast of a boy jerked out his too and climbed suddenly over the fence. Tho suffering rcptilo was left there, not only discouraged by tho loss of its frugal meal, but sick at its stomach, and mortified at tho boy's outrageous con duct. Two men, one a philosopher, and tho other a fool, wero in the sprvice of the same master, and both slept in the same bed ; the philosopher lay on tho outside. Ono morning, having overslept themselves tho master coining with a whip, flogged tho philosopher, who happened to be tho nearest to his entranco into the room. " This I will avoid another time," said tho philosopher to himself. On the next night, therefore ho changed sides with tho fool. Iu the morning they again transgressed and the, master came to ciius tiso them, but reflected that ho had before whipped tho man nearest, ho thought it but just tho other should feel his displeas ure ; ho went to tho other side of tho bed and tho other blows fell again upon the poor philosopher; thus confirming the general truth," tho wisest cannot avoid their fate." In the vicinity of St. Joseph, Mo., thero are 408,049 fruit trees, cov ering 3710 acres. BANKING HOUSE (IF IIENIlY CLEWS & CO., (United Mates Treasury Buildings) Xo, 32 Wall Street, X. Y. Tf77luslncssof our House Is the same. In all respects, us that of nn Incorporate Bank. Checks and Drafts upon us pass through tho Clear -n. jr Holme Corporations, Firms, anil Individuals keeping Bank Accounts Willi us, cither in Currency or Colli, will be allowed Five 1'er Cent. Interest per annum, on all daily balances, and oau check at; sight .without notice. Interest credited- ami Ac count Current rendered Monthly, We are prepared at nil times to make advances . to our Dealers on approved Collaterals, t market rate. Certificates of Deposit Issued, payable on de mand, or afler fixed date. hearing Interest t the current rate, and available in till purlg of the country. Collections made promptly everywhere bi tin United Slates. Camillas and Europe. Dividend. and Coupons nroumllv Colleeled, We liny, sell, iind exchange all Issues of Govern ment llmids at current market prices. Orders executed for the purchase or sale of Oolif, and Exchange, also for State, City, and nil other llrst class security's. Special attention given to the negotiation of liail Iioad, City, and oilier Corporate l.uans. We are prepared to take Cold Accounts on terms the same as for Currency ; to n Ivc Cold on De posit, bearin;: interest and Kiitiject. to check at sight; to issue Cold Certificates of Deposit; to make Advances in Cold, against currency anil other collaterals, and to afford Hanking facilities generally upon a Coi.n Basis. 1 17 lm m Who has a House to Faint ? READY - MADE COLORS, KwiWn ns "ItAITIIOAIV Colors Ciinrfinlnn,! I he more economical, more durable and more con venient than any Paint ever before offered. A book entitled "I'laln Talk with Practical Paint, ers, with samples, sent free bv mail on uimiica. ! 'V",- i.m,. , , JIASL'liYS WHITON, Clohc White Lead and Color Works, 111 Fulton St.. .New rk. Established IKio. Beware of imitations. 1 17 3m W A T E n WHEELS. THE DUPLEX TURBINE. OT Equaled by any Wheel in existence. - Oreat economy of water. Tim nnhi u-i,ci KVilnliln to riii'lulilp xtn-tmiH. Adiintcd tu'uii kiii.Va of Mills. Illustrated l'amphlet with Useful Table's. scut free. j. j" STliVKNsnx. 4 1 ' ;im 83 Liberty St., N. Y. ii HOW SHALL W'K PAINT OVIt IIOUSKS.' By ,1. W. Jliisury. CI.. 22iip.. SI 5il. Free by mail, on receipt of price. Jev York. 117 3m. iuusury vv niton. 44 TTINTSOXIIOrSK T'AINTIXO," By J. AV, Jl L Masiiry. CI. 4Sp.. 40c. Free bv mail on re ceiptor price. AI ASUK Y & WIIITON, jS. Y. 4173m Mi 1 1J.fi IIw I made it In (! mos.with Stencils. 4 17 3m nam .mplcs mailed free. A. J. FULLAM, N. . JAMES IB. CLAHK, MAXLFAC'TUIiElt AXD DEALEU IN Stoves, Tin and Sheet Iron "Wsire New BlooiiiGclil, Perry co., Ta., K'FKPS constantly on hand every article usually . kept in a first-class establishment. All the latest styles and most improved IavlM and lii Ivlicn Stoves, TO mil's FITIIKIt COAL Oil WOOD! ITS-Spouting and Hoofing put tip in the most durable manner and at reasonable prices. Call and examine his stock. 3 1 Xew Carriage Maiuij'ueitory, O.n High Stiucet, East of Caiu.isi.b St., New Klooinficlil, renn'n. TIIK subscriber has built a larEe and commodi ous Shop on liinh St., Fast of Carlisle Street. New llloomlielil, l'a., where lie Is prepared to man ufacture to order Ofi r r i a g e s Of every description, out of the best material. Sleighs of every Style, built to order, and finished in the most artistic and durable manner. IT?. Having superior workmen, he Is prepared to furnish work that will compare favorably with the best City Work, and much more durable, aud at much more reasonable rates. S-I;EFaIKIXc: of all kinds neatly and prompt ly done. A call is solicited. SAMUEL SMITH. 31tf OTICE TO LAND OWNERS! After the 12th day of August of this year, (1870) suits will be liable to be broniiht in the Court, of Dauphin County for money due on lauds in Ferry County, unpatented. ttuFor informal ion relative to the rutentinc of lands, call on or address H. 11. UALISHAITH, Attorney-at Law & County Surveyor. Bloomlleld, March 8. 1870. tf. THE WORLD'S WONDER r Equalizing Oil ! THIS Oil for Ilheumntism in all its forms. Sprains, Bruises. Cuts, Wounds of all descrip tions. Cramp, etc., etc., etc., IS UNKQUALLKD by any now ottered to the pub. lie. It is for sale at 60 cents per bottle, by N011THE. liOLINGEK, Mlllerstown, Terry county, Pa. AND F. MORTIMER & CO.. New Bloomneld, Pa. Relief given almost Instantly, and rermaneiit cares elleuted. 4 19 3m