l)c GLims, New Bloomficlu, pa. "Blees Patent" NOISELESS, LINK MOTION, ' " LOCK-STITCH Sowing Machine Challenges the World In Perfection of Work, Strength and Beauty of Stltcli, Durability of Con structlon and Rapidity of Motion. Call and exam Ine, and for Agencies and Circulars, apply AT PRINCIPAL OFFICE, 623 Broadway, New York. 281y-a NflVFLTV NEW THINO, forgentlemen's iiwj ujjll, use only. Sent by return mall on receipt of 30 cents. Agents wauled everywhere. Address, L. MUNKOK & CO., 31 3m 1'. O. Box 3201, N.Y. City. TiATirES Tlio Eugenie Is the most Useful ar JUJuu tide ever Invented for your use. Circulars free. Mrs. Morgan, P. O.Box2i;i8,N.Y,3m frENTTiEMF,N The GBANT Cioak Tip is a VJJJllXJJiJlUil novelty and a pleasure. bamples 30 cents. A. Grant,P.O.Uox4390,N.Y.-tfm $1140 How I made it in 6 mos. with Stencils. 1AUU Samples mailed free. A.J.Fullam,N.Y.Biii A GREAT OFPEeT.- HORACE WATERS, 2Vb. 481 Broadway, New York WILL dispose of One Hundked Pianos, Me lodeons and Organs, of six llrst class ma kers, including Chickering & Sons, at kxtkkmei.y LOW MUCKS FOR CASH, DURING THIS MONTH, or Will take from 85 to 825 monthly until paid. 4 17 ly a LONGEST ROOF In the United States Is on Einek's Sons' Factory Huston, Fa., one third of a mile long, and is cov ered witii READY ROOFING, CHEAP, DURABLE and easily applied. Send for circular and samples to the manufacturers. READY ROOFING CO., 4 23 lya No. 64 Courtland St. New York. JiOllING'S DOLLAR BOX OF INITIALED FRENCH NOTE PAPER Mailed to you on receipt or 81. Address 1 mo 4 41a LORINU, Publisher, Boston.Mass, COOO MEX WANTKDI lOO PElt CENT, prollt on three best things out, !0,000 club and combination premiums to agents. Catalogue and terms free. Address lmol 41a M. L. BYHN, 80 Cedar St., N. Y. listen to the Mocking Bird. The Prairie Whistle and Animal Imitator can le used by a child. It is made to imitate the song of every bird, the neigh of a horse and the bray of an ass, the grunt of a hog, birds, beasts and snakes enchanted and entrapped by it. Is used by Dan Bryant, Charley White and all tho minstrels and warblers. Ventriloquism can be learned In three clays by Its nid. Sent anywhere n)ii re ceipt of 10 cents ; 3 for 25 cents: 7 for 50 cents: 15 for 81. Address T. W. VALENTINE, lino 4 41a Box 372 Jersey City, N. J. 85 FIRST PREMIUM IMPROVED FAMILY $5 Sewing Machine. 812.50 clcarprollt per day. 875 per week. $300 per month made easy by any lody or gentleman introducing this Genuine and Original Old Favor ite. Willi its many new and practical additions, making the most complete combination of valua ble and useful improvements evereilected in any one machine. The embodiment of extreme sim plicity, elliblency and utility, entirely dlllerent In model and design from any low priced machine. It is the most serviceable, elegant and reliable Family Sewing Machine ever invented, gives per feet satisfaction wherever introduced, lias re ceived Premiums. Stood the test of ten years, and is fulls approved of by every family who have them In use. Is noiseless, makes tho strong and beauti ful Elastic Ixick Stitch, with wonderful rapidity and certainly. Sews anything a needlo will go through, from the lluest to the thickest fabrlc.ilrm and neat, wllh case. Uses all kinds of silk or thread direct from the spool : is improved with new and self-acting feed, spring tension, self-guider, and uses the adjustable straight, needle, perpen dicular motion, with powerful lever action. Pos sesses ail the good ipialillcs of tho best high-priced machines condensed, without their complications or faults, Samples of sewing sent free on receipt of stamp. For certlllcate, &c, see Descriptive I'anidlilets, mailed free. A thorough practical sewing machine for family use. Trilmne. A very strong.reliable machine, at a low price. Standard. Tills beautiful sewing machine is one of the most ingenious pieces of mechanism ever invented. Jtemocrat, tin. Worth many times its cost to any family. AT. V. M'ei'kln. It is quite a new machine with Us many late improvements, and sews with astonishing ease, rapidity and neatness. Jlrimti-llt-an, N" Y. Single machines, as samples selected Willi care, for family use, with every thing com plete, scut to any part of the country per express. j.ai A,.-,, in Buuun wuiHii'ii iox, nee, on receipt 01 price, 8500. Sale delivery of goods guaranteed. Forward casli bv registered loiter, or P. o. niimev order, at our risk. Agents wanted, male or female every where. New painpelcts containing extra liuerai iiunicenicnts, sent tree. Address Family Sewing Machine Co., Olllce 86 Nassau Street, New York. . ; JAMES 23. CLABK, I MANUFACTURER AND Wu.HU IN Stoves, Tin and Sheet Iron -Ware New Blooinflelil, Terry co., Pa., KEEPS constantly on hand every article usually kept in a Urst-class establishment. All the latest styleB and most Improved Parlor mid Kitchen Niovcs, . TO BURN EITHER COAL OR WOOD I A. Spouting and Roofing put up in the most durable manner and at reasonable prices. Call ami exainineJUs stock. 8 l Use Dr.. Frederick's Ltyhtning lie lief, THE MEDICAL WONCfER ! , Cures all Pains arid Aches In from 1 to 10 Minutes. B- Sold by Druggists and Country Store Keep rrs, unu r . mwu i i.H r.n s uu., new jtioomneiu, Pa. J. L. SINGER Si CO., Wholesale Agents, Newport, Perry County, Fa, l'ltlCE 60 CENTSi J'EIt ttOTTXK. 4 41 For The Bloomfleld Timet. AUTUMN. The beautiful summer days are past, With their bright and, lovely flowers j We no more hear the robin's chirp, Nor seek the shady bowers. But lovlicr far than Summer's reign, Or even May'g sweet treasure, Is the Aiitumo, as Its fruit It brlugs In loads of fullest measure. Resplendent views now greet the eye On every hill and mountain j And a song for the Autumn green Is sung By every stream and fountain. What luscious fruits it ever brings Its apples, pears, and peaches, It always strews like golden ore For litem my taste now reaches Then hail to the Autumn ! lovllcst queen I She rules with smiles and gladncBB ; Her realm is robed in gorgeous hues, And naught on earth knows sadness. Myhtle. Millcrstown, Oct., 1870 Linos on the Death of Lewis W. Or wan. We paitcd at tho portals, At the open gato of death j Where lie step'd across the thrcshhold, And yielded back his breath. Tho little bark lay moorinjf, Cold Jordan's stream beside ; Her sails all ti ini'd and ready To wait him o'er tho tide. Oh Death I thou cam'st so early, To take my all away ; There's not one comfort left me, I can but weep and pray. The little ones cln round me Our children his and mine; I trace their llttlo sorrows, In sad and broken lines. Deal gently ! O deal geWy, For thou'rt tho widows God j Then while they look to thee in prayer, O Fatncr! spare the rod. E. M'd. Bookevili.e, Iud., Oct. 16, 1870. Blushing. "VYHAT is there more mysterious J T than a blush, that a single word, or look, or thought, should send that in imitable carnation over the cheek liko tho soft tints of a summer sunset. Strange is it also thut the face only and that tho human face is capable of blushing ; that the hand or foot docs not turn red from modesty or shame, any more than the sock or glove that covers them. It is the face that bears the angel's impress ; it is tho face that is Heaven. The blush of modesty tinted woman's face when she first awoke in Edeu's sunny land, and still lingers with her pure daughters. They caught it from tho rose, for nil tho roses first were white; but when Evo plucked one of the buds, seeing her own fair face, more fair than the flowers, blushed and casts its reflex on her velvet cheek. The face is the tablet of the soul, whereou it writes its actions. There may be traced till the intellectual phe nomena, with a confidence amounting to a moral certainty. If innocence and pu rity look outward from within, none tho less do vice, intemperance, and debauchery make their indelliblo impressions on it. Idiocy, rage, cowardice, passion, all leave their traces deeper than the virtues of modesty, truth, chastity and hope. Even beauty itself grows more beautiful from the pure thoughts that arise within it. ' tSrOn a certain Sabbath eveniug, some tweuty-five years ago, a reckless, ill dressed young man was idly lounging under the elm trees in tho public squaro of Worcester. lie had becomo a wretched waif on tho current of sin. His days wore spent in tho waking remorso of a drunkard ; his nighta were passed in the buttooneries ot tho ale houso. As he sauntered along, out of humor with lumselt and all mankind, a stranger laid his hand upon his shoulder, and in cordial tones said : " Mr. Gough go down to our meeting at tho town-hall to-night." A brief conversation followed' so winning in its character that tho reckless youth cousontod to go. lie went ; he heard the appeals there made. With tremulous hands he signed tho pledge of Total Ab stinence. (By God's help, ho kept it, and he keeps it yet. ' Tho poor boot-crimper, who tapped him on the shoulder (good Joo Strutton) has lately gone to heaven, but the youth he saved is to-day the fore most of tho reformers on the faco of tho globe. Sometimes when I listen to the thunders of applause that greet John B. Gough on the plutform of Exeter Hall or tho Academy of Music, it seems to ma, I am heariug the echo of that tap on tho shoulder, and of that kind invitation under tho ancient elms of .Worcester, " Ho that winneth souls is wise." Distance Lends Enchantment. WHO originated this expression I know not, but a truer Baying never emanated from tho mind of man. It applies not only to space, but to time, to the past and to the future. Iq looking at a range of mountains in the distance, you do not sco the difficulties of ascent ; you eo tho ups and downs, tho blue peaks rising here and there, the valleys between, but all looks smooth and easy. It is only by a near approach that we find the jagged peak, tho frightful precipice, the darksome cavern. Even the valley so lovely, in the distance, may be a loath some swamp. The thirsty traveler in the desertseesiu the distance the long-sought-for water beautiful lakes with lovely islands dotting their surface rivers of pellucid waters gliding gently along, on whose banks grow the lofty palm, hastens on, to find tho lovely lakes and rivers changed to sand the same weary burn ing sand ho trod before. Perhaps he sees rivers in the distance yet, and keeps on and on till he drops from exhaustion. So with us. In youth we look forward to the realities of life, and distance covers them with such rose-colored tints that we build castles in anticipation, and never doubt their reality. It is only as we grow to manhood that we find the precipice, the caverns, tho swamps : that the centle eminenco we saw in the distance is of fearful height, the climbing of which may take years of toil, and the beautiful lakes and rivers of youth are nothing but sand. How many there are who sink in the swamp of blighted hopes who chase the mirage of happiness iu the desert till they die ! But climb, climb the mountains, ye adventurous ; you may not reach tho top, but you will not sink. Dig dig in' the desert, and if you go deep enough you will surely find water: and after a toilinsr, useful life, when old age comes creeping on, distance will lend its charms to cover up tho rough spots of life, and as you look back the mountains will agaiu ap pear smootli and pleasant. While the streets of the golden city will grow the more beautiful as you draw near to them. Scenes in Japan. A STREET called the Tokedia is tho Broadway of Yeddo. It is twenty miles long and is crowded throughout. There are no vehicles iu use in Japan, and the pavements extend from one sido of the street to the other. No provision is made for the passage of carriages, om nibusses or wagons, for there are none in existence, and persons on foot take pos session of the whole highway. The en tire metropolis is built of wood, and one dwelliug is a representation of all. A Japancso house at the first glance resembles a child's toy house on a large scale. The floor is raised about two feet above the earth, and there is a covered porch in front resting upou tho bare ground. After entering the porch you i step up into tho house, always leaving your shoes behind you. It is considered a very great breach of propriety to enter a dwelling without removing one's boots. As they wear only sandals, covered with a leathern thong, which they can shuffle on pr off in an instant, this custom is of but little moment to the natives, but foreigners find it a very troublesome one. This answers as a depository for shoes, and, in passing a house, tho number of visitors may be kuown by counting the number of pairs of sandals on the porch. WThcn tho walls of a houso aro up it consists of one largo room, which is then cut up by partitions, which aro nothing more than sliding screens that close up into each other in a fashion that admits of one apartment being divided into a dozen distinct ones instantly. , There aro no chimneys attached to the houso, and they contain no beds, chairs or tables. The floors are covered with a series of clean bamboo mats or cushions, each six feet by three and nicely bound with red or blue tape. They are stuffed with light wool or moss and are as soft and yielding to pressure as tho heaviest Brussels vel vet. Ihese mats fit in with each other as regularly us the squares on a chess 1 i -1.1 1 1 n , Doaru, ana mo wnoie noor is Kept as clean and is dusted as often as the ma hogony sideboard in the houso of a Dutch burgher. No fleok of dirt is ever allow ed to rest upon the polished surfaco of tho matting, and to step upon it with a pair of boots would bo a greater insult than to make a footstool of a seven hun dred dollar piano. : The family sit upon the matting all day, with thoir legs bent under them, in a shape that would givo any foreigner in curable paralysis in fifteen minutes, and they sleep upon it at night. A Japanese pillow is a curiosity in its way. It is nothing but a rocker of a cradle, broad enough to stand alone, with a semi-circu lar depression on the upper side. The- Japanese lie full length on the floor, place not their head, but their neck in the crescent-shaped hollow on tho upper sido of the pillow, and rock themselves to sleep in a few minutes. Carrier Pigeons and how they arc Trained, BALLOONS and carrier pigions are among the prominent agents of communication employed in tho Franco Prussian war. The carrier pigeon is larger than tho common pigeon meas uring about 15 inches in length and weighing about one and a quarter pounds. An appendage of naked skin hangs across its bill. Its value is estimated according to its shape and size. Its strong, instinctive love of home is so valuable, and fits it for its functions as a carrier. The birds are regularly trained when young, their trainers taking them at first short distances from home and then turning them loose. Those that fail to return homo are considered stupid and rejected as valueless. Thoso that return borne are then taken to greater distances, progressively increased from two miles to a thousand miles. Tho good birds return home with unerring certainty. The birds are sometimes kept in a dark place for Borne hours before they are used and sparingly fed, but abundant ly watered. The paper on which the niessago is written is carefully tied around tho upper part of tho bird's leg, but so as not to impede its flight. An old English bal lad and a lino from Tasso imply that the original way of suspending the despatch was from the wing or arouud the neck, but the above method is that now in use. The employment of tho carrier pigeon dates frcm remote antiquity. The rapid ity of the flight of this bird is almost in credible. Audubon speaks of passenger pigeons shot iu the neighborhood of New York with their craws full of rice, which tho birds could not have procured nearer than tho rico fields of Georgia and Carolina. Tho same naturalist ob serves that as their power of digestion is so great that they entirely decompos3 food in twelve hours, tho birds which were killed in the neighborhood of New York, must have traveled between three and four hundred miles in Bix hours. When the annual trial of the prize for the best carrier pigeons was decided at Ghent, in 1833, twenty-four birds which had been couveyed from that place, were thrown up at llouen at fifty minutes past nine o clock in tho morning. I he dis- tanco is ono hundred and fifty miles. Tho first pigeon arrived in Ghent in ono hour and a half, sixteen came in within two hours and a half, and three in the course of the day. Four were lost. Tho rate at which tho first bird flew was nine ty miles in tho hour. " When thrown up the bird rises, and when it has reached a good height will at first fly round and round and then make off,' continuing on tho wing without stop or stay, unless pre vented, until its well-known home is reached. Taddy Hayes and tho Turtle. In New York, a man was carry a live turtle along the street, when along came an Irishman, followed by a largo dog. The countryman tried by gentle words to t tho son ot Emerald to put his finger in the turtle's mouth, but he was t6o smart for that. ''; " But," says he, " I'll put my dog's tail in , and seo what tho basto will do. , 4 lie immediately called up his dog. took his tail in his hand and stuck it into the turtle's mouth. Ho had scarcely got it in when Mr. Turtle shut down on the poor dog's tail, and off the latter ran at railroad speed, pulling tho turtle after him at a more rapid speed than it hud ever traveled before. The countryman thinking his day's work would bo thrown away if tho animal should run at that speed, turned with a savago look upon tho Irishman and exclaimed: " Call back your dog." Patrick put his hands into his pockets, threw his head to ono sido, winking and then answered with a provoking sang troid : " Call back your fisk" Xtey 1 hero are two directly opposite reasons why some men have poor credit one because they're not known, and the other because they are known. OUR DUTCHMAN. Joins tho Sons of Temperance and Backslides. He CAN you pelief dat ereat vonder ven I dell mit you dat I didn't trinken a single trop of anyding stronger as tea und milk for more ash apout a hole veek ? De reason of it vhy dat ding ish so Tas pecaus I ish now shoined mit dat Son of Demperance Society, und dat affair don't allow no memper vot pelongs mit it to trinken no peer und vhisky und such kind of dings. I dinks you must be ex- donished mit me ven you hear dat I could do mit out mine peer for so long a dime ash a hole veek. Yet still dat ish bo, for vhy ish it dat I vill undertook to te ceive you mit a lie in a ding of dat kind ? I dinks not. After I ish signed mine name town mit do pledge, und vas a memper mit dat demperance dings for a few tays, I find out dat de orter vas maken readio to haben deir grand annual barado shust to tantalize dem peer salune und de vhisky tealers a driflo. So pesure ven I hears apout dat dings, I dinks it ish nodings more den mine tudy dat I must durn out mit dat barado affair. Last Tuestay ish do dime ven dat barade vas to dooken blaco, und ash I didn't haben no more den doo tays to got mincself readic in, I vas haben plenty to do I pelief so. Ven Duestay morning comes arount, I tress mincself ub mit a glazed cap und a ledder pelt mit a tin cup tied on und pesure I haben also mine best plack bair of ban daloons on und a vhite shirt. Den I buys den cents vorth of round toenuts mit a hole in, and string dem on a vire to hang arount mine neck. Dat dings ish for eating burposes ven I ish marchen mit dat barade. I know all apout how dis ding goes, und pesure I unterstand how to brcpare, for dat's not do fursd broces sion vot I durn out mit und vhy ish it dat I didn't know somcdings ? Veil I guess so ain't it? Ven I pelief dat I vas ash near readic ash I can got, I startzen for Proad straus. vhcro dat durn out starts from. For de fursd half a hour dat marching goes blcnty nice ; but ven a hole hour was ub, den I pegins to got dry mit mine mouth ; und for spite, do more I marchen de do tryer I got, shust on acgount dat I vas in the lino mit a demperance barade. Den I pegins to got mad dat I ever shoined in mit a ding . dat vont allow a man to drinken shust a driflo glass of peer. I holt out for a leetlo vhile longer, und den I can't stand dat dcuitation ash I go past so many lager peer salunes. So I dinks I can slip avay from the rear end of dat barado mitout anypody daken nodice of me, so ash I can sneak into a beer blaco and saw vot dime it ish. I goes into a beer saluno and I finds out vot I vants ; still dat makes me more dryer ash before ; den every beer saluno blace vhere ve go by mit I stopped in mit me, und by do time I ish marchen mit dat barado a odder half hour, I got so tizzy mit mine head ,and crooked mit mine legs, dat veu I undertook to keep ub mit dat durn out in do rear, I can't hardly do dat. Veil, dat Marshall leader comes pack vhere I vas, for by dat dimo blenty beeples ish hollering pad dings mit me. So dat Marshall dells mo it vas petter, for the sake of tho ortcr, dat I vill left de lino und go lay town somevheres undill I I soper ub a drifle. Now, ven I under dook to convince him dat dar ish nodings de niatder mit me, I look arount, und dat parade ish far avay off. So dat Marshall leaves me und runs avay to catch nb mit de line. Veil, so I dry to run to catch up mit it to, only mine legs get all tangled ub togedder, und I ish failed town so hard ash 1 can't dell. Pesure a pig crowd gets arount, und I ish picked ub ' and carried to a toor-step. ' ' JOSy At one of tho railroad depots iu the viciuity of Elizabeth, intending trav elers were recently amused in this wise. A merchant purchnsed a ticket, and then addressed tho agent : " Sraugcr, I want to leave my dog in this 'ere offico until the train starts. I'm afraid somebody will steal him." " You can't do it," said tho clerk. " Take him out,',' "Well, stranger, that is cruel : but he's you're both dispositioned alike, and kinder company tor you. " Take him out !" roared the clerk. . ." Well stranger, I don't think your'o honest, and you want watching. Here Dragoon,' said ho to the dog, 'sit down here, and watch that fellow sharp !' 'and turning on his heel, said to the clerk. ' Put him out, sir, if ho is troublesome.' The dog lay thero till tho train started, watching and growling at every move ment of tho clerk, who gave him tho bet ter part of the office j