:lltfii , t '. . ; Vl AN INDEPENDENT FAMILY NEWSPAPER. "X?mI&! r0. -VII. New Bloomfleld, Pa., Tuesday, May SO, 1873. ; No. SO. rfjloomfiflo fpnws. 18 rCDUSIIBD BVXHT TUESDAY MOniffNO, BT ' FRANK MORTIMER & CO., At New Bloomfleld, Perry Co., Pa. Being provided with Rtcam rower, and large Cylinder and Job-Presses, we are prepared to do all kinds of .lolH'rliitlng ill good style and at Low f rices. ADVERTISING UATKSl Tratuient 8 Cents per linn for one Insertion 13 . ' " twolnsertions 15 " " ' three Insertions Business Notices In Local Column 10 Cents per line. MFor longer yearly adv'ts terms will lie given upon application. Tried for Murder. A Detective's Story. I HAVE worked up many bard cases, and havo cornered many notorious criminals, but never, before or since, have I engaged in a case so complicated, or one which was so , hard to clear up, as that Btuart-Firstone murder case You know the Stuarts were very healthy and the old man had only two sons, Cecil and Gilbert; outlandish names they had, to be sure, but they were very proud of them, at least the younger one. As I said, he had' only two to bother him, and. to these, of course, lie gave the bulk of his property. Cecil was a cripple, the result of being dropped by a careless nurse in infancy. Gilbert, the younger of tho two, was early known to all the sports as a jolly good fellow, partly because he would al ways stand a treat, and would play bil liards and such games; and yet ho was nev er known to win when playing for a wager. In this manner he sustained his reputation of beine a free-and-easy fellow. But in the meantime his proporty was steadily do creasing until, at last, his share which, in the first place, would have been moro than enough for men like you and me dwin died down to an insigniticant sum, and he had to look in some other direction for money to pay his gaming debts. Ho bad often applied to his brother for aid, and - had often obtained it, together with good advice, which he promised to heed, but never did. Cecil was always very studious, and had surrounded himself with all tho old-fashioned books that he could hear of or obtain. And on account of his lameness this kind of company had a charm for him that we in good health would not feel. Cecil was always very lenient toward his erring brother; but at last healing from every source of his scrapes, he was com pelled, by a sense of duty, to resolve to . l-c fuse his application for aid. And it was not long before he bad to test bis resolu tion, for Gilbert, after an "all night" of it at a gaming saloon, came to him and beg ged for more money. Cecil Teasoned with him, and with tears iu his eyes begged that he would quit his wild habits. But all was of no avail, and he was compelled, much against his brotherly foelings, to refuse him the aid he sought. At this Gilbert Hew into a frenzy of rage and left the house, swearing that he would get the mon ey in some manner. As he was walking honeward, fueling anything but pleasant, he saw his dead' liest enemy riding with a young lady, to whom he bad , been paying attention for some time, but who now gave him the " cut direct." Maddened at this, be rush ed into a saloon near by, and calling for whisky, he swallowed a glassful in an in slant, then went home and called his bos om friend and counselor to him. Albert Firstone, the friend, was a broken-down gambler; a man who had spent a fortune on the turf, and was now nom inally acting as a jockoy for Gilbert Stuart, but, was in reality his ; confederate in schemes of robbery, and, as the sequel will show, of murder. These two friends were closeted togother for a long while, and time showed the tesult of their con ference, though I would not spoil my sto ry by revealing too toon their nefarious designs. Of course you remember the excite ' ment in the up-town circles when the new of Cecil Stuart's murder was circulated, and the astonishment of every one when it was known that his body had been found in tho coal collar of Roger Lyon's brown stone palace.1 Astonishment was inoreased manifold by the Intelligence that ' Roger Lyon had been arrested and charged with the crime of murder. Although but few wcro intimately ac quainted with Cecil Stuart, and a scarce ly large circle barely knew him us a very eccentric man, yet the crime being com mitted at the very door of their mansion made it seem the most startling one in the records of our city; and as there were many influential personages who loved Roger Lyon better than all their friends besides, and many a poor washerwoman who bless ed the day that he saved her bit of ground from the auctioneer's hammer to have him, the people's favorite, charged ' with such a deed, seemed to bo an outrago upon all classes of our citizens."' I well remember whon Lansing, Lyon's lawyer, called upon me and begged me to try my beet to clear up the mystery. At this time I had been in the detective force nearly four years, and of course, know the ropes pretty well. But for a month I confess that at times I was nearly ballled. t But I will come directly to my story. As a first step, I went to the cellar where the body was found, and, as I had ordered it to be left there after the inquest till I could examine everything myself, it still remained there. Being something of a doctor, I naturally examined tho wounds, and was satisfied they would not cause in stant death. But I did not roly upon my own medical skill in this, but sent for a physician, lie came a sharp fellow nam ed Denninc and probed tho wounds. One of them went closo to the heart, the other two were in tho lungs, evidently in tended to cause hemorrhage, which had followed, but not sufficient to cause death immediately. Roger Lyon's knife, with which tho deed had been committed, a silver-mounted affair, lay near tho wall. The doctor soon finished his work, and giving me a look that I interpreted in stantly, went out, taking Lansing with hitu, to whom he communicated tho re sult of his examinations. When they had gone I walked over to the wall and picked up the knife. As soon as I stooped over to do this I saw somo marks on the wall that appeared to have been made by a sharp instrument of somo kind. Whilo I was examfning these Gilbert Stuart and Albert Firstone ontered. I was about to call their attention to the marks when a sudden thought caused me to close my mouth upon the words that were almost on my tongue's end. After obtaining por mission thoy took the body to his late residence. As soon as they were gone, I again ex amined the marks, and found they were a combination of letters and figures ar ranged like this: B 1225 I) I copied them on paper, and then, tak ing tho knife with me, I went to my office down-town, to study out, if possible, the cipher I bad discovered. I had no doubt that it was made by Cecil, probably after he had been stabbed ; and I . was convinced tl-.at the cause of its being in cipher was, that no one would be able to notice it euough to obliterate it. But by what means could I obtain a key wag now the puzzle. , , . , Acting according to a suggestion of Lan sing,! went to the library, and for a week I rummaged its shelves for any work that mentioned cipher writing. I continued bringing home books until my dun looked more like a reading-room than a detective's office, whilo in their midst sat Lansing, searching every page, and, occasionally jotting down , something in a book by his side. ., , , , ,, . One day, ns I entered , with my arms full of books, I noticed a look of ( triumph on his face as his pencil flow over the pa per., , In answer to my inquiry . he banded mo a slip of paper upon which he had cop ied a table giving the relative , number, of each letter that is used in common English words. I looked it over, and waited for him to speak. In a moment he looked up and said : i . : . , " You see that (he table gives 'e' the prominence over others ; call 'o'ono. Then you see 't' is second best; call it two. Then run your eye up to the fifth in importance, and we have 'd' and 'I.' Take lost num ber five, and the figures, with the addition of the two letters that were expressed, read, 'aettl'd,' So you see I have trans lated the cipher in one way.V. .,.,, I admitted that it was a very ingenious translation, and was very much encouraged by it, although the word "settled" might not have any special relation to the enm iu hand. But 1 did not doubt that it was nearer the true rendering than any wo bad reached, and it convinced me that the figures were to be changed, In some way, to letters, before the cryptogram could be en tirely solved. About a week after this, Lansing was called out of the city by the sickness of his mother. As I parted with him at the depot, I told him to keep up bis courage, and to write out his defense, while I would attend to the remainder. During all this time the opposing counsel were striving in every possible manner to make an adamantine chain of evidence that should Immediately condemn the pris oner beyond any shadow of doubt. In this way nearly three weeks had passed away since the murder, whon I re ceived a telegram from Lansing informing me of his return to tho city. All this time I had been shut up in my office, working, it must be confessed, with little hopes of success. The day that I expected Lansing's re turn I went to the place where the body had been found, and examined carefully the marks on the wall, but I could find no other than the ones I had seen before, so I concluded that those wcro he only ones. As I stood looking at .them, however, I saw what seemed to be a piece of stone lying on tho floor of the cellar. As a de tective sees a cluo in everything, I picked it up, and found, to my surprise that it was a piece of putty. As soon as I discovered this I searched the whole wall to find where the piece camo from, and at last I discovered that some marks near the others were tilled with putty. I scraped it away, and the whole cryptogram appeared as fol lows : ST 1220 I) 124 A Firtl Oni (The letters and figures in italics had been concealed by putty.) I took another copy and went back to my retreat, leaving orders for no one to be admitted to the collar. Here, now, was anothor mystery ; and from the revelation which I had just re ceived, I was astonished into 'tho bolicf that Albert Firstone hud something to do with the crime But yet the cipher was still a mystery. While I was studying those 'new devel opments, Lansing came in. I grasped his hand with a pressure that made him wiuce, as 1 showed him the other letters I had found. He looked at them a moment, and then springing from his chair fairly shout ed "Firstone is the murderer, and his name is the key to the cipher 1" And showed me that the word "Fir stone in my copy was soparatcd in two words, and that line read : " A ' First one." By this key tho figures read, 'a b b e," and the cipher,with the addition to tho part concealed, read : Stabbed - by A. Firstoue, Wo did not either of us shout " Eureka" or anything else. But I looked at Lansing, who was trembling like a leaf, and said, "You ought to have been a detective." Having written out the cipher according to his translation, and being convinced that I had been outwitted, or something of that sort, by a lawyer, I leaned back ' on my chair,' and, I can't tell why, but I burst out into a hearty laugh, which Lansing soon joined. After my risible powers were exhausted, I rang the bell for the errand-boy, and sent a note like this to Denning: ' " Come up to my duu this afternoon, and bring some handy instrument for the de tection of foreign substances such as pieces of stone In blood. , , After sending this 1 prevailed upon Lansing to go with me to luncheon. . In an hour we returned, and found Denning, with a large microscope and several small vials. I immediately went to my desk, took out Roger Lyon's knife, and banded it to him, asking bim to soo if there were any pieces of stone la the blood stains which still showed on tho knife. lie knew my meaning in an instant. And , taking a vial be carefully rinsed a portion of the stains with its contents, letting the liquid run upon a glass slide, which he had placed in the sun's rays. ' . Impatiently we waited and watched for the evaporation of the liquid. It was soon all gone, when he placed the slide in the ndcroscopo and turned the powerful, sun glass upon it. On looking In the Jens, minute particles of stone, some stained with 'blood were plainly visible, thus prov ing that the knife had been used tp cut the stone of . tho cellar . after (he blood bad stained it. "That is the result you wanted to reach, is it not?" asked Denning, looking me in the face. . "Yes," I answered. Then taking a piece of paper I wrote for a moment, and then banded him what I had written, with a request that he would sign it, which he did. It was an affidavit certiflytng that, according to the best med ical knowledge, the deceased must have lived some time after tho fatal blow was received ; and that, from minute particles of stone which adhered to the blado, it must have been used by some one, probably the deceased, to cut stone with after the blood stains were on it. , Here, then, was the evidonce needed to prove the innocence ot the prisoner. I could not resist tho temptation to reveal it to Denning, and a happier trio could hard ly be found than wore assembled in that little down-town office. The trial was to commcuce in about a week, and of course wo were impatient for the time to pass. At last the day camo. The court-room was crowded, and many of the detective force were present. After somo other business, our case was called up. The judge asked " Guilty or not guilty ?" " Lansing, in the behalf of the prisoner, broke the silence with the words ' Not guilty," and added, " I would ac cuse Albert Firstone of the crimo charged upon ray client." , The looks of the wrotch as he made this bold charge carried the conviction of its truth to every miud iu the court room. The attorney then went on to say that he knew the charge he made was a serious one, but if he also knew that ho had suffi cient evidence to prove its truth. lie therefore asked the court to postpone the tiialof his client until the charges he had made were investigated. This request tho court readily complied with, and Albert Firstone, was ordered into custody. A preliminary examination was at once had, and a true bill was found against him, and in a few hours he was placed in jail to be tried for murder. In the meantime, Lyon, was roloascd on bail, until such time as a final disposition of tho case could be had. Tho next morning Albert Firstono, was found dead in his cell, and a slip of paper containing a confession of the deed, was found beside hiin. He also Implicated his friend Gilbert, as an accomplice, but that individual bad taken care to save himsolf from further trouble by flight. ' All this was very fortunate for us, for although we felt sure that we had caused the arrest of the guilty party, we might have had some trouble to convince a jury of the fact. ' As it was, Mr. Lyon's case was the next day called up, and a formal verdict of " Not guilty" was entered on tho records of the court, and as the real culprit was beyond the reach of human punishment, that was tho end of the Stuart-Firstono murder case. A Fish Story. ' A very staid and worthy old gentleman resided iu New Haven, . whom a successful mercantile career of more than thirty years bad place in independent, if not aflluent circumstances, but, through either custom or . a desire to add to bis already ample store, be still contained bis business and his anteprandial visits to the counting bouse. One morning the good wife bad postponed the matutinal . meal in conse quence of his absence, until that rare and valuable thing in a woman her patience- was well-nigh exhausted. At last, how ever, he made bis appearance; and without any excuse for his tardiness, but looking especially glum and out of humor, he sat bim down to eat. A cup of coffee par tially restored him, and opening bis mouth, he spake: , ' Most extraordinary circumstance, most extraordinary indeed I" ," Why, what do you mean, my dear?" demanded the lady. , , ,, , "Mean ?, Here have I bad to open the shop with my own hands, and after sitting lu tho doorway a full hour, waiting for. my boys, not ouo or tueni made bis appearanoe, and I was forced to close the shop again to co mo to breakfast I" . , " Good heavens !," exclaimed the lady with unfeigned horror, "you have not been to the shop r Why, it is Sunday IV , "Sunday!" returned he ; V Sunday Impossible madam; we did not have flnh for dinner yesterday I" ' DIVIDE ET IMPERA ! How Does a Llgbt Enalne Draw a Heavy - .Train. , riHE first locomotive was ' patented JL twenty years ago. Driving only one car, if lightly loaded it did very well ; but ' when the load it drew was heavier than its own weight, its wheels would not bite , that Is, thoy would turn round and round without advancing. Hence a cow-catcher was needed behind to guard , against cattlo running into it in the rear. It seemed at first impossible to make a less weight move a greater on an up grade ; and, for 27 years afterward, no one invented an engine ablo to draw three times its own weight. At tho present day, however, locomotives sweep along with trains more ponderous by IS or 20 times thun themselves. One means of gaining this vast increase of power for , the locomotive, was by dividing the load. It was found, that an engine poworless to stir five times its weight of 'freight when concentrated in one ear, could readily draw it when distributed in n dozen cars loosely shackled together. It . was heavier than each single car ; and it bad overcome tbo inertia of each one, a moment before it en countered the inertia of another. It was thus more than a match for each car taken singly ; and, pulling them successively, it drew after it a train as long as a comet, and the farther it ran the more strength it had to run further. Here was the story of little David over again. Ordinarily the stripling's weight, as ho told Goliath, was one hundred and twenty, but whenever ho got mad h weighed a ton. Moreover, the engine forced the momentum acquired by every car it had started, to swell its own potency in overcoming tho resistance of all that remained still motionless. "This railroad achievement (making a' light engino draw a heavy train), if not so common would seem miraculous ; mid it is analogous to an expedient for securing a farm which is equally simplo and equally efficacious. It is this : ' Divide your pay ments.' Buying, as 4,523 set tiers have bought of tho Burlington und Missouri River Road in Iowa or Nebraska, within the last three years, on ton years' credit, and six percent, interest, you pay in eleven instalments spread over half a life time, the first not due till the beginning of the third year. Besides, every acre you buy adds to your paying power, as the head way of every moving car reinforces the tractilo energy of the locomotive." In purchases made sinco 1873 nothing is due on the principal until the beginning of tho fifth year, and then only ono seventh annually. ' "Divide to conquer" is the maxim of Satan when he sows discord among breth ren, use it lor your good as Satan will lor your harm, and as Stephenson did to mul tiply tho magical forces of his immortal and world-moving locomotive. ' ' Get mad and weigh a ton." Own, land and nobody shall ever own you. Bo your own man 1 A rick pocket's Discomfiture. A woman who was riding in a Broad way omnibus, not long since, became aware that the "gentleman," on her right was feeling for her ' pockot under her cloak. For a moment a cold shiver passed through her, but as it was broad daylight, and as there were evidently many persons in the omnibus to whom she might apply for pro tection, she took courage, and recollecting that in the dress she wore her pocket had, much o i her previous annoyance, been sewed on the wrong side of tho skirt, con cluded to sit ' still and wait the course of events. After having- been sufficiently UJlLVlMllllcu ui. I.iu i:nuil.ui 11V1 IIVIU- bor to find the pocket, she turned to him add said quietly, " My pocket is on tho other ; side, sir." The man immediately jumped up, pulled the strap, and disap peared with mobtamusing rapidiiy,the cool ness of the lady having been too much for his artistio nerves. i i .. ! i i, ,1, A ..:., tv. , ... .. .. l . : ..l . Idle Girls. ! It is a painful spectacle in families Where a mother Is a drudge to see tho daughters elegantly dressed, reclining at their ease with their drawing, thoir music, their fancy work and their reading, beguiling themselves of the lapse of hours, dnys and weeks', but as a necessary consequence of neglect of duty, growing weary of their useless lives, laying hold Of every newly invented stimulant to arouse their drooping energy, and blaming their fato, when they dare not blame their God, for having placed t'lein wheie they are. These individuals will often tell yo'j, with an air (if aiiVcted compassion (for ho can believe it real), t hut poor, dear minima is working herself to death, yet no sooner do you propose that they should assist' her, than they declare she is quite in hor ele ment, iu short, that she would never be happy if she had only half so much to do.