fill m8rrcjcr.j AN INDEPENDENT FAMILY NEWSPAPER. .;- j" ?SiSr,tLS!'' Vol. VII, Now Bloorafleld, Pa., Tuesday, August 5, 1873. TVo. 31. llt IjUoomfiflir hnics. " " IS rUDUBITED EVERT TUESDAY MORNINO, BY MOETIMEB & CO., At New Bloomfleld, Terry Co., Ta. Being provided with Steam Tower, and large Cylinder and Job-Presses, we are prepared - to do all kinds ot Job-Printing lu . , , ; good style and at Low Trices. ADVEItTlSING BATKSl Traruimt 8 Cents per lino for one Insertion 19 . tt t twolnsertlons 15 " " "three insertions Business Notices in Local Column 10 Cents per Hue. , M.For longer yearly adv'ts terms will be given upon appliuatioiH CAUGHT IN HIS OWN TRAP. "1 (TATTERS had come ton crisis bo JJ.JL tween myself and landlady. My bill was sadly in arrear, and Mrs. Rig woodie, having passed from frowns to words, and from words to importunity, had ended with a pre-emptory demand of pay ment. ; i Not being ready or having the ready to comply with her requirement, I had nothing for it but to vacate my room and surrender my night key ; the former being wanted, I was given to understand, for Mr. O'Bosh, an old customer of Mrs. Rig woodio's, whom she was under a standing promise to accommodate, and whose arri val was hourly expected. Mr. O'Bosh, I may here say, was Mrs. Rigwoodie's Mrs. Harris a convenient myth one who never came, but was always coming when a delinquent boarder was to be got rid of. I had come to the city to be au author ; but my efforts with the pen to scrape ac quaintance with fame and fortune had not proved over successful. Down to my last dollar, with no im mediate prospect of another, and wearied with a long search for a cheap boarding house ; whose terms were not " Invariably in advance." I sat me down in an out-rft-tho-way restaurant, to face a tough beefsteak and the still tougher question of what was best to be done. ' A grave looking gentleman sat opposite, dividing his attention between a bottle of wine and the evening paper. ' " What a bungling sot these detectives are," said the gentleman, whose tone left it doubtful whether he spoke to himself or me. " Why," he continued answering my lookr " here's that bank robbery, nearly a week old; yet, with every clue to guide them, and the stimulus of a handsome reward besides, those who should have been hot on the scent within an hour, still stand gaping with their Angers in their mouths. Things were managed dif ferently in my day. " You were a detective once,"t I ventured to surmise. He nodded. "This reward is it very large?" I asked. ' " Five thousand dollars," he answered, " for the recovery of the property and cap ture of the thief." V " 'Twould be a quick way to make mon ey," said 1, "if one knew how to go about it." . "Would yon like to go halves in mak ing the effort ?" he queried summing me up with a scrutinizing glance. " I fear I should be of little service," I returned ; " I have no experience in suoh matters, and am almost a stranger in the oity." ' if The very thing to render your aid in valuable. This crime is evidently not the work of a novice, and to your profession al thief every detective's face is as famil - iur as a pal's. The mere sight of one puts the game to flight With you it would be different. Under skillful guidance you could work unsuspected. Now, if you'll put yourself in my hands for thirty-six hours, I beliove we can bag the prize. What say you is it a bargain ?" It was not exactly the road to fortuuo , I bad set out in, but it looked like a short er cut at starting. At any rate, my cir cumstances were desperate, and I saw no better chance to mend them. " I accept your oiler," 1 said. " Come along, then," said the stranger, rising; and having settled our scores, we left the place together. In the street he took my arm, and after a long walk through uufreqtteuted by- streets, my companion called halt before - sombre looking house, into which be ad mitted us with a latch key. He led the way up stairs to a shabbily furnished apartment, in which a dim light was burn ing. We seated ourselves, and my companion was beginning to unfold bis plans, when a knock was hoard at the door. He hold up his finger in token of silence. The knock was throe times repeated in a peculiar manner, when my host got up and cautiously opened the door. A man stood outside with his hat pulled over his eyes. "Excuse me a moment," said my com panion, stepping out and closing the door. I heard low and earnest voices in the passage, but only distinguished the words, " Train for Botton at ten San Franeiteo train at half part eleven." Boon there was a sonnd of departing foot-steps, and the door of the room open ed, and the proprietor entered. " I've no time to explain further now," he said. "Meet me at the depot in time for the ton o'clock train to Boston." " But I have no money," I answered. " I'll see to that," he replied. There was little time to lose, and I lose to go. . . . " Would you mind carrying this satch el ?" said he. " I have a short Btop to make . by the way, besides having a valise to look after." I received from his hand the article in question, which was small and light. In the waiting room of the depot my attention was drawn to the clicking of a tulcgraphio instrument. I had once . been an operator, and bad learned to read messages by the ear. It is said eaves-droppers rarely hear good of themselves, and the presont case, though listening was involuntary, proved no ex ception. Judge of my amazement when I heard clicked off in language to mo as plain as speech, a full description of my person and everything pertaining to me, down to the satchel in my hand in which latter, it was said, would be found a portion of the bonds stolen from the Bank ! I did not stay to hear what followed, which was doubtless an order for my im mediate arrest. ' ' The truth at once flashed upon' mo. I had been made the dupe of the real cul prit, who had sought to cover his own re treat by a ruse, of which I was to be the victim. ' I walked rapidly, avoiding public thor oughfares, and had gone a considerable distance before venturing to stop a police man, and inquire the way 'to the Chief Detective's ollice. Following the dlreotion, I lost no time in presenting myself to that functionary. " I think I have discovered the robber of the Bank," said I, as coolly as I could. " It'll be money in your ' pockot and a feather in your cap if you have," said he, eyeing me curiously, "It's very queer, though," he added, looking from me to a paper before him. 1 proceed od to give a minute narrative of what had occurred since my falling in with the pretended ex-detective, express ing the opinion that the latter would be found taking the half-past eleven train for Ban Francisco. "The telegram for your arrest," said the Chief, " was sent by myself, on infor mation coming from an unknown source, but which I did not fool at liberty to ne glect. Your coming directly here speaks in your favor. But let us see what is in the satchel." It was speedily opened and in it was found a package of missing bonds, a de scription of which was in the possession of the authorities. In giving them up my late acquaintance had sacrificed but little, s they had been so advertised that there would have been danger in disposing of them, while putting them into my posses sion was a cunning device to divert suspic ion from himself to me. A carriage was called, and, in company with the Chief and two subordinates, I was taken to the depot, which we reach ed a few miuutes before the departure of tli train. Snugly esoonced in a sleeping car, a whole section of which he had taken for himself, we discovered the object of our search, in whom the officers reoognized an old acquaintance. In his possession was lounu au me stolen money ana se curities, exoept those he had placed in my hands. ' I was formally detained till next morn ing, when Mrs. Rigwoodle and several of her boarders the formor being kind enough not to mention my little delin quency toward herself gave so good an account of mo, and proved so clearly that I was quiotly at homo on the night of the robbery, that I was discharged on the spot. I got the five thousand dollars, quit courting the Muses who but a Mormon would think of paying attention to nine sisters at once? married Nancy Walker, gave up poetry for the pork business, and have found, if not fame, at least something like a fortune in it. A LI rely rostofflcc. An amusing exporienco which recently befell a special agont of the Post Office Department illustrates the ideas which postmasters in the far West entertain re garding the dignity and importance of their position. The , agent, . commonly called "Mac," while officially visiting va rious officosin Montana Territory for the purpose of correcting any irregularities of postmasters, stopped at Iron Hood. Going into the postollice he found the room divi ded into three sections first a saloon, next the postoflice, and the last a faro bank. The mail bag was brought in, a rough looking customer opened it and emptied the contents on the floor. The entire crowd got down on their hands and knees and commenced overhauling the letters, among which were several registered, and selected such as they wanted.. After they were through, the remaining letters were shoveled into a candle-box and placed on the bar. The special agent, thinking the office needed a little regulating, asked the bar-tender, who had received and distri buted the moil, if. he was the postmaster. He answered, " No." "Are you the assis tant .postmaster?" "No." "Whore is the postmaster?" , "Out, .mining." "Where's the assistant postmaster ?", " Qone to Hell's Canyon, and by thunder Bill Jones has got to run this office next week; it's his turn." The government official then asked who he was, and de manded the keys of the office. The bar tender coolly took the candle box from the bar, put it on the floor, and gave it a kick, sending it out of the door.saying : " Ther's your post office, and now git." The agont says:. "Knowing the customs of the country, I lost no time in following this advice, and got." The office was discontinued. Hnukes In India. There aria two ways of accounting for the superabundance of snakes in India. One is by tho superstitious veneration of the Hindoos for the most deadly serpents, which leaves them unmolested, and leaves them to multiply without limit. Some such result as this must also have been realised in ancient Egypt, where all sorts of reptiles were worshiped. Josephus tells us that Moses was in the military service of Pha raoh before he quarreled with the poten tate. In one of his expeditions against the Nubians his army was so harrassed by the serpents, which swarmed the line of his march up the Nile, that he lost more men by snake bites than from the darts of the Nubians. Indeed, his army, according to this authority, on one or two occasions was nearly put to route (' by venomous snakes. ' " - The other and more convincing reason for the vast number of snakes in India is the scarolty of hogs in a oountry where the use of swine's flesh is prohibited as an article of food. Neither the Hindoo nor the Mohomedan religion permits the eating of pork in any form. The country is thus deprived of a most efficient auxiliary in the destruction of these pests. The hog is the mortal enemy of snakes. He kills them be cause he hates them, and devours them when dead. When the increase of this useful animal is encouraged, he compen sates society for its protection by thus abating a harmful nuisance. But the Hin doo despises the hog while he patronizes the snake, and gets rewarded for bis pre ference by bis race being stung to death at the rate of twenty thousand annually. tW A clairvoyant trio, two women and man, have been traveling in the South, pre tending to cure epizooty by the " laying on of hands." They practiced on a Kentucky mule the other day, and the firm has since dissolved. tW A young lady at Troy, while engag ed in conversation with a gentleman, spoke of having resided iu 8L Louis. "Was St. Louis your native place?" Well, yes, part of the time," answered the lady. KIT A merchant being asked how large an advertisement he wanted in the Enquir er, replied that they might ."put him in about three pints of type." The Professor's Courtship. A CORRESPONDENT of the Indian apolis Herald tells the following an icdote of Prof. Foster, who filled, with ability one of the chairs of tho Faculty of the colloge in Knoxville, Tenn. . . Prof. Foster was well educated in the sciences usually taught In college, but his Ignorance of the' common affairs of lifo rendered him a remarkable man, furnish ing a rare subject for the study of human nature in one of its multiform ' phases. Being advised by some of his friends to get married, he with childlike faith and sim plicity, accepted their advice, and prom ised to do so if he could find a young lady Willing to have him. They referred him to a number of the best young ladies in the city, any one of whom, tbey had no doubt, would be willing to accept his hand and make him happy, no was one of tho most kind-hearted of men, as void of guilt as of offence, and an entire stranger to the forms and ceremonies of modern courtship. IIo couldn't see the necessity of consuming a year or two in popping the question " Sally, will yon have me ?" So he , wont that very day to the residence of the nearest young lady who had been commended, and being welcomed and seated in the family circle, as he always was wherever known, ho at once made known the object of his vlst by saying in a clear and distinct voice: " Well, Miss Sarah, my friends have ad vised me to got man-led, rccomending you and a number of other young ladies to me as suitable persons, and I have now called to see if you are willing to marry me." Had an earthquake violently shaken the premises, the household could not have been more astonished.' - Like a frightened roe, Sarah started to run, when her mother caught her, and said : , , " Why, child, don't bo frightened, the Professor won't hurt you." Being again seated, a deep' blush suc ceeded the paleness which had been caused by the startling announcement,' and she rallied enough to say to the Professor that as his proposition was entirely unexpected, she must have time to consider the matter. This he granted, but said : ' . " As I am anxious, in' case of your re fusal, to see the other young ladies to-day, I can wait only one hour for your answer." Knowing the . worthiness of the Profes sor, the matron took her blushing daught er up-stairs for consultation, ' while the father was left to entertain his proposed son-in-law as best he could under the novel circumstances. Of course the discussion of the sudden proposition between Sarah and her mother was private, and cannot be given in full. . The ' most essential points of it, however, were told afterward. It was readily admitted that be was entirely worthy of Sarah's band and heart. " But, mamma," said Sarah, " how would it look to other people for me to have to give an answer in one short hour only sixty minutes Jump at a hasty chance and to think how my young friends would jeer and laugh at me. Wouldn't they tease me to death ? No, ma, I can never face the music" " But stop my child, and listen to mo. There is not a young lady in the city that would not jump at the offer made you. Let them laugh. Girls must have some thing to laugh at, but it won't hurt you. Tell him yes, emphatically. If he were a stranger whose antecedents were unknown to us, however prepossessing in person and manners, or profuse in his professions of love, I would withhold my consent. But we have long known him, his moral char acter is without reproach, be is amiable, kind hearted, and sincere, and a flno schol ar, with an honorable position in the col lege, and he makes no false pretences. You know just what he is. What more do you want?" "But, mamma, I don't know that he loves me, he hasn't even said so." " O, well, daughter," never mind that. Generally ; those who are the loudest in their professions of love have least of the pure article " You can teach him by ex ample to love you. It is far better than precept." Leauing her head upon her mother's bosom ; Barah said, in a submissive tone : " Well, ma, just as you say I'll tell him yes ; but although the hour isn't half out, we'll not go down until the last min ute of the hour." At the expiration of the fifty-ninth min ute they returned to the Professor and papa, Sarah still blushing, but more calm Uian before. Then, with a firmness that astonished herself as well as her pa rents, she extended her hand to the Pro feasor and said : "Yes, sir, if papa consents." He gave his consent without hesitancy, and it was readily agreed by all that the wedding should take place a week from that time. Then the Professor with his usual calmness, conscious of having done his duty, withdraw to report progress to his friends.' ' Woll In duo tirao the Profossor wont to the clerk for his license.' The clerk in formed him that the law required a bond and security in the sum of f 1,2(50, to be void on condition that there was', no legal objection to the proposed union of the two persons named. The Profossor very prompt ly replied r " Oh, never mind the bond, Mr. Clerk ; I will pay f 1,100 down, and will hand you the balance in a day or two." After further explanation by the clerk, the Professorsoon complied with the law and obtained his license. ' ' , t . . . ; . At the appointed time the wedding came off in the best style In tho city, and ' the company enjoyed the occasion with the occasion with the greatest zest. The hours flew like humming birds. As the 1 clock struck twelve the Professor picked up his hat and started for his boarding bouse! His principal attendant, surmising his at tention, followed to the front door and in formed him that matrimonial' etiquette re quired Mm to stay and board and lodge at the house of his father-in-law until he and1 bis wife wished to live by themselves ; that he would be furnished with a room adjacent to Sarah's room, in order that, if she happened to got thirsty, he might be near to get her a drink of fresh water. In the morning the bride and groom were greeted with the smiles of the family, to gether with those of some early callers, and inquiries made if they had slept well. Both responded that they had never slept sounder in their lives, he adding with his childlike simplicity, that he was happy to say that Sarah did not call for water during the whole night. That last remark was quite a riddle to her, and she looked cu rious, but said nothing, no one venturing to ask him to rise and explain, ne did not know it was a joke played on him until the attendant told it as such to the company. Finally the happy couple went to house keeping, and never were man and wife more heartily congratulated and more highly esteemed than they ' ' were. They were the favorites of the city. Never was wife more lovely or husband more kind and devoted, but he didn't know anything about providing for the larder, only as Sarah taught him. One little incident may suffice to Illustrate. She' told him one day to get some rice. Ho went immediately to the store and told the clerk he -wanted to get some rice. "How much?" inquired the clerk. "Oh, not much." said the Pro fessor, " I reckon three or ' four bushels will do for the present." The clerk was very sorry to say tbey had not so much on hand, but that they would soon have more. The clerk persuaded him to try to make out for a few day with fifteen or twenty pounds. Sarah and the olerk were not the only ones who laughed over the incident. He never called for the three or four bush els afterward. If the Profossor and his wife are still living they must be well stricken iu years, and if they see this brief sketch of their early lives and find any errors in it, they will pardon the writer. . . 1 - Illggln's Dog. i , It was a great many years ago, at a camp-meeting, that Brother Biggins, a good man but passionately fond of dogs, came in one day accompanied by a bktck-and-taa hound. Somebody asked him to address the congregation, and he mount ed the stand for that purpose, while his dog sat down on his haunches immediate ly in front, looking at his master. In the midst of the discourse, which entertained ns much, another dog came up, and after a few sociable sniffs at Brother Ulggln's dog began to examine the hind leg of the latter with bis teeth, apparently for the purpose of ascertaining if it was tender. An animated contest ensued, and one of the congregation came forward for the purpose of separating the animals. His efforts were not wholly successful, ne would snatch at the leg of Higgin'a dog, but before bis hand got there the yellow dog would be on that side, and would probably take an incidental and cuusory bite at the deacon's hand. Brother Hig glns paused in his discourse acd watched the deacou. Then he exclaimed, " Spit in his eye, Brother Thompson; spit in the hound's eye !" Brother Thompson did, and the tight ended. " But I just want to say," continued Mr. Kiggius, " that outside of the sanctuary that dog of mine can eat up any salmon-eolored animal iu the State, and then chaw up the bones of IU ancestors for four generations without turning a hair! YouundersUnd me?" The services pioceeied.