THE TIMES, NEW BLOOMFIELI), PA., MAltCll 20, 1877. MARRIED IN THE DARK. TIIH CASK of Mary K. Knox and n young nmn named Merrltt, near New York, h a very singular one, ami ,vct I lie duHt covered legal records; of Michigan tell of a ease Btlll more ulti gular. Miss Knox was engaged to a young man named Merrltt, the day was set for the nifpllalH, they drove away together and were married, and now Merrltt vows lie wan not the bride-groom. Sho vows that he wan, hut cannot prove It, and both make out a pretty good ease. One may well nrgue thnt he ought to know whether he ever married a certain young lady or not, and she said lady may well argue that she ought to know the man who rode to the clergyman's with her, stood up beside her, made his responses In due form, and drove her hack home. These arguments arc what mystify the Knox case. Now for one more singular: About twenty years ago there lived In central AKchlgan a curious old Ileuedlct named Dodsworth. At the age of fifty he married a girl of twenty, plump and hearty, and when the burden of (sixty years bore him down, his wife was only half his age, Dodsworth was noted for his peculiarities, but the climax came when he found himself on his dying bed. He was worth about thirty thous and dollars, and lie hadn't a blood relative living, so far as lie knew. He wanted to leave his property to his wife, as the pair had lived very happily, but yet ho could not leave it without dis playing pome of his peculiarities in the provisions of the will. Rome old men display a mean spirit when making ilieir wills, and draft in a provision cul ling the wife oft" with a shilling if site marries again. The old man wasn't of that (.lamp. His young wife was good looking, vivacious, fond of society, and it was folly to suppose she would mourn for her ' late husband' any great length of time. Therefore Mr. Dodsworth turned heel on tho usual custom, and sild In his will : " In crtf eniy wife C'ella does not take unlo herself another husband within thirteen months from date of my burial, all bequests otherw ise made in this will are to revert to the State of Miehigan,to be used for building and furnishing a home forold women." Whether C'ella was pleased or dis pleased at this provision deponent saith not, but the old man had not been under the sod six months when the widow was said to be looking out for another man. If it was singular for the dying Dods 'I worth to urge his wlfeto marry again, It was still more singular that lie should desire the ceremony to be performed un der the following circumstances, viz: " And it is made, Incumbent on said Cclia Dodsworth tliat In taking ti new husband the marriage ceremony shall lie performed in the big barn on my farm, on the H road. It shall take place at ten o'clock In the evening, on the main floor, without lights of any description, with all doors shut, and a free invitation shall be extended to all. The clergyman shall stand in the stables and tho bride, and the groom on the main floor, and the principal parties to the ceremony shall be dressed in black throughout. The widow announced her Intention to faithfully obey In spirit and letter, the will wag probated, and the twelfth month had scarcely passed before she issued an Invitation for the public to at tend a wedding at the big barn. Just who the groom was to lie no one could positively assert, as the widow had been keeping company with a widower, a bachelor and two young men, and as far as any outsider could Judge she loved one as well as the other. Being ' good looking and talented, ancUhavlng a for tune behind her, It was not strange that she should have a number of suitors. She seemed to enter into tho spirit of the affair with great zest, as also did the minister ; and to further mystify the people in attendance, the bride entered the barn alone at one door, the groom alone at another, and no one knew that the minister had arrived until his voice was heard In the stables. There were at least two hundred peo ple present, and each one understood that even a striking of a match would break the will. Many jokes were passed , and considerable confusion existed, but Ht length the minister announced that all was ready. The ceremony was gone through with, and at Its conclusion, the afikir having been a" process," a rush was made for the bride ; she was kissed by a hundred men, and was-then carried home, a distance of a mile and a-half,in a big arm-chair. Now comes the mystery. When the lady was set down at her own door the widower, the bachelor and the two young men claimed to be her true .and lawful husband. None of the crowd could say who was the lucky man, the minister was at sea and the bride herself eetned to Lave doubts. The widower was the man of her choice, but in the confusion be could bave been bustled aside, and be did affirm thut an attempt was made to choke blm and get him out of the barn. The bachelor vowed that she had promised to marry him, as also did both the young men, and each one was sure that ho held tho widow's plump hand and was legally married to her. The four men had a flght,but that didn't mend matters. The crowd ducked two of them In a creek, but that did not decide the question. Just how it would have terminated had not the widower keen a man of nerve no one can tell, ns the other three had already appealed to the law, when the widower stepped In and took his place as hustVaud, and settled with the others for two thousand dollars each. One of the young men, now over forty years old, and having all the wife he wants, (she weighs two hundred and thirty pounds), is living In this city, and, during an Interview had with him not long since, lit solemnly and earnest ly assured your correspondent that he was legally married to the widow Dods worth that night In the big barn. An other of the parlies lives In Clinton county, and he has time and again as serted that he Is the woman's true and lawful husband, so help his (lod. The bachelor is dead, but were he alive and kicking, he would renew his oft-repeated protestations " 1 married her, by gum ! and, by gum, I ought to have her !'' Old Hundred. Til 18 unique psalm tune flrstapprared in John Calvin's "French l'sallcr," published nt Geneva in loll? as the "proper tune" to the 134th Psalm. Gulllaume Franc was musical editor of this work. He was a master of music, yet all that will be found in ordinary musical history regarding htm is that he was an "obscure musician of Stras bourg, of the sixteenth century." The Church owes him not a few of her finest melodies, A melody in Ijiither's great psatler, published from l"i:U to 15(H), seems to have suggested the ideas of this inimitable chorale. One of Luther's; hymns of eight unequal lines, which was set to a melody of the Moravian or Waldensian early Church, contains the elements of the Old Hundreth. Hut these were reset and remodeled by Franc, who left Strasbourg and became "can teur" or precentor to Theodore Howl at Lausanne. He subsequently settled and died at Oeneva, leaving as his Imperish able monument tho music, of tlie"French realtor." The music was afterward adapted to the Hundreth Psalm In the first "English Psalter" ever published, edited by John Calvin, and printed for the use of the congregation of English speaking refugees at Geneva In 1550, of which at that time John Knox was minister. The musiclal editor of the psalter was Claude Uoudimel, of Rome, who suffered martyrdom at Lyons at the time of tho massacre of St. Barthol omew because he had set the English psalms to music. This Genevan-English psalter was reprinted in 1503-4 by "John Day, over the pump In Aldgate." and Andrew Hart, In Edinburgh, and laid the foundation of tho psalmody of the Protestant churches of the world. The words of this psalter contained first thirty-seven psalms written by Stern hold and Hopkins the remainder being written by ten of the refugees at Geneva. William Keith, from Aberbeen, wrote the hundredth psalm. This psalter, words and music, was for some time universally used by the Potestant churches of England and Scotland. When Oliver Cromwell got the- West minlstergeneral assembly of divines to prepare a new version of the psalm In common metre, for the use of the church es, the Parllment sanctioned It, the English church at once adopted it, but the Scottish people rebelled on the ground that they had already a better psalter of their own. . Cromwell had to come to a compromise with the hardy Scotts. (The only other compromise he ever made In his life was with Came ron, of Lochlel, when he and his army got bewildered In the wilds of Lochaber.) This compromise was that In Scotland a number of their favorite psalms, from the old psalter, might be published as second editions. This was done, and the muslo is thus called "old" the Old First, Old Forty-fourth, Old Hundredth, Old Hundred and Thirty-fourth, Old Hundred and Thirty-seventh, etc. Boston Transcript. Wonder of the Waters. Among the most wonderful fish to be found in the w orld is the blind Proteus, which is found only in the subterranean lakes of Krain, in Austria. Six fine specimens of this creature have just been received at the Aquarium in this city, with a consignment of submarine wond ers from Europe,and with proper care It is hoped they will live for a considerable time. In color they are yello wis h pink. which, however, on exposure to the light, becomes mottled and subsequent ly turns to a dark brown. They have long flat heads and four short slender legs, the fore feet ending in two nallless toes and the hind feet In the three. Strange to say, coming as they do out of utter darkness, the creatures have eyes. They are small, however, and are ordinarily hidden beneath the skin. Somewhat similar to .these , fish is tho Mexican Axoloth, another strange creature Just received. "Lang Tsing Yee" Is the name of a beautifully color ed fish, two specimens of which have just been sent from China. These are of a bright golden yellow, tipped on the fines with black, and , they have each four lace like tails. Pretty, or Not. TO BE PUETTYhTthe great object of almost every living woman, even of those who lecture upon the Impropriety of doing so. Beautiful women spend a great deal of thought upon their charms, and homeli er women grow homelier through fret- ting because they are not handsome. Men, at least while they are young, are very much like women in this respect, though they hide their feelings better. There is one comfort to the homelier ones, however. After you come to know people very intimately, you do not know whether they are pretty or not. Their " ways" make an impression on you, but not their noses and ears, their eyes and mouth. In time the soul expressess itself to you, and It Is that which you sec. A man who has been married twenty years scarcely knows what his wife looks like. He may declare that ho does, and tell you that she Is a bewitching little blonde, with soft blue eyes, long after she Is fat, and red and forty: because the Image of of his early love is In his heart, and he doesn't see her as she is to-day, but ns she was when life courted her. Of being an indiflercnt husband, lie may not know she Is the fine woman that other people, think her. You have known men M ho married the plainest women, and think fliem beauties ; and you know beauties who are quite thrown away on men who val ue a wife for her success as a cook. As far as one's effect -on strangers is to be taken into consideration, beauty, is valuable, and very valuable. So, if you have it, rejoice; but If you have it not, be content. Take care of your heart, your soul, your mind and your manners, and you will make for yourself that beauty which will render you lovely to those who arc nearest and dearest to you. What it Feels Like to be Guillotined. WE have heard how it feels to be poisoned, to be hanged and to be drowned,butit has been reserved forMpn date, an Italian gentleman, to let tho world know, through La Defense, what it feels like to be guillotined. He was in 1873 condemned to death for a crime of which be was Innocent, and it was not the fault of Italian justice that he es caped. The blade of the guillotine fell, but the wood in the grooves of which it ran and had swollen slightly, and the knife stopped barely two cemtimetres from his neck. Whllo they were re pairing this defect a reprieve arrived the true murderer had been found' and had confessed his crime. " It was at 8 a. m., August 17, 1873," says M. Mon date, " that my confessor, Abbe Ferula, entered my cell to announce to me that Iinust die. When at the touch of his hand upon my shoulder I awakened, I comprehended at once the nature of his errand, and despite my confidence it seems that I turned horribly pale. I would have spoken, but my mouth con tracted nervously and no saliva moist ened It.' A mortal chill suddenly in vaded the lower part of my body. By a supreme effort I succeeded in gasping, It is not true 1' The priest answered I kno'fr not what. I only heard a con fused buzzing. Then a sudden thrill of pride shot through me. For some min utes I felt no fear ; I stood erect ; I said to myself that if I must die 1 should show them that an innocent man died with courage. I spoke with great ra pidity ; I was horrbly afraid to be si lent or to be interrupted ; I thanked the governor of the prison and asked for something to eat. They brought me a cup of chocolate, but I refused it. Again I had become fully aware of the hor rors of my situation ; I hod visions of what the scaffold would be like, and me chanically asked the attendants, 'Does it hurt much V ' No, not a bit,' answer ed somebody, and I saw before me a new person in a gown of black woollen the executioner. I would bave risen, de fended myself, asserted my innocence, but I fainted, and when I returned to consciousness I waa pinioned in the cart which was entering the death place. I cast a shuddering look at the horrible machine. I bad no more con- nectedand coherent thought, and the rights between which the knife runs seemed as high as the masts of a ship. I was lifted to the platform ; I liad but one fixed idea that of resistance. But how could I resist V I was seized and flung down upon the plank. I felt as if I were paralyzed and lay there for an immense time. Then there was a sharp blow on my neck, and I falntod again with .the Instinctive idea that the knlfo had struck me. It was not the knife but the upper part of the lunette. When I came to myself I was In the prison hos pital." V-4k- . , What Is Wrong With the Bees. H. F. Crlley, residing at Isabella Sta tion, Wilmington and Beading railroad, was the owner of six large hives of bees that stored a great deal of honey last year, but at present he Is fearful he will lose his entire bee family. Those in two hives are already dead, and all the others appear to be In a dying condition. He says that he had not taken any honey from them since last spring, and the hives are full of honey, showing that they are not starving. He took the combs out of one hive and examined them, without finding a single worm or Indications of anything else being wrong. There were 18 combs 11 inches wide, filled with honey, but all tho bees were dead. The bees are In patent hives against the southern side of a board fence and protected from the northern winds, occupying the same location they did a year ago and flourished exceeding ly well. The cause of the death of the bees is unknswn. A Strange Hair Story. WE HAVE a remarkable circum stance In halrology to relate. Win. T. Hayes and lady called at the Reporter office a few mornings ago, with their rosy-cheeked daughter, aged between live and six years. Three years ago the hair of this girl was cut, by our meas urment the other day we find It 21 inches in length, and in great profusion, which is an extraordinary growth in that pe riod of time, three years. But the re markable pnrt is, the parents Inform us that when their daughter's hair was cut, three years ago, the mother put a small portion of it, about one inch in length in a vial, which had contained cinnamon drops, but which had been previously cleansed. In this vial the little bunch of hair was placed, corked and put into a chest, and forgotten until two years ago, when finding it accident ally, Mrs. Hayes, was astonished to see the vial nearly full, the hair having grown all the time, and now the bottle is full and some half dozen hairs have found their way out between the cork and gloss. From the curls in the bottle we judge they are the same length as the hair upon the little girl's head at this time, aud of the exact color. The bottle we are told has never been un corked since the hair was put into lt,and the parents fear to open It lest an en trance of fresh air might disturb its fur ther growth. The vial has been left at our office for a short time, where any one can see It. Mr. Hayes and lady vouch for the correctness of the fact, and we1 have no reason to doubt their story. Centre Reporter. Too Well Proved. A LAWYER bad a case on the docket XX in which, among other things, he wished to prove that his client had no money, and to this end he cross-exam ined one of the opponent's witnesses as follows : " You asked my client for money did you not V " Well-yes sir." " Answer promptly, sir. Let us have no hesitation. You asked him for mon ey now what was his answer?" " I don't know as I can tell." " But surely you remember." " Yes sir." " Then out with it. What was his answer?" "I'd rather not tell." " Ho t ho 1 You are on that track are you? You won't tell ?" " I should rather not, sir." " But I should rather you would I So sir, if you do not answer my questions promptly and truthfully, I'll call on the court to commit you for contempt." " Well, if I must tell tales out of school here you have it. I asked him yesterday if he couldn't lend me half a dollar, and he told me he could not." "And you believed him did you not?" " Yes, sir ; for he said you had robbed blm of every cent of his ready money, and if he didn't get out of your hands pretty soon his wife and little ones would come too." "That will do, sir. You can step down off the stand." Fortune's Changes. . A Washington letter says : In the rotation of fortune incident to our re publican form of government, families who are living in affluence and ruling society this year may be next earning their own support or living in depend ence npon ' friends. This ' is a fact so forcibly impressed every day in this city that it has not the benefit of, a single doubt, ' 1 frequently meet Mrs. Ex- Governor Ford, of Ohio going to or from the Treasury w hero she holds an office, and is as eager for her monthly salary as the untitled, uneducated woman who works In the same room. Ohio people will recall Mrs. Ford as a woman who adorned tho Executive Mansion, and Is still, as she was then, a strikingly handsome woman. In an other office In the same Department is a daughter of a former Secretary of the Treasury, Walker, and in all the De partments we find women who have been rulers In society, and been described as wearing flvo thousand dollar dresses and giving ten thousand dollar parties. DK. 8CIiE.VCKS STANDARD REMEDIES The standard remedies for all HiaaakA f i 'lings are Schenck's Pulmonic Hvrup, Kchenck's Hea Weed Tonlo. and Kchenek'ft Mandrake fills, and It taken before the luug are destroyed, a leedy oure I effected. i o tnese tnree medicines i)r. J. ii, Rchenck, of Philadelphia. owe hi unrivalled anonaim i ik. treatment of pulmonary diseases. inn ruimomu nyrup ripens me morula matter In the lung j nature throw It off by an easy ei pectnratinn, for hen the phlegm or matter I ripeaslight cough will throw It off, the patient ha rest and the lungs begin to heal. To enable the piilmoulo syrup to do this, Dr. Schenck Mandrake rills and Kchenck's Hea Weed Tonlo must.be freely used to cleanse the stomach and liver, Kchenck's Mandiake l'llls acton the liver, removing all obst met ions, relax tiie g ill bladder, the bile start freely, and the liver is smin relieved. Kchenck's Sen Weed Tonic Is a gentle stimulant and alterative; the alkali of which It I composed mixes with the food and prevents souring. It as sists thedlgestlon by toiling up the stomach to a healthy condition, so' that the food aud the J'ul monio Syrup will make good blood: then the bums heal, and the patient will surely get well if care I taken to prevent fresh cold. All who wish to consult Dr. Schenck, either personally or by letter, can do so at his principal olllee, corner of Sixth and Arch 81s.. Phlladel- pma, every Monuny. Kchenck's medic'nes are nold bv nil rlrtirririafa throughout the country. (inch & apr. V E G E T I N E PURIFIES THE BLOOD, Renovates and Invigorates llie Whole Njstem. Its Medical Properties Arc Alterative, Tonic, Solvent and Diuretic, VEGETINE Is made exclusively from the iuiees of carefully selected baiks. roots and herbs, and so strongly concentrated, that It will elfeotiiiilly eradicate from the system every taint of Scrofula, fcrofulous Humor, Tumors. Caucer, Cancerous Humor. Erysipelas. Salt llheuni. Syphilitic Dis eases. Canker, Faintness at the Stomach, and all diseases that arise from Impure blood. Sciatica, Inflammatory and Chronic liheumatism. Neural- f;ia. (lout and Spinal Complaints, can ouly beel ectuallv cured through the blood. For Ulcers and Eruptive Diseases of the Skin Pustules, Pimples, Blotches. Bolls, Tetter, Scald head and King-worm, VEGETINK has never failed to effect a permanent cure. For Pains In the back. Kidney Complaints, Dropsy. Female Weakness, lucui rhoea. arising from internal ulceration, and uterine disease and General Debility, Vegetine acts directly upon the causes of these complaint. It invigorate and strengthens Hie whole system, acts upon the secretive organs, allay Inflammation, cures ul ceration and regulative the bowels. For Catarrh. Dyspensia, Habitual Costlveness, Palpitation of the Heart.lIeada'-he.Piles.Nervous-nes nnd General Prostration of the Nervous System, no medicine has given ttch perfect satis faction as the VKOET1NK. It purities the blood, cleanses all of the organ, and possesses a con trolling power over the nervous system. The remarkable cures effected' by VEOKTINE have Induced many physicians and apothecaries whom we know to prescribe and use it la their own families. In fact, VEOETINE I the best remedy yet dis covered for the above diseases, and is the only reliable BLOOD FUKIFIEK yet placed before the public THE BESTEVIDENCE. The following letter from Bev. K. 8. Best, Pas tor of M. E. Church. Natlck, Mass., will be read with Interest by many physician. Also, those suffering from the same diseases as afflicted the son of the Kev. K. S. Best. No person can doubt this testimony, as there is no doubt about the curative powers of VKOETINE. . Natick, Mas,, Jan. 1, 1874. Mr. H. K. Steyims : Dear Sir. We have good reason for regarding your Vegetine medecina of I he greatest value. We feel assured that it has been the means of saving our son's life. He Is now seventeen years of agei for the last 2 year he has suffered from necrosis of his leg, caused by scrofulous affection, and was ro far reduced that nearly ad who saw him thought his recovery impossible. A council of able physician could give us but the slightest hop of his eve, rally. Ing, tro of the number declaring that he was be yond the reach of human remedies, that evea amputation eould not save him, a he had not vigor enough to endure the operation. Just then we commenced giving him Vegetine and from that day to the present he has been continuously Improving. He has lately resumed his studies, thrown away his crutches and cane, aud walk about cheerfully and strong. Though there I still some discharge from the opening where the limb was lanced, we have the fullest confidence that in a little time tie will be perfect ly cured. He has taken about three dozen bottles of Veg etine, but lately use but little, as he declares that he Is too well to be taking medicine, itetpectfully yours, K t. BEST. MK8.L.C. F.BEST. ALL DISEASES OF TIIE BLOOD. If VEOETINK will relieve pain, cleanse, purl, fy and cure such diseases, restoring the patient te perfect health after trying physicians, many rem edies, suffering for years. Is it not conclusive proof, if you are a sufferer, you can be cured r wny i mis meatcine penorming sucn great cures: It works In the blood, in the circulating fluid. It can truly be called the OKEAT BLOOD PIJkfPIKlt. The great seource of diseases originates in the blood, and no medicine that does not act directly npon it. to purify and reao vat. has any just claim upon public attention. RECOMMEND IT HEARTILY. south Boston, Feb. 7. 1879. Mr. 8tktens: Dear sir. t have taken several bottle of your Vegetine and am convinced it is t valuable remedy for Dyspepsia. Kidney Com plaint, and general debility of the system. I can heartily reco nmend it to all suffering from the above complaints. Yours respectfully. JAVA. MONKOB PAKKEK. 101m 386 Athens Street. Prepared by H.R.Stevens, Boston.Mass. Vegetine Is Held by All Druggists. T EATHER C. THE subscriber baa now on band at IOW PRICES, Good Sole Leather, Kip of Superior Quality, Country Calf Skins; French Calf, LININGS, ROANS, .F. Mortimer, 7, SKW BLOOMFIELD, r.