THE TDlES, NEW IttXXriM'ltitl), ilA., N0VEMT5K11 0, 1877. RAILROADS. PHILADELPHIA AND READING R. R. ARK ANG EM ENT OF 1'ABBENGER TRAINS. AuxiiHt 15llif 1S7T. TRAINS LEAVE II ARRlSHURO AS FOLLOWS For New York, at n.20, 8. If a. in. 3.57p.m., ami p. in. For I'liiladelplila, at 6.20, 8.10, 9.45 a.m. ml an. I 3.r7 p. in. Fur Reading, at 6.20, 8.10, 0.45a.m. and 2.00 3.57 ami 7.f. Fur l'ottsvllle nt B.20, 8.10 a. m.. and 3. f.7 E. in., and via Schuylkill and Hiisciuehanna ranch at 2.40 p. in. Fur Aulnirn via s. & H. Hr. at 6.10 a. n. For Allentown, at 5.2i, 8.10 a. in., and at 2.00, 3."7 and 7.6i p. in. The 6.20, 8.10 a. in.. 9.67 and 7.66 p. m., trains have tin on cars for New York. Tlins.20, 8. 10 a. in., and 2.00 p.m., trains have through fills for I'liiladelplila. SUNDAYS : For New York, at 6.20 a. in. F'or Allentown and Way stations at 6 20a.m. For Reading, I'hiladelphia and Way Statlonsat 1.45 p. in. TRAILS Fv)lt IIAUItlSIH'lU, LEAVE AS FOL LOWS : Leavo New York, at8.45 a. in., 1.00, S.EOand 7.45 p. in. Leave 'i'liiladelplila. at 0.15 n. ill. 3.40, and 7.20 p. in. Leave Heading, nt RIO, 7.40, 11.20 a. m. 1.31', 0.15 and in. :0 p. m. Leave rollsvllui, at 0.10, 0.15 a. in. and 4.35 p. in. And via Schuylkill ami Susquehanna Kisnchat 8.15 a. in. Leave Auburn via H. Ki s. Ur. at 12 noon. Leave Allentown, at ti3l)n,60, 8.ooa. 111., 12.15, 4.30 and 9.0) p. in. SUNDAYS: Leave New York, at 5.30 p. m. Leave I'liiladelplila, at 7.20 p. m. Leave Reading, at 4.40, 7.40, a. in. and 10 33 p. m. Leave Allentown. :!2 .10 a. in., and 9.05 p. m. J. K. WOOTUN, tien. Manager. C. G. Hancock, General Ticket Agent. Mines not run on Mondays. Vla Morris and Essex It. It. rennsylvaniii R. II. Time Table. NEWPORT STATION. On and after Monday, dune 2rith, 1377, Pas senger trams will run as follows: EAST. Mllllintown Acc. 7.32 a. m., dally except r-miday. .lolinstown lix. 12 22 P.M.. dally" Hunduv Mail, fl.54 p. M., daily eiccoptSuuday Atlantic express, u.dh'.m., nag, uany. WEST. WavPass. 9.08 A. m., dally. Mail 2.4:t p. m. dally exceptsunday Millllntown Acc. 0.65 p. m. dally except Sunday. Pittsburgh Express, 11.67F. M., (Flag) daily.ex cept sundav. Faclllo Express. 5.17 a. in., daily (fine) Trains are now run by I'liiladelplila time, wlileh Is 1:1 minutes faster than Altoona time, and 4 min utes slowur mail now lorn time. J.J. BARCLAY, Agent. nUNCANNON STATION. On and after Monday, June 2ith, 1877, trains will leave uuncannnn, as ioiiows: KASTWAltD. Millllntown Acc. daily except Hundnvat 8.12a. m. .lolinstown Ex. 12.5a P. M., daily except Sunday. man 7. .in p. m Atlantic Express 10.20 p. M., dally (flag) WESTWARD. Way Passenger, 8.J8 a. m., dally MaiI,2.no p. m dailyexceptSunday. Millllntown Acc. dailyexceptSunday at 6.10p.m. Pittsburg Ex. daily except Sunday (Hag) 11.33P. M. WM. O. KING Aeent. D. F. QU1GLEY & CO., Would respectfully Inform the publlo that they have opened a new Saddlery Sliop In Hloomtleld. on Carlisle Street, two doors North ot the Foundry, where they will manufacture HARNESS OF ALL KINDS, Saddles, Bridles, Collars, and every thing usually kept In a first-class es tablishment. Give us a call before going else where. S- FINE HARNESS a speciality. REPAIRING done on short notice and at rea sonable prices. HIDES taken lu exchange for work. , , I. F. QUIGLEY & CO. Bloomileld, January U, 1877. PATENTS. Fee Reduced. Entire Cost $55. Patent Olllce Fee 135 In advance, balance J20 within 6 months after patent allowed. Advice and examination free. Patents Sold. ' j. Vance lewises co., 19-3tn Washington, D. C. Cnn AGENTS WANTED to canvass for a wuu guano pictuhb. 22x28 Inches, entitled "THE Illustrated Lono'g Pkaybb." Agents are meeting with great success. For particulars, address 11. M. CR1DER, Publisher, 48 ly v York. Pa. REMOVAL. The undersigned has removed his Leather and Harness Store from Front to High Street, near the Penn'a., Freight Depot, where be will have ou baud, and will sell at REDUCED PRICES, Leather and Harness et all kinds. Having good workmen, and by buying at the lowest cajt price. 1 fear no competition. Market prices paid In cash for Balk. Hides and Skins. Thankful for past favors, 1 solicit a con tinuance ot the same. P. a Hlankets, Robes, and Shoe-findings made a speciality, JOS. M. IIAWLEY. Duncannon, JulylA. 1876. tl New Pension Laiv. UNDER an act of Congress approved March 3,' 1H73, widows of olllcers who were killed, or died of disease contracted In the service, are now entitled to 12.00 per mouth for each of their chil dren. The guardian of a minor child of a soldier who heretofore only received J8.00 per month pension Isnow entitled to J10. per moth. Soldiers who receive invalid pensions can now have their pensions increased to any sum or rate between 18. and $18. per month. Soldiers who have lost their discharges can now Obtain duplicates. Fathers and mothers who lost sons in the serv ice upon whom aey were dependent for support, can also obtain pensions. The undersigned having had over 10 years ex perienee In the Claim agency business will attend promptly to claims under the above act. Call on or address LEWIS POTTER, Attorney for Claimants, New Bloomileld, Perry Co., ra A SISTER'S LOVE. " yOU WILL come home with us, I. EIhIo of course I" Elsie Connrd, gentle, timid, and just seventeen, who bud come within one hour from her mother's grave, Bide by side with her father's made fifteen years before, did not speak for a moment. For the Invitation given as a matter " of course," bad come from her brother-in-law, her mother's staunch friend and adviser for many years, almost a second father to her own self from childhood. When be spoke ns If there was no question about his decision, It was not easy for bis timid little sister-in-law to dispute bis assertion. Was ho not Maggie's husband, and was not Maggie herself ten years older than Elsie, nnd Hubert Wayne seven years older than his wlfe.aetually double Elsie's own age? Had not these two controlled Elsie from her babyhood far more than the gentle mother lying in her newly-made grave ? Could she as sert her independence to them, watching her with grave eyes, full of wonder ut her hesitation ? Then between her own soft blue eyes and the faces of Hobcrt and Maggie, Elsie, saw a pale, dying face, and im ploring eyes, piteous, quivering lips,and again she seemed to hear the faint, plead ing voice say : " Oh, Elsie, care for poor Tom when I am gone I" Poor Tom, pitiful only in bis mother's eyes, a reprobate to all others, weak more than wicked, drinking to e xcess, Industrious only in fits and starts, the black sheep of the family. " Hobert," Elsie sald,the tears starting at the sound of her own voice, "you are very kind to wish it, but I will stay here." " Stay here ! Nonsense !" cried Mag gie. " How can you stay here?" " Mother left mo the house, and next year I shall have the five thousand dol lars father left me." "Well?" Chill and bard the monosyllables fell from Hobert Wayne's lips. " And," said Elsie, desperately, " if I leave here who will care for Tom ?" Then the storm broke. Tom was a disgrace to them all. Tom was twenty four, and able to take care of himself. Tom had sneaked away from the ceme tery, and was probably drunk some where. Tom indeed. But anger nerved Elsie. Had Robert and Maggie tried coaxing, or even argu ment, she Mould have found It hard to resist them, but she felt that she did not deserve reproacb.and so braced her heart to resolution, nnd stood Ann. It ended in Hobert and Maggie leav ing the house in nnger, leaving bitter, stinging words, and In Elsie lying upon the sofa sobbing her very heart away, for more than two hours. "And Tom will stay on aud on, spending Elsie's fortuno as he has spent your mother's," Hobert said fiercely, disgracing us all." "I am sure I can't help it," Maggie sobbed. " I did hope he would go away when the house was closed till Elsie married or came of age." And Elsie, sobbed faintly, exhausted, was lifted iu two strong arms, and a voice that had comforted her many a time and oft, said : "Dearie, don't cry any more. She's out o' trouble, and, God be praised, we can think of her a saint in heaven in stead of a sufferer on earth." Elsie nestled close in the old servant's arms. " Jane," she whispered, " It was not for mamma I was crying, but for poor Tom." " And indeed somebody may well cry for him, for I think he'll go down hill faster than ever, now he'll have neither mother nor home." " But, Jane, he will have his home." "Eh, dearie 1" " And his sister, If he can't have Ills mother. I'm going to stay here to take care of Tom." " Heaven save us ! What will Mr. Robert say ?" " He has said I am a fool, a conceited Idiot," Elsie answered, her eyes flash ing now through her tears, "But I'm going to stay. Tom is fond of me." Tom was fond of her. All that mis erable afternoon, ashamed, wretched, far more grief-stricken than any would have credited, Tom was wandering in a grove, skirting one end of Heron's Hill, the village where his name was a stand ing reproach, lie knew nobody would believe In blej sorrow, and his remorse cut deep as he realized how much his own wayward career had helped to break down his mother's health. Never deliberately wicked, honest and truthful, he was too fond of good com pany, too Indolent, too easily influenced by the temptation of the moment, to re sist a love of drink amid its train of evils. But he did not drink to drown this misery of self-reproach and loneli ness. To drink, he must face acquaint ances, go through the village streets to the" ale saloon," where ale was cer tainly not the strongest drink handed over the bar. And Tom craved solltudo. Lying on his face In the rank summer grass, he pictured his life to come, striking lower and lower. He had not paid too much heed to his mother's prayers and peti tions, yet ho realised that mother-love and home Influence had saved him deeper drgredution to come. And Elsie I The one tender spot lu Tom's heart held Elsie in sacred shrine. Her blonde beauty was angelic to Tom, and her soft hand mid tender voice had led him from evil more than once. Well, mother, was dead. Elsie would go to Maggie, "of course;" home was closed. Ho would go time one look at the darkened room where his lips had last pressed his mother's, and then Tom shuddered. Then loneliness, temptation, despair. What mattered It to any one what be came of him now ? Ho he went homo slowly, with sullen brow and bowed head. He did tiot look about him, as he entered the entry of the cottage, where doors, front and back, admitted the evening air. He did not notice the home-book restored, where there had been the confusion of long illness, the desolation of death. He went Into the sitting-room, where the win dows were once more open, and there a little figure stood waiting. Not cloaked or bonneted for farewell, but with a while apron over the black dress, white collar and cuds, a bow of black ribbon lu tbo fair waving hair a homo figure. " I am so glad you have come, Tom," was his welcome; "tea is all ready." " Tea ! Elsie ! I I thought you had gone to Maggie's hours ago." " I am not going to Maggie's." "Not going to Maggie ? Why, where are you going? AVho will take care of you ?" The little figure very close to Tom's side, the fair bead rested on bis breast, the sweet, snd face, was lifted to his and Elsie said : "Will you not take care of me, Tom?" A great rush of new-born true manli ness choked Tom's voice. A sudden sense of man's protecting power filled his very soul as he looked down nt the tender, confiding face. Ho did not speak until his arms closed about Elsie tightly, his lips pressed hers qulvering ly. Then he said : "God help me, Elsie, to take care of you, if you will trust yourself with me." It was a prayer with a promise, and Jane, wiping her eyes as she softly re turned to the kitchen, after hearing all, unseen, murmured : " It will be saving of him." The tea-table was temptingly spread, and Tom was hungry and weary. There was no temptation after tea was over to leavo the wide-armed chair, where, with Elsie beside him, he talked of their dead, very solemnly and lov ingly. But the next day the first trial came. Nobody was exactly willing to take Tom Conard into employment. He was a good workman at his trade, a cabinet maker, but a never-do-well, not to be trusted as steady, apt to disappoint cus tomers. All day ho tried in vain to And work, returning homo dull and dis heartened. But Elsie was not discouraged. There were a few hundred dollars iu the bank willed to Tom by his mother, despite of Robert's remonstrance, and when that was gone, her own small fortune could be commanded. She cheered him up by every kind, loving word her tender heart suggested, and then a great plan was proposed. Elsie fairly trembled as she made it, but she had given it hours of thought and prayer, and ventured : " Supposo you take that money, Tom and open a furniture store of your own. There is none on Heron's Hill and wo have to go to N for even a chair." A store of his own I Ambition was a key note never before touched in Tom's heart. A store of his own I What would Heron's Hill say to that? And if he had such a weight of responsibility as the care of Elsie and a store of his own, he would not have any temptation to Idleness, or worse. Elsie, watching his face, said, pres ently : " There is that little store of Hunter's, Tom. Nobody lias been there for seven months, since ho died, and It is right in the middle of Main street. And they could not refuse a trial If you pay one quarter's rent in advance; and it will give you quite a holiday to go to N for goods." Could he ? Dared be ? Tom felt his fingers Btralghten, his heart expand. Nobody had for years seemed to consider him fit for any re sponsible position. His mother's tender pleading was only to lead him from wrong; Robert exhorted him to "stop making a beast of himself;" Maggie wondered how he could bo forget his family ,but little Elsie trusted him.asked him to take care of her, proposed to lilm to open a store. "I'll do It, Elsie." "And, after all," the tender heart ar gued, as Elsie rose from prayer before retiring, "they all said he would only waste the money in drink, and he can not do worse than lose It In a store." But lie did not lose it. Heron's Hill wnsin agrealflutter when Hunter'ssloro was opened, nnd a great sign put over the door, benrlng the Inscription. " Thomas Connrd, Furniture Dealer;" great vans came lumbering over from N , full of the new goods, and repairing was promised upon a grand scale. Curiosity was the first attraction for customers, and trifles of withstands, chairs, kitchen tables, and such inex pensive articles were found to be needed in every household. Elsie, perched nt a high desk at the back of the store, was the cashier. Tom, important and busy, was salesman, and the two were as mer ry as babies in a new doll's house. It was wonderful to see how the new responsibility did steady "wild Tom Conard." The ale house- knew him no longer; the sneers of his old boon companions had no effect upon him. Elsie's trust In him, and the fact that he was her protector, kept him in the straight path where nil else had failed. Tbo new store prospered, and the cashier's place was filled by a clerk. Tom was quite able to pay, and Elsio returned to her duty as housekeeper for Tom; adviser for Tom; friend, counselor, comforter, all for Tom. It took time years to convince Hobert and Maggie, and Elsie's friends in general, that they had not made a mistake; but they were convinced at last. Elsio war twenty-one, pretty as ever, gentle and loving, faithful to Tom, when one evening over the cosy tea-table a momentous conversation occurred. "Elsie," Tom said, "I met Mr. Mur ray this afternoon, very downhearted." Mr. Murray was the new minister at Heron's Hill. Elsie grew rosy in a mo ment, stirred her tea and never said a word. "Elsie, "are you treating him quite fairly ? He Is a good man." "Yes," very faintly. "An upright, splendid fellow; what I call a true Christian gentleman." "Yes, Tom." " And he loves you ?" No answer. "And you love him? Why did you send him away?" " Oh, Tom, you nre cruel. It wns nil for your sake," she said in a burst of tears. Then she wns running away, but Tom's arms caught and held her. " For my sake ! so I suspected 1 But," and a brown mustache swept Elsie's cheek as Tom whispered" I was only waiting for Mr. Murray to speak, Elsie, to be sure there was some one to take care of you, before asking" "Oh! Tom, Helen." " Yes, dear Helen. Will you let her take not your place,Elsie, for my heart has room for you both, but my wife's placo in my new home." So it was settled, and when the fair wife Tom won would speak loving words of him and her own happiness, Tom would say : "I owe it nil to Elsie. My sister's love, and trust made a man of a never-do-well." SNIPKIN'S SOCIAL PARTY. MR. SNIFIUN'S, a little man with wiry slde-whiskcrs and a bald head, is very fond of having a social time. The other day he invited several of his fellow-clerks to spend the evening at his house, the programme embracing euchre and " hot stuff." The boys were to be up to the house ut eight o'clock. Mr. Snipkins went home to get his tea and prepare for them by working Mrs. Snipkins into the proper mood for the occasion. He was aware that unless that excellent lady was in a pliable humor, the possibility of working a half-dozen men into the house was the chimerical of all chimeras. At 8 o'clock the Invited guests with two decks of cards and a quart bottle approached the house. They found Mr. Snipkins at the gate. He had been waiting for them. There was a troubled look on his face. "It's too bad, boys," ho said, apolo getically, " but I'm afraid that that we will have to postpone our little affair until another evening." " Why, what's the row ?" " Well, you see," said Snipkins, hesi tatingly, and with an apprehensive look to the house, " It's the old lady. I am sorry, boys, but it can't be helped it really can't be helped. I didn't kuow she was doing it, of course, when I in vited you for to-night, or I wouldn't a done it." " Doing what ?" asked the man who had the bottle. "Doing grapes," replied Snipkins. " You see the man came with them this afternoon, and she skinned them and bad them on a blllng when I got home; and they've been billng ever since, but they don't Jell. No, no," Rfr. Hnipklns Rhook ills head despondently, "they don't Jell wortli a cent. She's got a roaring old fire, and she's us red ns a beet In the face, and shu whips around there without saying a word, but look ing volumes. I tell you, boys, I'm mighty sorry, but It won't do. There's no use talking party when grapes net like them. We'll have to put It off an other night." Mr. Snipkins spoke with so much feeling, and cast so ninny ap prehensive glances townrd the house that tbo party were convinced of the futility of their plans for the evening, and at once retired. A Poiniotl t-'raycr. A Connecticut clergyman once preach ed on the miracle of (Indnrn, where the exorcised devils entered the herd of swine, nnd after the sermon asked a young man In the audience if he was u Christian. " No," said lie, "but I nm all right; I urn perfectly safe now." "How so?" says Mr. F. " Why," says the youth, "you have just told us that the devils were nil drowned; so we are no longer in dan ger." Mr. F. knelt close by the young innn and offered a very earnest prayer as follows : "O Lord, we read in thy Word that the swine all ran down Into the sea, and we supposed they were all drowned, but It seems one bog swam ashore, nnd he is here right before me. Lord, cast the devil out of him." The result was the conversion of the young man, who be came a very efficient Christian worker. - . Irish Wit. In a recent Sunday evening " dis course" on the ('ove I'romenade, John K. Lester told tlio following story to il lustrate oneof his points. How effective it may have been in the direction deponent saith not ; but it is certainly ns pure a specimen of the rough diamond known as Irish wit as most of those that make " the grand rounds" of the press. Mr. Lester said that when he was a boy 10 or 12 years of age, he was standing in Market Square with his grandfather, when four Irishmen came up, one of whom asked the distance to Fawtucket. He was told by the old gentleman that it wns about four miles. "Well, faith," said Tat, in a mock tone of encouragement to ids three tired companions, " that's not bad at all only a mile a piece for us." " Whom do you want to see in Paw--tucket?" inquired Mr. Lester, senior. " Be jabers," was the quick reply, " I want to see myself there most of anybody." What He did Know. " I wish to ask you a question," said Mr. Sharp to our young minister, as he met him in the street. " I am anxious to know where hell is. The Bible I have read.geographies,historiesand other honlt- ATlfl T Pfln'fr ninlra nnf nrlmpa If ; exactly. The young minister, placin 1 . . . uuv T. UW V IV ins nana on his shoulder, and looking earnestly into his eyes, replied encourag ingly : " My dear sir, do not be discouraged ; I am sure you will find out after a while. As for myself, I have made no inquiries, and really do not wish to know where hell is. About heaven I have thought and read and studied a great deal. I wish to make that my home, and by the grace of God I will. Ask me about heaven and I can talk. I don't know where hell is, and would rather not find out." - The Sin of Drunkennest. When we acknowledge that druuken ness is a disease, let us not forget that it is also a sin. No man is forced to be come a drunkard ; he drinks to excess with his eyes open, with his hand3 free, with his conscience upbraiding him, until he drowns It in the bowl. He vol untarily surrenders his reason, his taste, his judgment, his health, his character and his conscience on the altar of appe tite ; and is not that a sin ? -' He knows that his habits of indulgence will dis qualify him for the performance of the duties of child, husband, parent and citi zen, and while they deaden the faculties which should elevate him above the dumb beast, they intensify and quicken all the animal and brutal insticts of de graded humanity ; and is not that a sin ? In a little village in the North of Ireland lived two old inhabitants known by the names of Darby and Fat, each in their own way rather eccentric and always ready with their answers. The former was one day taking his usual walk, when he met his friend Fat, and asked : " What toime molght it be now ?" Pat, having a short stick In his hand, gave Darby a sharp crack over the head with it, and said : " It's just shtruek wan." Darby, looking up a little surprised, but always ready, said : " Troth and it's a lucky job I wasn't here an hour sooner !"