THE TIMES, NEW BLOOMFIELT), PA., DECEMBER 1,1877. RAILROADS. PHILADELPHIA AND READING R. R, ARRANGEMENT OF FA8BENGE ft TRAINS. November 5(h, 1877. TRAINS LEAVE H AKKISBURO AS FOLLOWS Por New York, at 8.20, 8.10 a. m. 8.57p. m., and 7.65 p. m. For I'blludoliilila, at B.20, 8.10, 9.45 a.m. d n,1 3.IW p. in. Fur Heading, at fi.20. 8.10, 9.45 a. m. and 2.00 J. 67 and 7.M. For I'ottsvllle at 8.20. 8.10 a. m., and S.B7 p. m and via Schuylkill and Susquehanna Branch at 2.40 p. m. For Auburn via 8. & 8. Br. at 5.10 a. m. For Allentown.at6.20, 8.10 a. m., and at 2.00, 3.57 and 7.65 p. m. ..... . . The 5.20, 8.10 a. m., 8.B7 and 7.55 p. m., train have through cars for New York. The 6.20, B.10 a. m.. and 2.00 p.m., trains have through cars for Philadelphia. BUSDAV8: For New York, at 6.2o a. m. ForAllentown and Way Stations at 8 20 a.m. For Heading, Philadelphia and Way gtatlonsat 1.45 p. in. TRAINS FOR HARRISnTTRQ, LEAVE AS FOL LOWS I Leave New York, at 8.45 a. ra., 1.00, 6.80and 7.45 p. in. Leave Philadelphia, at 9.16 a. m. 8.40, and 7.20 p. m. Leave Reading, at t4.40, 7.40, 11.20 a. m. 1.30, 6.15 and lo. 35 p. m. Leave I'ottsvllle, at 0.10, 9.15 a.m. and 4.35 p. m. And via Schuylkill and Susquehanna Branch at 8.15 a. m. Leave Auburn vlaS. H. Br. at 12 noon. Leave Allentown, at ti.306,50, 11.05 a. m., 12.15, 4.30 and 9.05 p. m. SUNDAYS: Leave New York, at 5.30 p. m. Leave Philadelphia, at 7.20 p. m. Leave Reading, at 4.40, 7.40, a. m. and 10.35 p. m. Leave Alleutown, at 2 30 a. m., and 9.05 p. m. J. K. WOOTEN, Uen. Manager. C. G. Hancock, General Ticket Agent. fDnes not run on Mondays. Via Morris and Essex K. K. Pennsylvania It. It. Time Table. NEWPORT STATION. On and after Monday, June 25th, 187", Pas sennet trains will run as follows: EAST. Milllintnwn Acc. 7.32 a. m., daily except Sunday. Johnstown Ex. Yl tl c. M.. daily " Sunday Mail, 6.54 P. M., dally exceptSuuday Atlantic Express, 'J.oli'.M., Hag, daily. WKST. Wayl'ass. 9.0S A. m., daily, Mail 2.13 p. m. dally exccptSunday. Milillntown Ace. 6.f p. M. daily except Sunday. Fittsimrgh Express, 11.5TP. M.,(FlaR) daily.ex- cept sinidnv. Pacific Express, 6.17 a. m.. daily (flap;) Trains are now run by Philadelphia time, which Is 13 minutes faster than Altwna time, and 4 min utes slower than New York time. J.J. BARCLAY, Agent. nUNCANNON STATION. On and after Monday, June 2 Mh, li77, trains will leave Duneannon. ns follows: EASTWARD. Milillntown Acc. daily except Sunday at 3.12a. m. Joh'Ktowii Ex. 12.5ap. M., dally except . Sunrta . Mail 7.30 P. M " Atlantic Express 10.20 P. M., daily (flag) WESTWARD. Way Passenger, 8.38 A. M., daily Mail, 2.H'.) p. m, dailyexceptSunday. Milllintown Acc. daily excent Suiulav at fi.lnp.M. 'Pittsburg Kx. daily except Sunday (Hni) 11.33P. M. NV.M. (J. KINO Audit. D. V. QUKjLEY & CO., WouM respeel fully Inform tlia public tilut they liave opened u new Saddlery &7wp In nioomlleM, on Carlisle Street, two doors North oi tlic Foundry, where tiiey will manufacture HARNESS OF ALL KINDS, Saddles, Jiridlcs, Collars, and every thing usually kept In a llrst-class es tablishment. Give us a cad before going else where. to. FINE HARNESS a speciality. REPAIRING done on short notice and at rea sonable prices. HIDES taken in exchange for work. D. V. QUIGLEY & CO. Blooinlleld, January 9, lb77. Kfin AGENTS WANTED to eanvass for a WU UKANU 1'ICTLKB. 22x28 inches, entitled "TUB Il.l.USTHATEO I.OHD8 PllAYEK." AgelltS are meeting with great success. For particulars, address 11. M. C'KIDEK, Publisher, 48 ly York, Pa. Removal. The undersigned has removed his Leather and Harness Store from Front to Hieh street, near the Penn'a., Freight Depot, where he will have on hand, and will sell at REDUCED PRICES, Leather and Harness of all kinds. Having good workmen, and by buying at the lowest caA prirm. l fear no competition. Market prices paid In cash for Bark. Hides and Skins. Thankful for past favors, 1 solicit a con tinuance of the same. P. 8. Blankets, Robes, and Shoe findings made a speciality, JOS. M. IIAWLEY. Duncannon, Julyl9, 1870. if gUlUTvISlNG! JUST OPENED A VARIETY STORE, We Invite the Citizens of BLOOMFIELD and vicinity, to call and examine our Stock of ciioernii'S, qt'eensware, glassware JIN WARE. A FULL VABIETVoF NOTIONS, tie., &c, &c, All of which we are selling at astonishingly T-.OW PRICES. (Jive us a call and KAVK MONEY, as we are almost dlVlNU TIliNUS AWAY. . Putter and Eggs taken In trade. , . VALENTINE BLANK, 38 ly Went Main Street. 1 0B Ml IN TING of every description neatly and promptly executed at Reasonable llak-i at the Ulooinheld Times Steam Job Olllce. DOLLY'S MISTAKE. " T SU1 1 o'c SUPPOSE I must call. Eleven clock. The old gentleman said I was not to stand upon ceremony, so I'll run down to-dny. It Is dismally lone some here, and somebody said the Law lor girls were the belles of the place. Who was It told me that Julia Lawlor was the belle of Itushtown, and that Dolly was the nicest little thing In the world? I'll go down and prove the assertion." AH this In soliloquy, as Mr. Thomas Bardell donned his daintiest walking dress, drew on his lavender kids, put on his glossiest silk hat over his crop of curling hair, and surveying his hand some, faultlessly-attired self in the long mirror, sallied forth, Rushtown was a collection of county Beats, a mile from a populous borough, and the Bardell Place was one of the most stately of the many Buperb houses of which it wbb composed. Thos. Bar dell, my hero, was the nephew of the late owner of the Bardell Place, and on the death of that gentleman had inher ited his entire property, greatly to his own amazement, Mr. Julius Bardell, de ceased, having quarreled with every re lation he had in the world, and an nounced his intention of leaving every dollar to a charity. That he did not, but relenting made a will in his nephew's favor, brought Mr. Thomas Bardell from a college in Ger many, where he was finishing his edu cation, to Itushtown. He was twenty-four, an orphan, hand some and talented, and had some pri vate fortune before his uncle's death. That he wits unspoiled, modest, and one who held all women ns little lower than the angels, may be attributed to the fact that he hud a mother who was a trtio Christian lady, who loved him, and whose dentil, when he had just iittnined manhood, was the heaviest sorrow of his life. Itushtown was an unexplored country to my hero, but Dr. Lawlor being the only physician in tho place, his resi dence wits easily found. The hall door stood open, the parlor door was nlso stretched invitingly wide, nnd after vainly waiting for the ring to be answered, Mr. Bardell stepped inside the vestibule. A voice high above his head, and in the parlor, called : "Tom, is that you ?" The speaker, Dolly Lawlor, whose name, be it hero recorded, was Mabel, but who bad been called Dolly from her cradle, being at the top of a high step ladder, scmhbln.!' the paint over a French window, heard a voice say : " H is Tom, certainly." 11 Hand meniy soap, that's a good fel low." said Dolly, from the lofty perch where she was seated, facing the back window; "you know I am afraid to look down or turn around on the ladder, I am so sure to get kiddy." " Where is the soap ?" came in a voice niufllcd by laughing. "Closedown by tho ladder, where it has just dropped. Don't dare to laugh tit me, Kir, for I tun in tho depths of af fliction. Papa has invited the heir to that splendid Bardell Place to drop in without ceremony. Did you ever, and wc just in the middle of spring clean ing V So I left Jane to finish up stairs, and came down myself to make tho parlor decent. There goes my brush ! Hand it up; that's a dear." The brush was handed up, Dolly not daring to take her eyes from a level, al ready feeling her head spinning with giddiness. "We can't bo grand, of course, and the house will look mean enough after Bardell Place, but wo can be clean," she continued, scrubbing vigorously at the paint. "And you know, Tom, he is sure to full in lovo with Julia, and it is such a splendid chance for her, poor dear. She does so hate oureconomies. She has gone over now to Mrs. Simp son's to finish her new muslin, and she can't help clean, because it will spoil her hands, and they are so pretty. Julia is lovely in blue, because her skin is so fair, if her hair and eyes are dark. She will just be perfect when she is rich, Tom. I hope she will have him, and papa and I can jog along forever. We don't mind cheap things as poor Julia does. There! That paint can't be whiter. I'm coming down, and you can move the ladder over to the other win dow for mo, Tom." But, cautiously descending the ladder, Dolly only caught a fleeting glimpse of a tall figure out at the garden gate. "Well," bhe said, tugging at the heavy ladder, " if Tom was in such a hurry that he could not move the lad der, he might at least have waited to say good morning." Then, being the sweetest-tempered of women, though merely a passably pretty girl, Dolly ascended the ladder ugalu, and soon forgot Tom's rudeness In the absorbing duties she had undertaken. In the meantime Mr. Thos. Bardell, shaking with laughter, wended his way homeward, inwardly determining to make his next call at Dr. Lawlor's when Miss Dolly was less engrossed In tho task of cleaning paint and the diffi culty of maintaining her equilibrium. " For that must have been Miss Dolly, with the natty little boots, and pink cal ico dress. She had lovely brown hair, though I could not Bet her face." The next call made by tho heir of the Bardell Place found the parlor shining with cleanliness, Miss Julia Lawlor, a really beautiful girl, arrayed in the blue muslin, at the piano, and Dolly, also in blue muslin, knitting. The appearance of the blue muslins was the result of Thomas BordeH's apparently careless intimation to busy Dr. Lawlor that he intended to " drop in" that evening. For a wonder the Doctor remembered the fact, and the " Lawlor girls" were arrayed to receive their guest. Dolly, in half an hour, decided that Bhe liked the new-comer very much in deed, and that he would make a very nice brother when he fell in love with Julia and married her, as of course it was his manifest destiny to do. " For Julia Is really lovely," thought unselfish little Dolly, "and when he hears her sing he must lose his heart." 1 Apparently the singing was as power ful a magnet as Dolly supposed it would be, for scarcely a day or evening passed that Mr. Bardell did not drop in. Tom Lawlor, the Doctor's nephew and stu dent, declared Bardell to be a first-class fellow, and was always bringing him to tea. Then the garden to the Bardell Place, as summer came on, offered most tempting opportunities for the presenta tion of bouquets to the fair ladies at Dr. Lawlor's. To be sure, Thomas Burdell did not know that Julia's share always adorned the parlor, while Dolly cries over hers in her own room, and some times pressed her rosy lips upon the card of tho donor. Silly little Dolly! For she knew Mr. Bardell was falling deeper and deeper in lovo with Julia. Did lie not fairly haunt the house ? Did ho not listen entranced when Julin sung, even upsetting all the orderly ar rangements of Dolly's work-box iu liis abstraction. Was not tho picnic on the Bardell grounds, to which all the friends far and. near had been invited, solely the result of Julia's wisli to see the place ? That picnic! Somehow it Impressed itself upon Dolly's mind that Thomas Bardell was contemplating a proposal on that Juno day, when he was to play host to all tho peopluof Iiushtown. She could not have told why she thought so, nor why she resolved to ask " papa" for permission to visit her aunt in New York a few weeks. " Just to give them u chance to lie alone," she thought, and wondered what made her heartthrob so very painfully at the idea. She made Julia look like an exquisite picture, by wreathing field daisies un der the rim of her chip hat, and fasten ing her soft white lace at the throat with a bunch of the same llowcrs. Then (die dressed herself rather hasti ly, having curled her sister's hair, and otherwise made a Cinderella of herself. She heard nothing of a dismayed ex clamation in his father's study of: " But bless my soul, Bardell, I can't spare here! She is my right hand and eyes ! She Is housekeeper and compan ion nnd everything ! I thought it was the other one you were " And here the blundering, kind hearted father stopped, hesitated, und finally said : "Well well, if she loves you, I will not say nay, though I don't know what I shall do when you take her away." Then Thomas Bardell discovered that it was fully time for him to go home and receive his invited guests, and he departed, not seeing the girls, and leav ing the doctor In dire dismay. " Dear me dear me," ho kept mutter ing ; " why couldn't ho have fallen in love with the other one?" When the Lawlor carryall, driven by Cousin Tom, drove into the avenue of Bardell Place, Thomas Bardell, stand ing upon the porch to receive ids guests, thought his eyes had never rested upon a lovelier vision than the daisy-wreathed face of Julia Lawlor. The prettiest pink tinge came to her cheeks as she ac cepted his help in leaving the carriuge and his arm to the house. Dolly jumped out, "anyhow," as Tom Lawlor said, and there was not the faintest color upon her white cheeks, though she talked and laughed gaily enough. But after the luncheon was over Dolly found an opportunity to escape alone, and strolled over to a rustic seat overlooking a pretty lake, and com pletely hidden by tall lilac bushes. Here, with her useful little hands idly clasped, she was looking straight before her, thinking, when Thomas Bardell, who had watched her flight, also strolled down the path that led to the rustic seat. Dolly was thinking. " It Is lovely here, and the house Is splendid. Julia ought to bo very hap py, but I wished she cared more for him. All she looks forward to la the splendor and freedom from money care. But perhaps that Is best. I don't care about money, and It must be for the best for me to stoy at home and make it cheerful and comfortable for papa. Julia says I must come often to make her long visits, but I don't think I can. I won der " And here little Dolly's hands clasped each other In a tighter grasp, and her very lips grew white as Bhe Wondered If it was very wicked for her to feel such an envious longing to have, not the wealth, but the love of her future brother-in-law. " I'll soon conquer it," she thought, miserably, when it's all settled. It is this waiting that tries me." She was not to wait much longer, for the bushes parted near her, and present ly Mr. Bardell startled her by saying : " Are you dreaming, Miss Dolly?" She blushed and smiled, answering : " I was a little tired, and came down here to rest." " I am very tired, let me rest, too," he snld, taking a seat beside her. " I think this is the prettiest spot on the grounds." " Yes," Dolly said, faintly.wishlng he would go away before she began to cry. ' The house sadly wants one addition,' said Mr. Bardell, looking straight before him across the lake. "It seemed to be perfect," Dolly forced herself to say. " Perhops it Is only in my eyes the deficiency exists, but I think It wants the presence of a gentle, loving woman, and I know that I want a wife there. Will you conic to brighten it, Dolly ? Will you trust your happiness to me, believing I will make It the first thought of my life? Dolly, don't cry, dear; your father gave me permission to sptak to you." There came some five minutes of quiet bliss for two hearts, and Dolly's tears were stopped with caresses. Pres ently Mr. Bardell said, In answer to his lady love's last remark : "Julia! Oil, yes; she Is very hand some, but, you see, before I saw her I was already in love with you." " Why, you saw us both at the same time!" " No ; when 1 fust sawyou, or, rather, the arrangement of your black hair, you were seated on tlie top of a step-ladder, giving me distinct orders regarding soap and scrubbing brushes." "You!" cried Dully, and certainly there was no lack of color in her checks us she spuke. "You! I thought it was Tom !" 11 So it, was Tom, my dear ?" " it was too mean." ' 1 lor-t my heart then and there, sac riliced a pair of lavender kids at tho shrine of cleanliness, as sure as my name was " Tom !" said Dolly, laughing. A Joko that was nut a Juke. AND MBS. D. MAN X E RING, ho live at Lorlmer and Jackson streets, Williamsburg, have an only daughter, Claru. Sho is a brunette, 17 years old, with bright black eyes and dark curling hair that Hows in waves over her slight but well developed figure. She returned but a few weeks ago from Orange county, New York, where sho has been spending the summer. About ten days since Mrs. Maunering, while looking over the contents of Clara's trunk, which had not yet been unpack ed, discovered a scroll of parchment, richly engraved and ornamented, and held together by a blue ribbon, tied in a true love knot. She opened and read a certificate by the Bev. William H. Williams, of Unlonville, Orange coun ty, setting forth that John Brundage and Clara Manncring wero married on the 25th of August, 1877. Hardly able to believe her eyes, Mrs. Maunering questioned her daughter. With some blushes Clara explained that when two or three people came together In the Catskills the favorlto mode of amusement Is the performance of a mock marriage. On the evening of tho above dato she had attended a party given at the house . of a young farmer named Brundage. It was proposed that she and the host, in accordance with tho custom of tho country, should play at being married. Accordingly sho stood up with Mr Brundage before one of the guests, who volunteered to play the part of clergyman, and the pair were pro nounced by him man and wife. Hardly hud the words, " Whom Ood has joined together, let not man put assuuder," been pronounced when Brundage, de claring that the marriage was a real one and not a sham, cluimed her as his wife. Tho supposed bogus clergyman, he said was. a minister of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and tho ceremony he had performed could not bo nullified save by a di vorceobtalned by due process of law. All this was dono in a Joking way, however, and not even when the got tho certificate of tho ceremony did Clara reollze that the affair was not a hoax. She brought the certificate home with her ns a memorial of the mock marriage, but, so she said, had forgotten that there Was such a'thlng in existence when her mother brought It to light. Clara's story caused Mrs. Maniierlng great perturbation of mind. She thouuht her daughter's youth had been taken advantage of, and that she was perhaps bound for life to some undesirable and ineligible person. Anxious to know whether the pretended marriage was valid, she consulted last Thursday with one of the clerks in the Brooklyn City Court, whom she mistook for the judge, and was told to her horror that the cer tificate set forth a legal marriage. She immediately wrote to Mr. Burn dage, and received in reply an agree ment to annul the marriage if it proved distasteful to her. He was ready, Mr. Brundage Bald, to consider the ceremony of the 25th of August real or a sham, as his bride's parents determined. He loved Clara, and wanted her to live with him as his wife, but would not take advan tage of the supposed joke unless she wished to have It so. All the proceedings and expense necessary to dissolve the marriage he would take upon himself in case Clara did not care to continue to be Mrs. John Brundage. Through Inquiry of friends living In Unlonville, Mrs. Mannerlng learned that Mr. Brundage was well off, possessing a good farm and being abundantly aide to support a wife, besides being heir to considerable prop erty. He was, she was informed, a most desirable match,and her daughter might go further and fare worse. "I'd just as leaf It would be a real marriage," she said, shaking her curls. Mrs. Maunering did riot seem to have formed any plans for the future. Brun dage had not yet visited his bride in her home, and there seemed to be no hurry about coming to a decision. Clara, she continued, was yet too young to think of marriage, hut if Mr. Brundage would wait twb or three years before he claims her, she might make no opposition. " Dank You, f.'iue Frient." A good story is told by the Marquette (Mich). Mininy Journal of a former res ident of Negaunee, now living in Col orado. He was an explorer of ;.onie note, and was one day digging at the foot of a mountain in Boulder county, when a Teutonic gentleman came along and inquired : " My goot frient, vat "Sou pcen do deer ?" " Oh, I'm only scratching around to see what I can find," " Veil, miiio frient, I dond't know pretty much by (lis expiorin' pisncss; uitver dond't you could dell me e:o I gould. vhul me a golt mine right away guick ?" " Oil, you just find a big pine tree and go to digging in it4 shadow, and you' find what you want." " Dank'you, mine frient," and the (icrman went a little wnv im f 1 tain, found the shadow of :i pine tree uiui went io tugging, jna snort timf he found what is now the celubruted Melvina Mine, and now our Negauneeito is slicing for an interest iu the vulua'ole property, on tho grouud that he gave the information that led to the dis covery. Sensible Almost to the Lsst. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Mulcaby lived on a farm. They wero shrewd, thrifty and had the reputation of being " close." Finally Mrs. Mulcaby sickened and was about to die. Finding herself Hearing; tho end, sho expressed a desire to put things in order before that event occur red, and old Tom prepared to listen. " Tom," said Mrs. Mulcaby, " there's Mrs. Smith, up at tliecrossing, she owes me SI. 80 for butter ; see ye git it." " Sinsible to the last, my dear ; sensi ble to the last," said Tom. " I'll get it." " Then there's Mrs. Jones, up at the creek, she owes me $1.50 for chickens." " Ah I look at that, now, for a moind, she forgets nothing." " And Mrs. Brown, in the village, she owes me for milk." " D'ye hear that ? Sinsible to the last ; sinsible to the last. Goon, my Dear." "And and "Yis?" "And Mrs. Roberts, at the toll-gate, I owe her " " Ah ! poor dear I poor dear!" broke In Tom hastily ; " how her moind does be wondering ! Sure we've allowed her to talk too much, entirely, so we have." C2" A woodman in Austin, Nev., has named his team of eight oxen after leading citizens of the place. Every day he Is heard shouting to them like this, except that ho alio uses profanity : " Gee there, John Lyons ; whoa, Dr. Sheridan, you blamed lazy beast; haw, there, Colonel Price, or I'll break every bone In your durned lazy body ; git up, Squires!" Then he whacks the minis ter with the butt of the whip, and throws a stone ut the bank president. i