THE TIMES, NEW I1L00MFIELIVFA., FEIHIUA11Y 25, 1879. RAILROADS PHILADELPHIA AND READING R. R ARRANGEMENT OK FA88ENGEK TRAIN ft. ,OV. lOlll, 1878. f KAtNS LEAVE ItAKltlSBUKOASFOI.LOWI Kur Now York, at 6.20, 8.1l a. ni. SUwp.m., and 7.&" p. m. iroi' Philadelphia, at 5.20, 8.10, 9.46 a.m. 2. (HP Hi, I 4 IW p. III. bMi ilmi.ilng, at 6,20, 8.10, 9.45 a. m. and 2.00 4.00 and 7.M. . , Kur I'uHsvllle at 8.20, 8.10 a. m.. and 4.00 p. ni.. uid via Schuylkill aud Susquehanna branch t 1.40 I), in. Kur Auburn via . & . Br. at 8.30 a.m. Kur lllmituwn, at 6.2U, S.lua. in,, and at 2.00, 4.0" and 7.6 1 p. in. ..... .... Hie xM. s.luu. m., and 7.68 p. m., trahn have thruugu ears lor New Voik. Tub 5.2m, a. in., trains have through carsfor Philadelphia. . SUNDAYS t For New York, at 6.20 a. m. For Allentown nod Way station at 6.20a.m. For Heading, Philadelphia uud Way Statlumal 1.45 p. m. TMA1NH VOa IIARItlSBtlltG. LEAVE AS FOL LOW8 i Leave New York, atM3 a. m., 1.00, O.COund 'V.eave'piilladelphla, at 9.45 a. in. 4.00, and M?aveltnadlng, at fl.40. 7.40, 11.50 a. in. 1.30, 8.1u utiU I". : p. m. , , . . Leave Potlsvllte, at 8.10, 9.15 a.m. and 4.40 P Aud via Schuylkill and Susquehanna Branchat ' l?HvenAulurii via8. ft 8. Br. at 12 noon. l.tiave Aileiiiowu, alf2.30d.60, .05a.rn.. 12.15 4.30 and 9.0) p. in. SUNDAYS: Leave New York. atj.3l p. m. Leave Philadelphia, at 7.20 p. m. Leave Reading, al 4.40, 7.40, a. in. and 10.85 n m Leave Allentown,at2 30 a. m., and 9.05 p. m. J. K. WIIOTEN. Gen. Manager. O. O. Hancock, General i tenet Agent. D'ie-1 nut run nn Mondays. V la Morris and tssex It. K. Pennsylvaula R. Il.Tlmo Table. NEWPORT STATION. On and after Monday, June 25th, 1877, Pai euger trainswlll run astollowit EAST. HltHlntnwn Aco. 7.82 a. m.. dally exceplSunday. Johnstown Ex. 12 22 P.M., dally" Sunday Mall, 6.64 p. M., dally exeentSundaj Atlantic Express, 9.51p.m., flag, dally. WEST. Way Pass. 9.08 A. M., daily, Mall 2.43 p. m. dally exeeptSunday. Mimi,.t,.wii Ann. A.66P. M. duilyexeent Sunday. Pittsburgh Express,. U.67P. M.,(Klag)-daily.e- PaciUo ExpreRS.6.17 a.m.. dally (flag) , Trains ure now run by Khtladelpkii) time, which Is 13 minute fatter than Altoona time, aud 4 mln te.s.owerthauNewkBtheoi(AYiAgeBt DUNCA.NNON STATION. On and .titer Monday. June 2th, 1877,tralni w eaveOuuoaniion, a; loiiows: KA8TWAKD. Mirtilntown Aco dally except Sunday at 8.12a. k. Julimtuwn Ex 12.5 6 p. m., daily exoept Sunday. Mail7.3U P. ..." , " rlantii Kxpressl.20p. m.. dally (flag) WESTWARD. Way Passenger. 8.38 a.m. .dally M ill, 2.09 p. m dallyexceptflunday. Milllintown Aco. daily except 8nnda at 6.1p.m. Pittsburg Ex. dally except Sunday (flag) 11.33. u. WM. O. KING Agent. gU UPRISING! JUST OPENED A VARIETY STORE, UP TOWN ! We Invite the Citizens of BLOOM FIELD and violnitv. t call and examine our Block of UKOOKKles. QUEKN8WARK. GLASSWARE. UN WAHK, A FULL VAFIETY OF KOTluNei, el o.. etc, etc All of which are selling at astonishingly XjO"W pbices. Give lis a e 'II aud 8 AVE MONEY, as we are al moitGIVlNU THINGS AWAY. - Butter and Eggs takeu In trade. VALENTINE BLANK, WEST MAIN DTK EET Mot. 19, '78. tf The most useful preseut FOR YOO-R WIFE, Intended wife, mother, or sister. Is one of our Nlckle Plated and PnlHied Fluting or Orimplng Irons. 4 livm ii one handle aud at greatly Kb DUCKD PhlOES. King Kevemaule Fluting Iron, 13 60. Home Fluting and Crimping Iron, 82 75. 6b.Hl tHK PAID on receipt of price. Hewitt Mfg. Co. Pittsburgh, Pa. P. O. Box, 8fi8. or 168 Peuu Avenue. AN AGENT WANTED IN THIS COUNTY W 47,61 T A Tl? MT'C obtained for median XT 1. L Hi i-M lusl devices, medical I obtained for mechanl- I or oi her compounds urn.enial designs, trade marks, ana laneis. ua.eais.AsiiiHiiiiieuiB. mieiieieiues. Hulls for Inmugemenis. aud ad cases ariaiUK un der tne HA lit X UWS, promptly attenued to. 1NVENTIIOXSTHAT HA VK BEEN XX Hit! Jitj L Hi U lice may still, in liu.xi ciw, Uv. iiaienled b us. helugopposlle the Patent Oltlee, we cau make closer wai-ehes. and secure Patents more promptly, and with broadtgc claims, than those who are reuioie Iioin Wash ington INVENTOR SZ? your uevice; ve make nimiimilons ree oj Cnarve, and advise as to pateiiialdlity All cor respondence strictly contnieutial. Prices low, and NO CHARGE UNLfcbS PATENT IS BE I'UltED. We refer to officials In the Patent Office, to our Heuis iu every Stale of ihe Union, aud to your (Senator and llepresentut ve In Cougiets. Special references glveu wheu desired. Address: C. A. 8NOW & CO.. Opposite Patent Oftloe, Washington. f "mar 'i'xajiiiitiiutMiWMBig h DATA II It IT 1 !i!n ewh nelghhnrhoo.1 to Introduce our t a BLi'I T.ZZVI Oil. CATA21H (One doi ar pucknge fiualu lifm wlll M '')to pay express charges (26.. tf rea-.Scln-il Iiv Adiinis or ftimn Kx,Co') J AUku, r. B. BOWU 8 CO. 0 B Ast'l. r3 Plttubarrta. ra. p.' nl'i Uean mske money faster at work for ns than at anything else. Capital not required ;e will start vou; 912 per day at home made by the Industrious. Men women. bv and alrls wanted everywhere to work for us. Now is the time. Orwtly mitllt and terms free. Address TKUE ft v , Augusta. Maine. 11 lyr T A DIRS AND CHILDREN will And a j splendid assortment of shoes at tke an price store of F. Mortimer. Th9 Wrong Pig by the Ear. OLD DR. JOHNS lived In the llttlo village of lloiieyliurst, ami fur for ty years he lmd been the mile iihytilelan In the district where he mlded. No one eared to enter the list against him In that locality, for the simple Inhabi tants fully believed that there wan not ueh another master of the healing art In the known world, and so he drove his red wheeled gig over the lanes and byways of the country side without a rival, and dosed aud bullied the Inhabi tants In his rough and kindly funliloii to his heart's content. The doctor lived In a great rambling house half way down the vllluge street, with a wide expanse of lawn In front, and bis little biluk office In one corner next to the sidewalk. Ills wife had died many years ago, so his household was conducted by a housekeeper, llut as the doctor's family whb small and he loved society, he was hardly ever with out a Btudeut, to whom he taught the heulitig ait In the buck ofllce. Thus it was that Charlie Horton came to Hon eyhurtt to study medicine with the doc tor, aud, as bis predecessor had done before him, occupied the back olllce aud the northwest chumber. He came from a town somewhat distant, aud was un known to the town folks, and, like every stranger who came among them, was made the subject of great crltlcul examination, as he walked up the broad aisle of the village church the Sunday evening after his arrival. ' Well, doctor, how are you V" said Farmer Smith, as he leanad over the gate of his cornfield the uext morning as the doctor came driving by. k'Ah, Smith, how do you do I" re plied he, as he drew reiu on the gruy mure aud stopped. "How's your folks V" "Toler.ble, thank'ee; wife's a little 811111' this mornin'. See you've got a new young man ; see'd him yesterday at church, eh V" said the farmer, luugh lng. " Yes, I think so," replied the doc tor. " Think ye hain't got the wrong pig by the ear, eh, doctor V" " Well, dou't kuow," replied the vil lage Esculaplous ; " can't tell yet." Now, "getting the wrong pig by the ear" was one of the doctor's great ex pressions, in fact his fuvored one. Like Shakespear's justice, he was " full of wise saws aud modern instances," aud had a proverb or apt quotation upon every occasion. With him, if a man made a mistake it was "getting the wrong pig by the ear." Of course this peculiarity was well known throughout all the couutry about where he practiced, and hence the quotation of Farmer Smith. Time passed on and Charles Horton became fully domesticated in the doc tor's household. He was a line young fellow, somewhat over confident, per haps, and needed the rein a little. Tills the doctor was uot slow to put on, and he mingled his Instructions In the heal ing art with admonitions about "get ting the wrong pig by the ear," until Charles was heartily tired of the home proverb. But he was a good fellow, nevertheless, aud a great favorite. Two years passed away, and Charlie's studies with the old doctor were draw ing to a close, when suddenly the idea popped into his head that he would go to l'aris and finish his medical educa tion with a course through the Conti nental hospitals. Dr. Johns pooh poohed the idea, aud thought it utterly useless. ' " Why, boy," said he, " what do you want togogalivantlngotr to France? What bee have you gut in your bonnet now? Can't you be satisfied with home learning, but must go and tack on some new-fangled toni-foolery, that will knock all your sensible knowledge out of your head ? Go to Paris f Non sense! Don't get the wrong pig by the ear? llut Charlie was not to be talked out of his new idea. He was bound to go to Paris to study and see the world, and so one day he packed bis trunks, bade his friends good-bye, and, mounting the stage-touch, was wheeled out of the vll luge world. But before going, the old doctor call ed hiiu into his ofllce, aud, shutting the door, thus began : " Now Charlie, you are off to foreign parts, and I hope you will enjoy your self. Stick to your books and get what kuowledge you can out of those fellows over there, although I don't suppose they kuow so much more than other people. But, uevertheles you may learn a few things. I don't suppose you'll be apt to acting, for you have beeu too well brougiit up for that f aud now I've got something here that I want you to take with you. It's a recipe that it has taken me a good many years to find out. You will Mud it of great value iu your prac tice. It will cost you five pounds." And the doctor, with a very grave face held out a huge yellow envelope sealed with red wax and tied with a blue ribbon. Churl I e was rather tired of this long winded hurrHiigue, for although he liked the doctor, he considered It) ni some thing of an old fogy. But the ofler of this receipt excited Ids curiosity. What was It t So he paid the five pounds, nml became possessor of the huge envelope and Us mysterious contents." V Take good cure of it, Charlie, and don't open it until you lire out of the country." A dtiy or two after, wheu at his hotel at Folkestone wuillng for the steamer, he bethought hi in self of the mystio re el pt aud hastening to his room lie lock ed the door and opened his valise. There It was, safe and sound, In all its glory of yellow envelope, red seal aud blue ribbon, Charley took It out; turning It over. It wus very solemn aud ponderous; a perfect panacea for all the evils that flesh Is heir to. lie turned it over aud over, and finally untied the ribbon, and breuking the seal drew out a sheet of foolscap carefully folded. Taking it to the window he reud as fol lows : " Ojn't get the wrong pig bv the ear. ini kUTi'iiKW Johns " DuMiing the paper to the floor, Charlie burst out : " The old swindler, to cheat me out of five pounds iu thut way I I'll come up with him, though. See If I don't pay him off." So he contented himself witli concoctiug a scheme for vengeance In secret. Three years passed away before Char ley Horton llnlshtd his studies and re turned home. Meanwhile he had changed greatly, aud from a smooth faced stripling, wltii the merest sugges tion of a mustacho, he was now bearded like the pard, and looked so different that his own mother hardly knew him. But he had not forgotten Dr. Johns, nor his promised revenge. It was Saturday night when the stage coacli set Charles Horton down at the door of the village inn at Iloneyhurst. He gave a false name to the landlord, aud smoked a cigar with hltu after sup per, and inquired uhout the village, with out that functionary ouce suspecting his Identity. In the course of the conversation, Charley asked " who it was that lived in that large house with a front garden down street." " That's Dr. Johns been here a good many years; clever man. I'll Introduce you to him, if you wish. The doctor and I are pretty good friends." "Well," slowly replied Charlie, as if considering it, "he ought to know his danger, and it would be best for him. It may uot be too late yet." And on they started down the street, toward the doctor's residence. " What did you say was his name," asked Charlie, as they marched along. "Dr. Johns," replied the host. "Johns Johns," said Charley, thoughtfully: "I know a fellow in Europe Charley Horton by name who said he had studied with Dr. Johns, an old man, aud somewhat of a character. I wonder If your doctor 1b the same man V" " To be sure he is." replied the inn keeper. "I knew Charlie Horton well. He went to Europe three or four years ago. So you kuow hlin, do ye t Is he there yet V The doctor will be doubly glad to see you if you bring news from Charlie. He thought a great deal of him. By this time they had reached the doc tors office, and he greeted the landlord heartily, and looked inquiringly at the stranger. The landlord Introduced Charlie as Dr. Holmes, and added that he brought news from Charlie Horton. At this Dr. John was overjoyed, urg ed the pseudo Holmes to come in, and inquired affectionately about his old pupil. Conversation was carried on for an hour, when Charlie, looking the doctor earnestly iu the face, said : " Dr. Johns, how is your health now?" " First rate, sir first rate. Never felt belter iu my life!" aud he certainly looked it. "You don't find old age creeping on, do you, sir V" blankly inquired Charley but still looking very Intently into the doctor's fuce. "Well, a little stlffllsh in the joints now aud theu ; but bless you sir I cau ride as many miles and as many hours as I ever could." " Dr. Johns," said Charley very im pressively, "do you ever meet in your practice people who look aud feel the perfect embodiment of health, yet whose constitutions are being sapped by a fatal disease and they uot conscious of ill" " Well, yes, I have met such cases," replied the doctor. " And did you ever apply them to yourself, sir)" agaiu asked Charley in solemn tones. "Why, Dr. Holmes, what do you mean V Do you think that ray consti tution Is undermined by a secret dis ease? Nonsense, man I" and he laugh ed outright. , Then Charley began. He told the old doctor all that he had told the landlord, aud much more. How he hud many such cuses. He knew the doctor felt his age, aud he cleverly used those symptoms, twisting them about, show ing that It was not age, and In two hours' time the doctor wits so thorough ly frightened that he believed his end liable to occur at any moment, and be sought " Dr. Holmes" to do whatever lay In his power to give him relief. Dr. Holmes promised to think It over dur in the night. Dr. Johns would not hear of his returning to the tun, but in sisted upon his taking a bed at his own house. Charley, with a grave fuce, finally consented ; but before going to bed he advised thedoctor to take "an anodyne," assured him that there was no immed iate danger, and cleverly managed to slip an emetic into the doctor's gluss of runi-and water, which he always took before retiring, anil had done so with great regularity for thirty years. About the middle of the night the old housekeeper called Charley up iu great haste and terror. Dr. Johns was very sick, aud had asked her to cull Dr. Holmes as soon as possible. Charley went into the bedroom and found liliu tossing around aud groaning at a great rate. He felt now he bud an attack of the disease mentioned by Charley, and besought hlui to do what he could speedily. Charley made an examination, looked grave and shook his head. "Bad, Is It, Dr. Holmes V asked Johns, faintly ; " tell me the worst sir." " it is a bad case, Dr. Johns," said Charley. " I can do only one thing and that is a costly one. I cuu give you a prescription, but it will cost you twenty pounds. I am obliged to ask that for it, as I obtained it under peculiar cir cumstances. It may give you relief. I have seen It used with very good re sults." "Twenty pounds?" asked the old doctor, eagerly. " All right ; I will give it, sir. What is the prescription ? Here is the money." Charley wrote on a slip of paper, fold ed it up and handed it to the doctor. He received it eagerly, opened it with trembliug bauds, aud by the light of the bedroom lamp, read : "Dou't get the wrong pig by the tall. Da. Chablks iiohton." With one bound the doctor was out of bed, but Dr. Holmes had vanished. " Charley," said Dr. Johns next day, I'm getting old ; you must come aud take my practice. Your twenty pounds will help to give you a start."- The doctor says he never got the " wrong pig" but once. Anecdote of Webster. T A WYERS sometimes resort to ques- Ij Unliable methods in order to de stroy the effect which the testimony of a truthful aud Intelligent witness has upon a jury. Mr. Webster once tried, in an uugallant way, to break down a woman's evidence, and he met more than his match. It was in the some what famous case of Mrs. Bogden's will, which was tried in the Supreme Court. Webster appeared as counsellor for the appelleut. Mrs. Oreenougb, wife of Rev. Wil liam Greenough, late of West Newton, a tall, stralght,queenly-looking woman, with a keen black eye, a woman of great self-possession and decision of character, was called to the stand, a witness on the opposite side from Mr, Webster. Webster, at a glance, had the sagacity to foresee that her testimony, if it was of any importance, would have great weight with the court and jury. He, therefore, resolved, if possible, to break her down. And when she answered to the first question put to her, " I be lieve," Webster roared out; " We don't want to hear what you believe, we want to hear what you kuow 1" Mrs. Qreenough replied, " That is just what I was about to say, sir," and went on with ber testimony. Notwithstanding his repeated efforts to disconcert her, she pursued the even tenor of her way, until Webster, becom ing fearful of the result, arose, apparent ly in great agitation, and drawing out his large snuff box.tbrust his thumband finger to the very bottom, and carrying the deep pinch to both nostrils, drew it up with a gusto. Then extruding from his pocket a very large handkerchief, which flowed to bis feet as he brought it to the front, he blew his nose with a re port that rang distant and loud through the crowded hall. He then said "Mrs. Greenough, was Mrs. Bogden a neat woman ?" "I cannot give you full information as to that. She had one very dirty trick." " What was that, ma'am ?" "She took snuff." The roar in the court-house was such that the defender of the Constitution ! sat down, aud neither rose or spoke flgutn until After Mrs. Qreenough vaca ted her chair foranother witness, having ample time to reflect upon the Inglorious history of the man who had a stone thrown at hia head by a woman. - - -. The Abba's Surprise. AT THE time the A hbe Cochin llv ed in the seminary of St. Sulpice, he wus allowed a double louis a month for pocket money by his family, which he spent In charity. Among the recipients of his alms was a poor mother of a family, whom the Abbe found on one holiday at the gate of the seminary, where she was walling his coming out to beseech his charity, on account of some additional Hfflictlon. It was the end of the month, and the A I 'be told her she must wult a few flays longer, for the good reason that he had no money. The woiuuu uikiii this urged the impossibility of the tiling, and how ever little he could give her it would save her life ; the Alihe looking almohed, protested that he did not possess one farthing I The woman then seemed seized with a fit of inspiration ; she ex claimed that he was a Sulut, aud that it was iu his power to work miracles, and if he would only lake the trouble to feel Iu his pocket she was quite assured that he would Hud something that he did uot expect, aud which would suffice for her Immediate wauts. . For the sake of peace and quiet, the holy Abbe was going to turn his pocket ' Inside out, but In fumbling what should be find, to his great surprise, but three franc pieces I He gave them, instantly, to the wretched wouiau ; and theu, full of joyful humility, ran to throw him self on his knees in the chapel of the Virgin of St. Sulpice, where he spent the remainder of the day In thftiiksgiv lug for the miraculous gift that had been bestowed on him, and entertained a holy fear of the power of which he was the depository. On his entering thesemlnary he heard an exclamation of "There he is I there he is 1" "Let us humble ourselves," said he; "let us humble oui selves." "Upon my wind Cochin, you have put me terribly out!" cried the compan ion who shared his cell with him, aud who was waiting for him at the door, "you have left your small clothes here Instead of mine lu which I had eighteen francs 1" A Hill Full of Serpents. Mr. J. II. Beeson, the well-known Central Branch contractor, gave the Patriot a pleasaut call a few mornings since, aud from him we learn the par ticulars of the most remarkable snake story we have heard. In the extension of the Central Branch road from Belolt to Cowker City the line passes through the town of Glen Elder. A short dis tance from Glen Elder, on the Solomon river, Is a steep aud rocky bluff, about fifty-five feet high, a large portion of which had to be blasted away to make room for the road bed. A few days ago, while the excavation was in progress, a blast of ultra glycerine caps and giant powder tore off an unusually large part of the bluff, and down the declivity there came writhing and roiling a bunch of snakes, which Mr. Beeson assures us was almost as large as a barrel. They were of different varieties, rattlesnakes predominating, with racers, garters, etc. When first disturbed from their warm bed, they were active and dangerous, but coming out into the severe cold they were soon comparatively harmless, and were killed by the men without much trouble, or covered up in the dump by earth and stone. But this is a very small portion of the story.. Every day and every blast, since the first batch appear ed, has brought another huge bundle of reptiles. Every hour a moving, writh ing lump comes rolling down the hills, and what escape the laborer's pick and shovel, crawl off to get covered up In the dump. Thousands of them have been unearthed and killed, and every blast brings thousands more, far out rivalling to number the famous snake den of Concordia. AUhtion Kan.) Patriot. A Wise Deacon. " Deacon Wilder, Iwant to know how you kept yourself and family so well the past season when all the rest of us have been sick so much and had the doctors running so long." " Bro. Taylor, the answer is very easy. I used Hop Bitters in time and kept my family well and saved large doctor bills. Three dollars' worth of it kept us all well and able to work all the time, and I will warrant It has cost you , and most of the neighbors one to two hundred dollars apiece to keep sick the same time. I guess you'll take my med icine hereafter." See other column. tT When a young man arrives at the conclusion that his employer cau uot get along without hlm.he has always arrived at the most fatal step on his journey through life. Fatal, because the plaoes on earth have always been filled by those coming after them.