Tltti TIMES, NEW BLOOMFIELD, YA., MAY 13, 1879. RAILROA D 8 PHILADELPHIA AND READING R. R RRANOF.MENT OF PA8SENGER TRAINS. Nor. lOliT, 1878. CHAINS LEAVE HABR1BBURG A8 FOLLOWS For New York, at 5.20, 8.10 a. m. loop. m. and 7.6J p. m. For Philadelphia, lit 6.20, 8.10, 9.4ft a.m. S.OOmd 4.00 p. m. , . . For Itoadlug, At 8,20, 8.10, 9.45 a. m. and 2.00 4.00 and 7.55. . For Pottsvllle at 6.20, 8.10 a. m., and 4.00 6. m., and via Schuylkill and Busquehanna ranch t 2.40 p. m. For Auburn via tt. 8. Br. at 6.80 a. m. For Allentown,at5.20, 8.10a. m and at 2.00, 4.0O and 7.65 p. m. ..,.. The .20, 8.10 a.m., and 7.55 p. m., tralm have through cars for New York. ,...,,. The 5.20, a. m., train have through carsfor Philadelphia. SUNDAYS I For New York, at 5.20 a.m. ForAUentown and Way Stations at 6.20a.m. For Reading, Philadelphia and WayStatlonsat 1.45 p. m. TRAINS FOR HARRI8BURG, LEAVE AS FOL LOW'S : Leave New York, at 8.45 a. m., 1.00, 8.80and TLeave"plilladelphla, at 9.45 a. m. 4.00, and LeavTiteadlng. at t4.40, 7.40, 11.50 a. m. 1.30, 6.15 and U. 35 p. m. Leave Pottsvllle, at 6.10, 9.15 a.m. and 4.40 "'And via Schuylkill and Susquehanna Branchat 'Lea'veAuburn vtaS. ft 8. Br. at 12 noon. Leave Allentown, at tl30d,60, .05a. m., 12.15 4.30 and 9.05 p.m. SUNDAYS: Leave New York, at J.30 p. m. Leave Philadelphia, at 7.20 p.m. Leave Reading, at 4.40, 7.40, a. m. and 10.35 P Leave AUentown,at2 30 a. m., and 9.05 p. m. J. K. WOOTEN. Oen. Manager. 0. G.HahcOCK, General Ticket Agent. Does not run on Mondays. Via Morris and Essex 11. R. rpHE EAGLE HOTEL, CARLISLE ST., New Bloomfleld, Penn'a. J." A. NEWCOMER, Proprietor. HAVING removed from the American Hotel, Waterford.and having leased and refurnished the above hotel, putting It In good order to ne commodate guests, I ask a shave of the public patronage. I assure my patrons that every exer tion will be made to render them comfortable. Mu My stable is still in care of the celebrated J March 18, 1879 J. A. NEWCOMER. ""HE MANSION HOUSE, New Bloomfleld, Penn'a., GEO. F. ENSMINGER, Proprietor. HAVING leased this property and furnished It In a comfortable manner, task a share of the public patronage, and assure my friends who stop with me that every exertion will be made to render their stay pleasant. A careful hostler always In attendance. April 9. 1878. tt RATIONAL HOTEL. CORTLANDT 8TEET, (Near Broadway,) 3XTE-W YORK HOCHKISS & POND, Proprietors. ON THE EUROPEAN PLAN. The restaurant, cafe and lunch room attached, are unsurpassed for cheapness and excellence of service. Kooms50cents,2perday.3to810 per week. Convenient to allferrlesand city railroads. NEW FURNITURE. NEW MANAGEMENT. 4 ly QURPUISING! JUST OPENED A VARIETY STORE, UP TOWN ! We invite the Citizens of BLOOMFIELD and vicinity, to call and examine our Stock of KNOCK HI PS. QUEEN8WARE. GLASSWARE. TIN WAKE, A FULL VARIETY OF NOTIONS, etc., etc., etc. All of which are selling at astonishingly LOW PRICES. Give ns a call and SAVE MONEY, as we are al most GIVING THINGS AWAY. Butter and Eggs taken In trade. VALENTINE BLANK, WEST MAIN STREET Nov. 19, '78. tf American and Foreign Patents. GILMORE ft CO., Successors to CHIPMAN HOSMKR & CO., Solicitors. Patents pro cured inall countries. NO FEES IN ADVANCE. No charge unless the patent is granted. No fees for making preliminary examinations. No addi tional tees lor obtaining and conducting a -rehearing. By a recent decision of the Commis sioner, ALL rejected applications may be revived. npeoiai attention given to lnierierence uasesDe fore the Patent office. Extensions before Con. gress. Infringement Sultsln different States, and an litigation appertaining to mveutmns or Pat ents. Send Stamp to GUinore & Co., for pampa let of sixty pages. LAND CASKS. LAND WARRANTS ft SORTP Contested Land Cases nresecuted twfnra the II. S. General Land Oltloe and Department of the Interior. Private Land Claims, MINING and PRE EMPTION Claims, and HOMESTEAD cases attended to. Land Scrip In 40, 80, any 1(50 acre nieces for sale. This Serin Is assignable mil nan be located In the name of the purchaser upon any Government land subject to private entry at I.Z5 per acre. It Is of equal value with Bounty I .. .1 Uo .& nf, U..nt ......... . .... .. J for pamphlet of Instruction. ARKKARS OK PAY AND ROITNTV OFFICERS, SOLDIERS and 8AIU)RS of the late war. or their heirs, are In manv eanAniiriurf to meney from the Government of which they have no knowledge. Write full history of servlae and state amount of pay and bounty received. Enolose stamp toOILMORK & CO., and a full re ply, alter examination, win ne given y ou free. 1' U N H I O N N. All OFFICERS, SOLDIERS, and BAILORS, wounded. ruotured. or inlured In the 1uI.a r however slight, can obtain apensonby addressing Oil, MDU K Si CO. Cases prosecuted by GILMORE ft CO.i before the Hupreine Court of the United States, the Court oi 1,'taimsana tne Nniitnern U'aims Commission. Each denartment of our business la RnrniiiRiM rn asenarate bureau, under chame of the mime experienced parties, embloyed by the old firm. j-romni attention to an Business entrusted to GILMORE & CO., Is thus secured. We desire to wm nuooesi ny aeservineit. AoMress: GILMORE SCO., 6W F. Street. Washington, D. C. A NEW USE FOR WIDOWS. THE Rev. Dr. Dlllaway was the rector of a large and flourishing church in one of the smaller cities of New York. He was the possessor of a handsome fortune, and he received a large salary from his parish. He was a remarkably handsome man, of very agreeable man ners. He was a widower. Which three facts combined made him very Interest ing to the unmarried ladles of his con gregation. But he had now been a widower for ten years, and his three daughters had grown to be young ladles, and were said to be pattern housekeepers, and to be perfectly devoted to their father; so grim despair was gradually settling down upon many a spinster's heart, as sue saw how well satisfied with his condi tion the rloh and handsome minister seemed to be, and the avalanche of slippers and dressing gowns and em broidered dressing cases which poured In upon him, was growing lighter year by year, and the demands among the unmarried ladies for interviews, for the purpose of spiritual consolation were growing fewer and fewer. As to his daughters they had almost forgotten that the fear of a step-mother had ever darkened their young lives. It was only when they went to see Aunt Lelghton that their serenity waB dis turbed. Aunt Klzzy was a very old lady, their father's aunt, and she was, as Dolly Dlllaway said, an " inveterate croaker." She seemed to consider that her great age gave her "the spirit of prophecy," and she was always tore telling, with great solemnity, events that were about to happen. Over and over again they heard, " sooner or later, Harrison Dillaway is sure to marry again, I feel it in my bones 1" Moreover she didn't need the spirit of prophecy to tell her that he wasn't the man to hold his own against a designing woman ; he always thought women were angels, and a smart one could make him think the moon was made of green cheese ! Smart as he was about some things, boy and man, Harri son was easily taken in 1 ' That afternoon Dr. Dillaway an nounced to his daughters that he pro posed to take a vacation. This was something altogether new. Dr. Dilla way 's church was never closed, and the summer months, when most of his parishioners were absent, he usually de voted to ministering to the poor. Ex cepting to attend conventions, or for business affairs, his daughters had never known him to leave home. " But it Is almost October now, papa, and everybody has come home!" re monstrated his daughters. "You ought to have gone with us in the summer." "I didn't feel the need of vacation then, and I do now," said the Rev. Dr. "I shall be absent a month, and Dr. Johnson will supply my pulpit. I shall go west possibly to Lake Superior. And as to the rest of his plans the Doc tor was rather reticent. His daughters packed his wardrobe with careful hands, and gazed sor rowfully after the train that bore him from them. . "If I believed in presentiments I should certainly think something was going to happen to papa. I feel some thing in my bones 1" said Dolly. " You had better go and talk it over with Aunt Klzzy 1" said Jo, scornfully. And Dolly said no more about her "pre sentiment." She even forgot H herself, before she went to bed that night; but perhaps Mr. Frank Rhodes' coming had something to do with that. He did not come very often of late, since Dolly had coolly informed him that though she was foolish enough to like him a little, she never meant to make such a sacri fice of herself as to marry him ; love didn't last, but the things that gratified one's pride did. "For my part," said this abominable Dolly, " I mean to have "A bouse to bide in, A coach for to ride In, And flunkeys to tend me, Wherever I go." And naturally, the young man's pride took fire at this, and he sternly resolved to think no more of such a heartless, mercenary girl as Dolly. He also sternly resolved not to go to see her again, but, in spite of all his resolutions, Dolly's pretty face was a magnet that drew him with irresistible force, and once in every month he might be seen ringing the door-bell at Dr. Dlllaway 'e house. The poor fellow loved her with all his honest, manly heart, and was foolish enough to build all bis air-castles on the hope of getting rich, and so win ning her. But he always went away from her presence more miserable than he came, for Dolly was a born coquette, understood perfectly her power over him, and liked to torment him as a cat does a mouse. On this evening she was particularly bewitching, and particularly provoking, and poor Frank went away in a state bordering on distraction, resolving more firmly than ever never to go near her again. The Rev. Dr. Dlllaway had been ab sent but a week, when a letter from him fell like a bombshell into the midst of his peaceful family circle. " I have married a widow with six children, you will be somewhat surpris ed to hear; a lady whom I long ago learned to esteem aa the wife of my old classmate, Mr. L." Thus wrote Dr. Dlllaway. The letter fell from Laura's trembling hands. They each picked it up and read it, to be sure that Laura had not taken leave of her senses. Dolly was the first to break the stony silence : " Oh, it Is too dreadful to be true 1 It is a nightmare I Pinch me, somebody, and make me wake up!" "A widow with six now we should have thought a widow, all by herself, was bad enough," said Josephine, medi tatively ; " but piling on the agony in this way, does seem too much I Boruo of them must be grown up, and girls, per haps I I'll never stay here after they come I And I am better oft than either of you, because I am young enough to go to school. I'll go to Vassar College now. It will be better, a thousand times, than staying here with a widow and six children!" " She won't be a widow, she'll be papa's wife, that is the worst of itl" said Dolly, dolefully, " and she'll expect us to call her mother. O, what an aw fully wicked thing for a minister to do!" " I don't think you ought to talk quite like that," said Laura. " Papa wouldu't do anything wicked. I don't think he realized at all how we would feel about It. And, perhaps, we haven't done quite as much for him as we ought. But I'll have carpets put down before they get here. She shan't have the satisfaction of doing it, and acting as if she had been abused. I'll go down to Seymour's and order them this very day!" " There is no hurry ! they won't be at home for three weeks. On their wed ding tour now ! How perfectly ridicu lous! Two old things like that!" said Josephine, disrespectfully. " Laura, shall you stay here go on living here, I mean, after she comes V" asked Dolly, from the depths of a brown study. " It looks very much as if ' fickle fate' had prisoned me here. I have no where to go. Besides I don't mean to leave poor papa to his fate until I find out what it is likely to be 1 She may prove a virago, and make his life wretch ed !" " I hope she will. I hope she's a Fee jee Islander, with six little cannibals 1" said Josephine, who was always very fierce while her anger lasted, and then very penitent. " Well,-1 shan't stay hereto be lectur ed and dictated to by a step mother I" cried Dolly, hotly. " I don't know where you can go," said Laura. " I know !" cried Dolly, triumphant ly, though with a blush, "I'll marry Frank ! He'll be glad to get me at any time. And I am going to ask him right straight off." Dolly Dillaway, are you crazy V" said Laura, severely. "Ask a man to marry you I and for the sake of a home!" "As if he hadn't asked me times enough 1" " But he may have changed his mind." "He's changed since last nlgbt.then." " Dolly, don't marry a man that you don't love, for the sake of getting away from home. Better go away and earn your own living; better endure the worst step-mother that ever lived." " I'm not going to marry a man that I don't love. There, you made me con fess to what I didn't mean to. Who wants to own up to being spooney V I'm going to write a note to Frank, and ask him to come here to-night, and then I'll tell him all about it, and if you think it's more proper, Laura, I'll make him ask me again." " I was just thinking that I couldn't bear to tell anybody of it," said Laura, " and that we had better let papa sur prise his parishioners, as he has us." " I won't tell anybody but Frank. Let papa enjoy his lovely surprise. If there could be a grain of satisfaction in it, it would be in seeing how some wid ows will look. (These were ladies who were thought by his daughters to have smiled too sweetly upon the handsome minister.) Dolly dispatched a note to Frank Rhodes at once, asking him to call that evening, and as early as propriety would allow, that young man appeared with a countenance upon which amazement and delight were mingled. What Dolly wanted of him was a mystery, but it was delightful that she wanted him at all. Dolly had donned a black dress, and wore not a particle of color any. where, a rare thing for her, and her face was very doleful. She did not smllo as bhe entered the room. " Dolly, what is the matter t Not your father he lsu't 111 ?" " Worse than that!" said Dolly, so lemnly. " Not dead V O, Dolly, not dead 1" " Worse than that Oh, no, I don't mean that ; but worse for him, I think. He has married a widow, with six chil dren !" " Wh-e-w!" whistled Frank. "Is that all the sympathy you have, sir?" " Why, If I should see him, Dolly, I'd try to express my sympathy as feel ingly as the circumstances would allow ; but" " Sympathy for u,of course, I mean," said Dolly, sternly. " Well, It is rather rough upon you, Dolly, that's a fact! But maybe you'll like her them I mean." "Like her! I wou't Btay in the house a day after she comes! And I wanted to ask you where do you think I had better go V I thought perhaps you might know of a situation 1" All this was rather falteringly said, and Frank looked bewildered. " A situation V What in the world can you do V" That made Dolly very Indignant. " There are a great many things that I can do," she answered stoutly. For one thing I am an elegant housekeeper ask Laura 1" " But what a position for you ! And, besides, who would have you for a house keeper, a girl not twenty yet 1" ("He Is too obtuse for anything! I shall have to be 'the woman who dared,' though It's unspeakably worse than I thought. I hope the Woman's Rights people will never move to have things this way 1" thought Dolly.) " If nobody would have me for a housekeeper, It is just possible that some man would take pity on me and marry me," said Dolly, red to the roots of her hair. Frank's brow darkened. "And you want me to suggest one who can give you, as you say, " A house for to bide in, A coach for to ride In, And flunkeys to tend yon Wherever you go I" " I only want one who can protect me from a step-mother I" said Dolly, and dropped her eyes completely outof sight, Something in her manner seemed sud denly to strike Frank. A light leaped into his eyes. " Dolly, a six-footer, like me, could do that, even if he was poor, I would un dertake the whole seven, if you would have me I" No answer. " Dolly, are you in earnest ? I can't bear jesting." And the big, strong fel low actually trembled as he stood over her. " Of course I am in earnest ; but never thought you would be mean enough to make me propose to you I" said Dolly, and actually set out to have 'a cry,' but allowed herself to be speed! ly soothed by Frank's tender raptures And Frank did have sense enough to ask her to name an' early day, without being ' hinted at ;' and these two grace less young people resolved to be married on the day before the Rev. Dr. Dilla. way's return. They carried out their intentions, moreover, being married very privately. And before that day Josephine had made all her arrangements to enter Vassar College on the next day, and Laura had the house carpeted throughout, except ing the balls and dining room, to whose uncovered, hard wood floors her father naa never oojeccea. And now they were all gathered in the drawing room, awaiting the arrivals. They had not been able to discover whether the bride's whole family were to accompany her or not, but, resolved not to be found wanting, they had prepared a dinner that might have served for a score, and every bed-chamber in the house was prepared for the guests. But the girls wore very sombre dresses, and very long faces. "I can't call her mother! I won't call her mother !" declared Josephine, for the tenth time, just as a sharp peal of the bell rang through the house. If It had been their father alone, the girls would not have allowed him to ring they would have been at the door, to meet him; now they only arose and stood near the drawing-room door, in very dignified attitudes, Dolly leaning rather defiantly upon her husband's arm. The Rev. Doctor entered, brisk, beam ing and alone. "Why, I couldn't think where you all were ! Couldn't one of my little girls come to meet me ? he asked. "Papa, where is sheV" burst forth Josephine. "SheV" repeated the Doctor, in a be wildered tone, though with a twinkle in his eye. " Your wife our mother ?" said Laura, courageously. " In heaven, my dear," said the Doe. tor, tenderly. "But but the new one! You wrote us that you had married a widow with six children your old friend s widow I' cried the three, in chorus. " Why, yes, yes, my dears. So I did!" said the Doctor, seating himself calmly, and spreading out bis hands before the genial fire In the gate. " But I married her to another man 1" Whether to laugh for Joy or cry for shame the girls did not know. " How dellghful It Is to be at home again," said Dr. Dlllaway, turning the subject as easily as If he were not secret ly exulting over the success of his "little oke." " And how cheerful and com fortable this 'beautiful carpet makes the room. My dears, it touches me very much that you should have remembered my wishes, when I was away, and sacri ficed your own tastes." 'It wasn't that, papa," said Laura, with a lump In her throat. " It was be cause I was determined your new wife shouldn't do it I I wouldn't have any body think that she cared more for your comfort than we did !" " Papa, I'm going to Vassar, to-mor row," said Josephine, dolefully. " Another one of my little girls sacri ficing her own wishes to mine. I can't tell you how delighted I am." "It wasn't that," owned Jo. "It was because I wouldn't live with a step mother." Easy enough for them, but O, poor me!" Dolly had been thinking all the time. She had kept very much in the back ground, but now she rushed up to her father with desperate courage, and cried : " Oh, papa, we have done such a dread ful thing Frank and I ! We have got married I" "Well, I did think, when Frank wrote me about it, that you might wait until I got home your poor old father would have liked the privilege of mar rying you ! But since it was all to grati fy my wishes, I could not withhold my consent." " When Frank wrote V Oh, you per fidious monster!" turning upon Frank. " 1 believe this was all a plot I" "Not a bit of it Dolly," said Frank, " I thought he was married as much as you did, but I didn't think it was quite the thing to marry you out of hand, without letting him know; though I am afraid that if I hadn't felt sure of his consent I mightn't have done it !" "Dolly turned her back upon Frank for fully five minutes. "My children," said the minister, rubbing his hands slowly together and allowing his black eyes to twinkle. " I have come to the conclusion that vaca tions are a means of grace ! I have neglected them too much. Hereafter I shall take one every year !" " But, papa, don't go where there are widows, will you V" cried Jo, anxious ly. But the minister was too wise to promise. " I am glad I am married," said Dol ly, aside. "There'll be no security here, if papa has taken to vacations. He'll discover, before long, that widows, as well as vacations, may be a means of grace." which is certainly a "new use" Sieve, for wid ows. Lovers' Troubles. Two young men went into the woods near Aurora, 111., to play a game of cards. As they were rival lovers, and had not previously spoken to each other for months, it is conjectured that the girl in dispute was the stake they played for. The winner, however, was not permitted to gain the prize, for his op ponent instantly shot him through the heart. An effort made to settle ri valry by chance had a not less sad re sult in Texas. The two suitors were convinced that the young woman would aocept either of them if the other would let her alone, and they agreed to throw dice to decide which should give her up. The loser honestly endeavored to keep the compact, but the woman refused to be disposed of in that way, and wrote to him that she would marry nobody else, and would not even see the winner. The latter would not believe that his compet itor had tried to retire from the contest, and so murdered him. A Singular Fact. One of the best investments ever made by a large sign-painting firm la this city, many years ago, was to pay a man In Jersey City $600 for his secret preparation, by which he applied gold leaf in some kind of gilding. The man received the $600, took up a piece of glass, licked It with his tongue, and the gold-leaf adhered beautifully. This was his secret, and it proved worth the sum to the others to know it. Aeto York Observer. "I Don't Want That Stuff. Is what a lady of Boston said to her husband when he brought home some medicine to cure her of sick headache and neuralgia which had made her miserable for fourteen years. At the first attack thereafter, it was adminis tered to her with such good results, that she continued Its use until cured, and made so enthusiastic in its praise, that she Induced twenty-two of the best families in her circle to adopt it as their regular family medicine. That "stuff" is Hop Bitters. 20.