'2 THE TIMES, NEW BLOOMFIELD, PA. JULY 22, 1879. tered couutry that be lost tho trace. There whs a river, and ou this side about a tulle from the river was a cabin, and the woman said that a covered wagon patted by about that time of the year, with a man dressed In a blue jeam suit, with bright buttons, walking behind the wagon, and a dark-looking man who drove the ponies. " Then a man about half a mile across the river told of seeing a covered wagon pass very early In the morning with only one man In It, that was all he saw, but there might have been more. " The officer followed another hundred miles, but could And no one that ever saw a man dressed In blue jeans after he crossed the river. " But he passed on to the small town where Williams told his goods, and found he had a permanent store there, and had had for four years ; It was In charge of a clerk, who stated he had been In Williams employ four years ; that he knew nothing of his movements when not there; that he remembered the goods being brought, but there was an extra trunk of clothing, which was sold ; that is, a portion of them was sold ; Williams kept out the best white shirts and a pair of fine boots ; he said that the clothing had recently been given him by a deceased friend. " The detective turned and went back to where Harry was last seen, and, get- ting In the few neighbors, he told them his mission, and asked their aid in un- . earthing Harry Colby : he had disap peared near that place and was con vine- d that lie had been murdered by Wil liams, although Williams bore a good name wherever he had been known ; but still those letters that had been sent backward and forward looked mighty suspicious. " Bo the officer, with these men's help, commenced searching for indications of a grave, and at last, about half a mile from the road, in as lonely a spot as could be found, the ground was Bunken 1u ; it was a round Indenture, not ob long like a grave, so they commenced digging, and it was not long before a ' bright button was exposed.and very gen Uly the dirt was removed, and there they tfound all that was left of Harry Colby. He was identified by his blue suit, which was remarkably well preserved, and by a peculiar tooth. "I Bhall always believe the guiding hand of Providence led poor Harry to have that blue suit made up for that journey , for he could not bear the thought of wearing it before, so that his disap pearance might be traced and brought to light; for bo many were immigrating about that time, and all so much alike, that he would have never been remem bered had not the uncommon blue jeans, with its bright buttons, been noticed and commented on and remembered. "I shall never forget that coming home, for we were, all hoping against hope that he might be somewhere ; and then it was so hard to think that Wil Hams would make away with him. True, he was under arrest for forgery, and those letters coming from Missouri were very suspicious ; but he had always borne such a good name, was raised among us, belonged to the church and all that ; so we could not bring ourselves to believe he could murder the son of the man who had done so much for him, for he knew how very much Harry was loved and idolized at home. Beside, he had come back and married his only sis ter. Why, sir, it was unbelievable that a man could be so wicked. " lsut when all tnat was left of poor Harry had been brought home, and the bullet found in bis side, then we knew Williams had done it had coolly and deliberately planned and executed the awful deed for the paltry sum invested in those goods and because he always hated Harry ; he was jealous of the love bestowed on him by his parents and Cora, and, beside, if Harry was . out of the way, he and Cora would inherit all of Mr. Colby's vast wealth. " Well, it is useless he go Into details of the trial ; he was convicted and sen tenced to be hung. After he was sen tenced he confessed that he had planned the murder before starting ; that he car ried the spade all the way to dig his grave or the hole be was found in; that the morning the deed was done Harry was preparing breakfast, when he took up .the spade and said he would hunt a cer tain kind of root. In a few minutes he shouted for Harry to come in he be lieved he had discovered a gold mine Harry, all unsuspicious, leaned over the hole that Williams had made, searching for signs of the bright metal, when Williams shot him through the side ; he aimed at his heart, but the bullet glanc ed oil. He lost words were : " Oh, John, I know you did not do it intentionally I Tell mother I am not afraid to die.' ' Poor fellow J He had no idea he had been coolly and foully murdered by one who should have been a protector and friend. . , ' " Willlums had intended to get the old man, with his wife, started on the road to Missouri, and there murder them. Why, sir, he confessed he had the very place picked out. Oh, there never was a greater villain I If it had not been for the five thousand in the bank that he ob tained by forgery, neither of the old couple would be alive to-day. He never dreamed that Mr. Colby would find out the money had been drawn out of the bank. " The day he was hung he dressed himself in a nice suit of black cloth and walked out to the gallows as coolly, smoking a cigar, as if he was taking a walk. He was possessed of considerable wealth, which he willed to his sister. Cora had no children and had her name changed to Colby. 8he is an angel, and tries ever to cheer and comfort her poor stricken mother." A Coin that will Grow. PETEU'B mother died. After that he waB sent to his grandmother's for he had a quarrelsome,fretful tern per, and his aunt could not manage him with the other children. His grandmother dealt kindly and patiently with him, and helped him to improve. Peter now had a new mother, and his father had sent for him to come home, but he did not want to go. He felt sure he would not like his new mother, and that Bhe would not like him. " That depends upon yourself, reter," said grandmother. " Carry love and kindness in your pocket and you'll find no difficulty." That idea Btruck the boy favorably. He wished he could, he said. " And the best of it is," said grand mother, " if you once begin paying it out, your pockets will never be empty, for you'll be paid in your own coin. Be kind and you will be treated kindly- love and you'll be loved." " I wish I could," said Peter. And all the way home he more or less thought of it. I do not know about his welcome home, or what hla father or new mother said to him. The next morning he rose early, as he was used to at his grandmother's, and came down stairs, where everything being new, he felt very strange and lonely. "I know I shan't be contented here," he said to himself ; " I know I shan't ; I'm afraid there's not a bit of love in my pocket." However, in a little while his new mother came down, when Peter came up to her and said : " Mother, what can I do to help youV" " My dear boy," said she, kissing him on the forehead, " how thoughtful you are. I thank you for your kind offer, and what can I do to help you ; for I am afraid you will be lonely here at first.comlng from your dear,good grand mother?" What a kiss was that! It made him so happy. " That's paying me in moie than my own coin," thought Peter. Then he knew he should love his new mother ,and from that good hour Peter's pocket began to fill with the beautiful, bright coin of klndnegs, which is the best "small change" in the world. Keep your pockets full of it, and you will never be in want. A Remarkable Love Story. THE Port Jervis " Union" tells this story : A little more than four years ago a gentleman of this village, then about twenty-three years of age, fell in love with a young lady, aged about nineteen, also of Port Jervis. She re turned his affection, and for a time all went along Bmoothly. The lady was the daughter of pious parents, and al though she was not connected with any church, was a firm believer in their tenets, and looked with feelings akin to horror on anything approaching skepticism or doubt. But the time came when she learned that her lover was deist ; that he disbelieved in a revealed religion, had no veneration for the Bible and took no interest In churches, sel dom or never attending them save as her escort. She was deeply pained by the revela. tlon . She' sent for her lover and endeav ored to convince him of his error; but he was not satisfied with her arguments and refused to accede to a surrender of his principles. The more the lady pon dered, the more plain her duty seemed to her, and ehe finally decided to renounce her love. She accordingly wrote him a long and tear-stalued letter bidding him good-bye forever. The gentleman again and again urged her to reconsider her determination, but she was obdurate, and a separation took place. He was deeply grieved, hut al though he was, as he thought, badly used, felt that she had acted up to what her convictions of right demanded. He could not easily divest himself of his love, and after a few months he left the village and engaged in business else where. The lady mourned, but tried to satisfy herself that she had acted correctly. Two years made her riiore liberal than she had been, and she began to study on the subject. The more she read the more Bhe distrusted her former deolslon, and Bhe finally became quite as liberal as her lover she had discarded. Whether the loglo of the books Bhe read or the promptings of the old love had most to do with the change it would be hard to tell. The lover, too, had undergone a change. The fact that his creed had cost him his sweetheart annoyed him, and, struggle as he would, he could not banish her from his memory. Last winter a revival of religion took place In the city in which he was en gaged in business. At the solicitation of a friend he was induced to attend. As in the other case, it would be hard to tell whether the change . was brought about by the arguments of the preacher, by the excitement which prevailed, or by the memory of his old love. Suffice It to say that he united with the church and in a short time became a zealous member. He thought over the action of his former sweetheart in discarding him for his Infidelity ,and wrote her a brief note, asking the privilege of once more call- ng on her. Bhe responded in the affirmative. The gentleman came, and when she timidly apologized for her previous dismissal of him, he, to her surprise, defended her conduct, said she had been In the right, and in her place he would to-day do the same. Her heart sank at these words. She confessed the great change in her sentiments. From being a firm believer n the Bible, she had discarded it, and with it her belief In any revealed relig ion. It was now the gentleman's turn to be horrified. He pleaded with her, urged everything he could think of to induce her to change her mind. She could not, and told him so. He felt that he must not be " unequally yoked with an unbeliever," and, taking counsel of his religion, gave her up . Married by Telegraph. 'HE Rev. C. S. Colt, pastor of the Centenary Methodist Episcopal church, on Belleville avenue, Newark, recently performed a novel marriage ceremony in the main Newark office of the Western Union telegraph company. He said that Miss Margaret Wright, of Albany , N. Y., wfco was on a visit to friends in Newark,, requested him to marry her by telegraph to a gentleman in San Francisco. He told Miss Wright that such a marriage would norbe legal She then said that she was engaged to Dr. F. M. Shaw, of Los Angelos, who had promised to come east for her. He had written, however, that owing to a rush of business he could not journey east at the time agreed upon. He urged her to join him in San Francisco, where they would be married. She replied tnat sue wan tea more than a mere promise to marry before she would take such a long journey. Dr. Shaw then proposed that they should be married by telegraph, with witness at the San Francisco and Newark offices, and she accepted the proposal. The Rev. Mr. Colt, after much urging, consented to perform an informal mar riage ceremony, with the understanding that Miss Wright and Dr. Shaw should be married afterward by a clergyman in California. He forwarded a number of questions to Dr. Shaw, who answered that he was fifty-one years old, did not have a wife living, and that no legal objections to the proposed marriage existed. The Bev. Mr. Coit refused to give Miss Wright a marriage certificate, the under standing being that she would get one from the minister in California. At nine o'clock one evening the opera tor in the Western Union office at Market and Broad Btreets, Newark, was surprised by the appearance of the Bev Mr. Coit and a fashionable party of ladies and gentlemen In the office. Miss Wright, who has dark chestnut hair, brown eyes, and an olive complexion, wore a dark silk dress, with white boh. net and lilies of the valley. She carried in her right hand a small bouquet of white flowers. She blushed a deep crimson and laughed nervously when the Bev. Mr. Colt said to the operator that she wished to be married by telegraph. By request of the Rev. Mr. Coit, the operator telegraphed to Dr. Shaw, who was awaiting with his friends in the San Francisco office, the question : " Are you ready V" in a lew minutes tne answer was flashed back : " l es, and have been for an hour." The Rev. Mr, Colt then read the ques tion, which the operator sent to Dr, Shaw: " Do you take Margaret Wright for your lawful wife, and promise to be faithful to her until separated by death V" There was considerable delay at the Ban Francisco office, and while waiting for an answer the bride chatted pleas antly with her friends, one of whom said: " Wouldn't it be a Joke, Maggie, if the doctor said no V" Thebrlde Join ed in the laughter that followed. Mean while Dr. Shaw telegraphed, " I do, and pledge my love and protection." lie also sent on the name of a friend, a Mr. Shere, as his witness In San Fran cisco. Mr. Gibson, of Newark, was the witness for Miss Wright. . a jew days alter the ceremony was performed the bride started for Califor nia to Join her husband. She is 27 years old, Intelligent and accomplished. All Aqalnst Him. THERE were two men (about 1838) Stlckpenny & Whewell, who owned a saw mill near Old Town, Maine, in common. The arrangement under which the mill was operated was that each one had the mill all to himself during the alternate weeks. Stick penny was a mean, rusty old chap. Whewell was a shrewd, Investigating young man. The ' mill was run by a crude, rougli kind of an undershot wheel that gave very little power for the amount of water used, so that the water was often short. Whewell wanted to put in a new iron spiral vent wheel then Just coming out, but Stlckpenny would have nothing to do with it. He wasn't going to lay out money for any " such Job as that." Finally, Whewell said he would pay all the bills, to which Stick- penny at last agreed, " but provided you nut the wheel ill in your week." So the new wheel was put in, and Whewell, being of a mechanical turn of mind, experimented with it, and soon found that by plugging up some of the orifices the saw went through the log faster than when they were all open. So he plugged tbem up during his week, and alwavs nulled the nlucs all out airain for Stlckpenny to operate with. Soon it began to be noticed that somehow or other Whewell always managed to saw a couple of thousand feet mpre of lumber in his week than everStickpenny could, no matter how the pond was. Finally, Stlckpenny went down to. see Whewell about it. Says he: "Whewell, how is it that you alway manage to Baw more lumber in a given time than I can when my turn comes round?" Says Whewell Don't you know how that is ? Waal, I'll tell you. It's because you ain't been treatin' of me fairly on this matter. It's agin nature. You can't expect the mill to saw as well for you as it does for tbem as do the square thing all around." Stick- penny wouldn't believe that and went away. But still the mill went on turn lng out regularly more lumber for Whe well than Stlckpenny managed to get out of it ; bo finally the latter came around and said : " What's your bill ? I'll pay my share." He paid it, and thereafter Stlckpenny managed to saw Jnst as lively as Whewell did. "Well," said the old fellow, " I always knew that the folks around here were all ag'in me, but I never thought the Almighty was;" and he died without finding out the explanation of it all. Crime is Allegheny. This seems to he an era of crime in Allegheny county, and there is scarcely a day that the papers do not contain some fresh criminal sensation. Joseph Aikens and wife have lived for many years in Unity township,about Ave miles from Oreensburg, where they cultivated a good-sized farm. About a year ago Aikens made up his mind to go to Ire land, and with this purpose in view had the title-deed to his farm made over to his wife. Later, when he changed his mind and determined to stay at home, Mrs. Aikens refused to give up the title- deed, and this, so far as the neighbors know, was the beginning of a family dispute, which has since been embittered by Aikens' drinking habits. The quar rel culminated recently. A young man met Aikens on the road with a shot gun in his hand. Aikens told him that he had Just shot his wife, and both returned to the old farmer's bouse. Mi a. Aikens was found lying in the front doorway quite dead,and while the young man was looking at the terrible sight the aged murderer killed himself with the same gun. Short Dresses for Women. A lady Just returned from a protracted stay in Paris says : " I was thoroughly astonished, in visiting Worth's, to find all the newest costumes made short. In fact, no fabrio was too costly to cut up in dresses of walking length. Only dinner costumes and ball dresses were made long." House dresses, carriage dresses, promenade dresses, are all made of one length. A Parisian lady does not pretend to be seen on the street holding up her.skirts. No Good Preaching. No man can do a good Job of work, preach a good sermon, try a law suit well, doctor a patient, or write a good article when he feels miserable aud dull, with slugglshsiln and unsteady nerves, and none shojr'5 make the attempt in such a condltiofl. when it can be so easily and cheaply removed by a little Hop Bitters. Bee other column. DR. WIIITTIER, No. 003 Penn Street, Pittsburgh, Pa., Continues to afford rellti'ils sneHal treatment of ,l' "u urinary iiupusps. reriect cure kuarantppd. Rjieniiaiorrlioea or Seminal Weak nfl resulting from snlf abuse or sexual ecess, prmliioliiK nervous debility, night emissions, do siHimleiiny.dlr.zliiPM, dimness of sight, pimples cil the face, weakness of mind and body, and finally Iniiioteney, lossot sexual power, sterility, eto.,unhlting the ylotlm for marriage or business and rendering life miserable, are permanently cured 111 shortest lioasihla Una i,..,rri,.a. Oleet, Htrlntures, all Urinary diseases and Hyphl lis, (all forms, consisting of Hkln Eruptions, til cers In the mouth, throat, or on other parts of the Dooy, are peneouy cureu. and the blood poison thoroughly eradicated from the system. Dlt. WHj rTIhll Is a regular graduate of medicine, as his diploma at ofllce shows: his life long special experience In all private diseases, with purest meuicine prepared nymmseir, enables him to cure dllllcult cases after others fall It Is self.evl. dent that a physician treating thousands of cases every year acquires great ak IP. The establish ment Is central and retired, ac J no arranged that patients see the doctor only. Consultation and correspondence private and free. I'ampliletssent sealed for stamp. Medicines sent everywhere. Hours 9 A. M. to 4 f. M., and 6 F. M.. to 8 P. M. Hundavs from 10 A. M., to 1 f. M. Everybody suouta read me MAimilUE AND HEALTH GUIDE, 144 pages, fine Illustrations, price 20 cents. A book for private, careful rtadlng by both sexes, married or single, explaining wonders and mys teries of sexual systemf reproduction, marriage Impediments, etc., causes, consequence and cure. Bold at olllce or by mall, sent securely sealed, on receipt oi price In money or postage stamps. Ad- uresn un. niuiiltn, no. sua renu Bt.. Pitts- burgh, l'a. W48 ly JEW WAGON SHOP. TUB undersigned having opened a WHEELWRIGHT SHOP, NEW BLOOMFIELD are now prepared to do any kind of work In their line, tn any style, at prices which cannot fall to give satisfaction. Carriages of all styles built and all work will be warranted. 8TOUFFEB & CRIST. New Bloomfleld, April 23, 187. J- M. Giryin. J. II. GlRVIH J. M. GIRVIN & SON., FLOUR, GRAIN. SEED & PRODUCE Commission Merchants, No. 64 South Gay, St., BALTIMORE, MD. We will oav strict attention to the sale of all kinds of Country Produce and remit the amounts promptly. to iyr. 0. ttl. UIKVIPI BUJN. jyjUSSER & ALLEN CENTRAL STORE NEWPORT, PENN'A. 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