THE TIMES, NEW BLOOMFIELD, PAM AUGUST 20, 1879. 3 RAILROADS. pTIuSelphIa and reading rTr ARRANGEMENT OF FA8SENGEKTRAIN8. nay UliT, 1870. TRAINS LEAVE H Alt KISBURG AS FOLLOWS For New York, at 5.13, 8.10 ft. in. 2.00p.m. and "7.65 p. m. For Philadelphia, at 6.15, 8.10, 9.4ft a.m. 2.00 an1 4.W p. in. Fur iteadlug, at 8,13, 8.10, 0.45 a.m. and 2.00 4.00 and 7..5 p.m. For Pottsvllle at 5.15. 8.10 a. m., and 4.00 p. m., and via Bcliuylklll and Husquehanna Branch at 2.40 p. in. For Auburn via H. B. Dr. at 6.30 a. m. For Allentown, at 5. 15, B.loa. m., and at 2.00, 4.00 and 7.56 p. in. The 6.15, 8.10 a.m., and 7.55 p. m., train) have through cars for New York. The 6.15, a. in., trains have through carsfor Philadelphia. SUNDAYS i For New York, at 5.15 a. m. For Allentown and Way Stations at5.tSa.rn. For Heading, Philadelphia and Waydtatlonsat 1.43 p. m. TRAIN'S FOB UARHISRVRG, LEAVE AS FOL LOWS : Leave New York, at 8.45 a. m., 1.00, 6.30 nud 7.45 p. in. Leave Philadelphia, at 0.45 a. m. 4.00, and 7.20 p.m. Leave Reading at t4.40, 7.25, 11.50 a. m. 1.30, 6.13 and In. ;ti p. in. Leave Pottsville, at 5.30, 9.15 a.m. and 4.40 p. in. Andvla Schuylkill aud Susquehanna Branchat 8.15 a.m. Leave Auburn vtaS. & S. Br. at 11.50 a.m. Leave Allcntown, at -U.30 5.40, 9.05 a.m.. 12.10 4.30 and 9.05 p.m. SUNDAYS: Leave New York, at 5.30 p. m. Leave Philadelphia, at 7.20 p. m. Leave Heading, at 4.40, 7.40, a. in. and 10.33 p. m. Leave Allentown.nt2 30 a. in., and 9.05 p. m. J. K. WOOTEN, Gen. Manager. C. G.Hancock, General Ticket Agent. tDoes not run on Mondays. Via Morris and Essex K. B. JEWCOMER HOUSE, CARLISLE ST., New Bloomfleld, Penn'n. j; A. NEWCOMER, - Troprlctor. HAVING removed from the American Hotel, Waterford.and having leased and refurnished the above hotel, putting It In good order to ac commodate guests, I ask a share of the pnbllo patronaue. I assure my patrons that every exer tion will be made to render them comfortable. A. My stable is still ill care of the celebrated Jake. March 18, 1879 J. A. NEWCOMER. HE MANSION HOUSE, New Bloomfleld, -Penn'n., GEO. F. ENSM1NGER, Proprietor. HAVING leased this property and furnished it In a comfortable manner, I ask a share of the public patronage, and assure iny friends who stop with me tint every exertion will be made to render their stay pleasant. - A careful hostler always In attendance. April 9. 1878. tf RATIONAL HOTEL. CORTLANDT STEET, (Near Broadway,) 2STE-W "YORK:. HOCHKISS & POND, Proprietors. OST THE EUROPEAN TLAN. The restaurant, cafe and lunch room attached, are unsurpassed for cheapness and excellence of service. Rooms 50 cents, (2 per day. $3 to 810 per week. Convenient to alllerrlesandcityrailroads. NEW FURNITURE. NEW MANAGEMENT. 41y American nnd Foreign Patents. GILMORE & CO.. Successors to CHIFMAN HOSMER & CO., Solicitors. Patents pro cured in all countries. NO FEES IN ADVANCF. No charge unless the patent is granted. No fees for making preliminary examinations. No addi tional fees for obtaining and conducting a re hearing. By a recent decision of the Commis sioner, ALL rejected applications may be revived. Special attention given to Interference Cases be fore the Patent office. Extensions before Con gress, Infringement Suits in different States, and all litigation appertaining to Inventions or Pat ents. Send Stamp to Gilmore & Co., for pamph let of sixty pages. LAND CASKS, LAND WARRANTS & 8CRIP. Contested Land Cases prosecuted before the U. 8. General Land Oftlce and Department of the Interior. Private Land Claims, MINING and PRE EMPTION Claims, and HOMESTEAD cases attended to. Land Scrip In 40, 80, any liiO acre nieces for sale. This Scrip is assignable, and can be located in the name of the purchaser upon any Government land subject to private entry, at 81.25 per acre. It is of equal value with Bounty Land Warrants. Send Stamp to Gilmore & Co., for pamphlet of Instruction. ARREARS OF PAY AND BOUNTY. OFFICERS, SOLDIERS and SAILORS of the late war, or their heirs, arein many casesentitled to money from the Government of which they have no knowledge. Write full history of service, and state amount of pay and bounty received. Enclose stamp to GILMORE & CO., and a full re. ply, after examination, will be given you free. PENSIONS. All OFFICERS. SOLDIERS, and SAILORS, wounded, ruptured, or injured in the late war, however slight, can obtain a penson by addressing GILMORK&CO. Cases prosecuted by GILMORE & CO., before the Supreme Court of the United States, the Court of Claims and the Southern Claims Commission. Each department of our business la conducted In aseparate bureau, under charge of the same experienced parties, enibloved by the old firm. Prompt attention to all business entrusted to GILMORE & CO., Is thus secured. We desire to win success by deservlneit. Address: GILMORE ft CO., 623 F. Street, Washington, D. C. jgLOOMFIELD ACADEMY. An English Classical School for Ladies nnd Gentlemen, The regular Academic year lieglns on MON DAY. September 1st. 1S78. Students are carefully prepared for College The preparation is thorough and accurate, and up to the requirement of any leading Colleges. An English course, the Academic course proper, embraces the essentials of a good Knulisheduca tion. and students whose progress Jusliliea It will be allowed to select one or more ot the hlulier branches in addition to the studies of thiscourse. Music, Drawing and Painting. Patrons will notice our reduction of expenses: Board and furnished room, if paid In advance, S2 Alii Tuition for common English branches, in advance. S no per quarter of ten weeks. During coming nm' Did number of students will be limited in order to do thorough work. Address: J. II. FLICKIXGER. A. M., Principal, or Wm. ghikr. Prourle letor. New llloomUcld, Pa. July 29. 1879. O V K E S' B E A Rp ELJ X 1 1 .Hr.v h. .. t"LTi'l"'5 THE LAYMAN MYSTERY. THE following remarkable story has never before been published In Its complete form. Years ago the mala features of It were printed in the New York Courant but, for the sake of cer tain parties Involved, the full narrative was suppressed. George Layman was a farmer, resid ing near Belby, In Yorkshire, England. Though not an educated man by any means, he was above the average far mer of the time. He had a good home, well furnished, and a flue farm excel lently stocked. He was twenty-eight years old, and unmarried. With him resided an only sister of seventeen and a girl of remarkable beauty. In 1820, when this narrative opens, brother and sister were living in the greatest affec tion and harmony. In those days it was customary to employ young men, generally the sons of other farmers, and to board and lodge them in the house. George Layman had seven such. One of them was named Thomas Miller. He was about nineteen or twenty, well built, and exceptionally good looking aud attractive. He was exceedingly well informed, and spoke without any of the peculiarities of dialect for which York shire men are noted. He came to the farm-house with a stick in his hand and a bundle on his shoulder, and obtained a night's lodging. He got into conversation with the farmer and the hands, and, though he admitted that he knew nothing of farming, but had worked at the trade of a gunsmith, he expressed a desire to remain and make himself useful about the place. Layman assented. Miller joined the other young men, and was apparently soon deeply interested in his work. An acquaintance soon sprang up be tween Miller and Fanny Layman, the farmer's sister. Unfortunately It took a clandestine form, and the lovers for such they soon became met in secret. The consequences which might be expected followed, and Miller soon after ward disappeared. When it was appar ent to her brother and neighbors that she was to become a mother, she solemn ly averred that she had been married to Miller, and produced a certificate show ing such to be the fact. Miller disap peared March 20, 1820, when Fanny was within three months of her confine ment. On April 17th following, a stranger arrived at the small inn in the adjacent village, and sent for Farmer Layman. He represented that he was auxious to hire a run for cattle, and had heard that Layman's land was peculiarly adapted. A long conversation followed, and Lay man did not return home until rather late. On the road thither, and not more than half a mile from his home, he came upon a carriage standing in the road. Several men were around, and one held a lantern while the others were putting on the fore wTreel, which had come oft in a rut. Layman paused a moment, and as he did so he heard a stifled groan from the vehicle. "What's the matter ?" he asked. " Any one hurt?" " Oh, no," was the reply ; " the lady is only alarmed that is all. " "Help help 1" was heard in tones that seemed to indicate a struggle to free the speaker's mouth from a muffling hood. "What means this ?" Layman in quired, excitedly, springing from his horse and going toward the door of the carriage. He was confronted by a stalwart, gray haired man in a capacious cloak, who thrust him aside with his left hand, and said : "Do not interfere,, my friend, the lady is my daughter, and she is slightly alarmed that is all." At the same time another pdtson stepped up to Layman and whispered ; " She has been long confined in a lunatic asylum, and we are just convey ing her home. Make no alarm, or she may have to return." Thus appealed to, the farmer passed on, and before two minutes had elapsed the coach passed out of sight and hear ing in an opposite direction. When the farmer reached home he found that his sister was missing. Soon after he left for the inn a person brought a message for her, and she walked down the road with him. That was the last seen of her. ' Search was made all over the nel gh horhood, but it was unavailing. The man at the hotel who had sent for Layman vanished the same night, and it was believed that he was lu conspiracy with the abductors of the girl, and on him devolved the part to get the farmer out of the way while his sister was re moved. What was the object of the abduction? That was the interesting question. Sev eral days passed, and the neighborhood wag still in excitement over the missing girl, when a servant cleaning out the grate in the room occupied by the stranger at the inn, found a scrap of paper clinging to the chimney. It had been partly burned with others, hut had been carried up the chimney by a draft and clung to a protuberance. This scrap of paper was thought nothing of by the servant, and would have been thrown away If the landlord had not seen it, and observed on it the name " Layman." This attracted his attention, and he read all that was there. It was as follows : gel the Layman the way, jou can easily entice tunny Use what aids find need. Saldom. The paper had been formed along the fourth line, and then torn off at the corner. It was conveyed to Layman, and kept by him as likely to be of value. There was small doubt that Fanny was in the vehicle which Layman overtook on his way home, and that the screams which he heard were her cries for help. Could It be that Miller was at the bot tom of the abduction ? Layman re membered that Miller had frequently written in an album belonging to Fan ny, and in comparing that writing with ttie writing on the scrap of paper they were found to be Identical. Layman made his way to York to consult a lawyer as to the best means of discover ing his sister. When he reached that city almost the first thing he saw in a newspaper was an account of the dis covery of the body of a murdered woman in the River Aire, just above Leeds, near a place known as the Forge. The woman was pregnant, and her linen was marked " F. L." Feeling sure that this must be his sister, for the description .answered to her in every particular,Lay man started back home. On the outskirts of Selby he was wny laid by footpads, and robbed. Then he was left on the highway, half dead. He was found by a laboring man who rec ognized him, and had him conveyed home. When Layman recovered con sciousness, he remembered distinctly that one of the footpads said, when ex postulated with by the other : " You know as well as I do that the understanding was that we were to kill him." Layman was a vigorous man, aud three days after his last mishap he was on his way to Leeds. Arrived at Kirk still, he found that the body had been claimed by an old woman as that of her daughter, and buried. Layman went before Mr. James Hargraves, then a Magistrate, and applied to have the body disinterred. Leave was granted, and the next morning was appointed for the work. During the night, however, the grave was opened and the corpse re moved. Who the depredators were was involved In mystery. Layman saw In It a conspiracy to defraud justice, and by a wonderful stroke of good fortune hit upon the very device which the de spoilers of the grave had adopted. While examining the church-yard and the neighboring field, he observed deep foot prints underneath a very high wall, the ascent of which was, however, easy to an unencumbered person. These foot steps led both ways, and Layman con cluded that persons rifling the grave had both approached it and quitted It by that way. But it was next to impossible that they could have done this with the cofllu in their possession, and therefore he ar rived at the conclusion that the corpse had been reburied somewhere within the precincts of the grave-yard. A search was made, but no newly turned soil was found. Mr. Hargrave suggested exam ining the old-fashioned square raised tombs, of which there were many In the grounds, and sure enough, under' one of the slabs was found the coffin aud the remains. Layman identified the body as his sister's and It bore marks to show that the girl had been strangled. By this time the authorities of Leeds, York and Belby had become alike in terested in the crime. That the man Miller was at the bottom of It they had every reason to believe. But who was he, that he could bring his instruments to bear so readily whenever he desired to use them? And what was his object in accomplishing the death of the girl ? The word " Seldon" at the end of the writing on the scrap of paper found in the chimney was evidently the wri ter's name. Was Seldon the same per son as Miller, and was that person inter, ested in getting out of the way the girl whom he lawfully married ? Mr. Har grave's shrewdness seemed to ofl'er a rational solution of the mystery, name ly : That Miller had married the girl unknown to wealthy parents or friends, aud on their learning of the fact they had taken measures to remove her, in order that the disgrace of marrying be neath his station, might be removed, and that he. might be at liberty to fulfill some other marriage engagement which they had arranged. One thing was re solved on to look for Seldon. There was a family of that name in the North Hiding, residing near Birmingham, aud another branch of the same family at Stanhope, in Durham. All investiga tion, however, failed to connect any member of either family with Fanny Laymau. There was only one man of a suitable age In either, and he had been traveling abroad at the very time of Miller stay with the Laymans. In the meantime it ought to be said, a Con oner's Jury had sat In the case of Fan ny Layman or Miller, and returned a verdict of wilful murder against some party or parties unknown. Two years passed away. Layman went to London on pleasure or busi ness, and as countrymen are wont, vis ited the House of Commons. He saw a gentleman coming out of St. Stephens' who attracted his attention. The young man, Miller, stood before' him there was no doubt of that. He inquired who he was, and learned that he was James Aubrey Seldon, a member of Parliament from the North Hiding of Yorkshire, and that this was his first session In the House. Layman returned the next day and watched for the arrival of the members. In due time Seldon came, and Layman had a good view of him. No doubt re mained on his mind as to his being Miller. Layman was in doubt what to do. He had 150 pounds In his pocket book, and he said to himself that he ought to secure the services of a lawyer. He asked for the Courts, aud meeting a host of lawyers coming out in wig and gown, he stopped one. This happened to be none other than the renowned Brougham, who listened to the man pa tiently. Calling a younger lawyer, he briefly Informed him of the facts, and he asked Layman to wait where he was for a moment. The lawyer returned with a cab, and he and Layman drove to Bow street. A warrant was procured and Seldon was arrested. Now follows the most remarkable part of the strange narrative. Seldon denied all knowledge of Lay man or his family, or that he ever went by the name of Miller. His hand writing, however, was shown to corres pond exactly with that of Miller, and that of the man who signed "Seldon" to the scrap of paper found In the chim ney of the inn. Seldon 's father was also positively identified by Layman as the gray-haired man who thrust him away from thecar rlnge on the night of Fanny's disappear ance. A host of witnesses, however, swore that the elder Seldon was at home at that time and sick in bed. To crown all, while Seldon was still under exam ination, a young man answering Mil ler's description somewhat, surrendered hlmeelf to the authorities, and confessed that he was Miller, and ha'd enticed Fan ny away and murdered her. The ad mission of this cold-blooded murder aroused the indignation of all who heard it. He was tried, convicted and sen tenced to be hanged within forty-eight hours. At the last moment he was re prieved, and his sentence was subse quently commuted to banishment for life. Layman persisted in his belief to the very last that Seldon was the real man, and his conviction was intensified by what occurred some years later. There was a hunt at Rock Hall, the seat of Sir Joseph Rockcllffe, Layman's land lord. Seldon was there, and following the hounds he took a path which no one knew but .those acquainted with Lay man's farm. This strengthened the far mer's belief that Seldon and Miller were Identical. But the most confirmatory and dam ning proof Is yet to be given. Inquiry showed that the man representing him self as Miller was pardoned the very day his sentence of death was commuted to transportation, and that he was actually keeping a hotel at Richmond, in York shire, within a few miles pf the coun try Beat of the Seldons, and passing un der his own name, Marfit. This fact was ascertained in 1832. The very same year one King was hanged at York for highway robbery. Before the execu tion he made a confession of his crimes, and among other things admitted that he was one of the gang who assailed Layman, near Selby, soon after the murder of his sister. He was formerly a groom with the Seldon family, and confessed that he was hired to aid two gypsies in dispatching Layman and getting rid of his sister. He declined to say who hired him, but enough escaped him to show that his employer was the elder Seldon. Finally, in 1841, the wife of James Aubrey Seldon filed a bill of divorce agaluBt her husband, asking for a sepa rate maintenance. One of the facts set up was that the respondent was subject to fits of great mental excitement, dur ing which he recounted crimes which he Bald he had committed, and among them the instigation of the murder of one Fanny Layman, to whom he was married clandestinely. An attempt was thereupon made to revive the inquiry iuto the murder, but Marflt disappeared from Richmond and Seldon was placed in a lunatic asylum, near Durham. Thence he escaped in 1847, and nothing was heard of bim for several weeks, un til his remains were found on a heap of I straw in an old barn ou, Layman's iarm. Taking all the circumstances together there is no doubt that James Aubrey Sel don and Miller were the same. Seldon had returned from the Continent, aud took a fancy to stroll through the coun try toward homo. On his way he came to Layman's and there saw Fanny. That was the attraction which held him. Finding his attempts to seduce her in vain, he married her secretly. On dis covering the condition in which she was, he abandoned her and returned home. By some means his father, who was a desperate and unprincipled man, learned of his marriage, and a plan was devised to remove her. In the first Instance, it is supposed that the GypBles were to ab duct her and Inveigle her into some sit uation which would warrant a divorce. Subsequently, however, her death was resolved on, whether with the saction of the Seldons or not Is uncertain. The old woman who claimed the girl's body was doubtless one of the Gypsies. The alleged sickness of the elder Seldon must have been a trumped up story, to which it was not difficult to get retainers to swear, especially when all the authori ties, from the Constables to the King, were anxious to cover up the guilt of the real culprits. THE CAUSE OF THUNDER. I HAVE lately seen it stated in atext book upon electricity and magnet ism that the phenomenon of thunder is not fully accounted for by any theory as yet brought forward. Whether this be so or not, I am not sufficiently acquaint ed with the subject to say. I believe the commonly accepted theory is that a vacuum is created in the path of the electric spark, and that the subsequent in-rush of the air produces the detona tion. If, however, it be allowed that the electric spark is not a material sub stance, but that it is merely a natural force or mode of action, the possibility of this theory is at once disposed of. It Is a wellrknown fact that the passage of electricity in a high state of tension through a mixture of oxygen and hy drogen, not only causes an explosion, but also causes the formation of water, and it seems to me that, given the exist ence of free oxygen and hydrogen in the region of the electric disturbance, the phenomenon of thunder is sufficiently accounted for. Whether the normal amount of hydrogen In the air is suffi cient to cause the stupendous noise of thunder I am not competent to judge; but if not, I would suggest that the pres ence of an abnormal amount might be accounted for by the process of the elec trolysis, which would probably occur between the two poles of the thunder cloud before the tension became so great as to cause a rupture of the circuit and consequent discharge of the electric spark. I would also draw your atten tion to the fact that every thunder-clap Is Immediately followed by an increase in the quantity of water deposited In the shape of rain. Does this not point to formation of water by the explosion of the gases? As I myself am unable.both of means and time, to Investigate the matter, I should be glad to find that some one better qualified had taken the subject in hand. It is a frequent exper iment of Dr. Tyndall's to show his audi ence red clouds. I feel convinced that, by following this line of inquiry he could give us a real thunder-storm. Nature. A Kind Hearted Judge. Romance would seem out of place In the judicial chair of a higher court, but three case3 are on record during the past three months where an ' English' judge has not only evinced the tact of woman, but her a love of romance as well, and wound up a somewhat bitter lawsuit by marying off'the plaintiff and defendent. A young man and woman who were some distant relation to each other, were recently contesting their right to a piece of property, the one claiming possession under an old lease, and the other under an old will. The case became sorely entangled, and the judge said: "It strikes me that there is. only one way out of this difficulty that, can give satisfaction to both of you.. Here is a respectable young man of good, possessions and prospects who would certainly have appeared In a more favor, able light had he not been so piqued by the plaintiff, who, on the other hand, is naturally a very nice young woman. They can get married and both live hap pily on the land which they are now disputing about, but if they go on with this ungraceful suit, the value will soon be frittered away between the lawyers." The young woman blushed and the young man appeared very awkward, but a stay of proceedings was had to give the contestants time to get married,after. which the suit was withdrawn. How to Get Sick. Expose yourself day aud night, eat too much without exercise; work too hard without rest ; doctor all the tlrne ; take all the vile nostrums advertised; aud then you will waut to know How to Get Well. Which is answered in three words Take Hop Bitters I See other column. 34.