THE TIMES, NEW BLOOM FIELD, 1A., FEBRUARY 24, I860. RAILROADS PHILADELPHIA AND READING R.R AtlllANQEMKNTOF PAB8KNGEKTHA1N8 KOVEXBEK 10th, 1879. Trains Leare Harrlsburg as Follows : For New York vis Alleutowu, at 8.15, B.06 a. m. Alul 1 AF, n. in Kor New York via Philadelphia and "Bound Brook Route," 6.2U, (Fast Kxp.) 8.85 a. In. and A.o p. 111. Through ear arrives In New York fct 12 noon. Korl'hlladelphla, at 5.1ft. 6.2o (fast Exp) 8.U5, 0.55 a. m.. 1 If. nnd l.UU 1. III. For Heading, at 8. 15, 8. 20 (Fast Exp.) B.05, 9.65 a. m i.4.',4.(), aim s.ue p. ni. Kor Pottsvllle. at 6.1r. 8.05 a. m. anil 4.00 p. m., and via Schuylkill and Buaqueliauna Branch at 2.4(1 p. ni. Kor Auburn, via Schuylkill and Husqueliamia Branch at o..iu a. m. Kor Lancaster and Coliimtila, 5. 15,8,05 a m. and 4.011 n. m. Kor Allentowll, at 5.15, 8 05, 0.65 a. m., 1 45 and 4.00 p. hi. The MA, 8.05a. m. and 1.45 p. m. trains have inrougu cars mr sew nora. The 8 uo train lias through cars lor Philadel phia. The 8.05 a. m. and 1.45 p. m.. trains make close connection at Heading with Main J.I lie trains paving inrniiKii cars lor new ioik,viii liounu Brook Route' SUNDAYS t For New York, at 5.20 a. in. Kor Alleutowu and Way Htatlons, at 5.20 a. m. Kor Heading, riilldelaphla, anil Way Stations, at 1.45 p. in. Trains Leave for Harrlhburg as Follons t Leave New York via Alleutowu, 8 45 a. in , 1.00 and 6 3u p. in. Leave New York via "Bound Brook ltoute."and Philadelphia at 7.45 a. ni., 1.30 and p. ni ar riving at Hairlsburg, 1.50, 8.20 p. m., and tf.nup.m. 'Through car, New Vork to llarrlsburg. Leave Lancaster, 8.05 a ni. and 8.50 p. in. Leave Columbia, 7.55 a. m. and 3.40 p. in . 1-eave Philadelphia, at 9.45 a. in., 4.00 and 6.60 (Fast Kxp) anil 7 45 p. in. Leave Pottsvllle. 6.00, 9,10 a. m. and 4.40 p. m. Ieave Heading, at 4.60, 7.25, 11.60 a. in., 1.3U, 0.15, 8.00 and 10.35 p. m. Leave Pottsvllle vla8chuylklll and Susquehanna Branch, 8.25 a. m. Leave Auburn via bcliuylklll and Susquehanna Branch, 11.50 a. in. Leave Alleutowu, at 6.05, 9.05 a. in., 12.10, 4.30, and 9.05 p. m. SUNDAYS: Leave New York, at 8 30 p. nt. Leave Philadelphia, at 7.45 p. m. Leave Heading, at 7.35 a. m. and 10.35 p. m. Leave Alleutowu. at 9.05 p. ni. J. E. WOOTTEN, Gen. Manager. O.O.Hancock, General Passenger and Ticket Ageut. JHE MANSION HOUSE, New Bloomfleld1, renn'a., GEO. F. ENSMINGEH, Proprietor. HAVINU leased this property and furnished It In a comfortable manner, task a share et the publio 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 at tendance. April 9. 1878. tl RATIONAL HOTEL" " CORTLANDT STEET, (Near Broadway,) nsnl-w yoek. HOCHKISSSPOND, , Proprietors ON THE EUROPEAN PLAN. The restaurant, cafe and lunch room attached, are unsurpassed for cheapness and excellence of service. Kooms 60 cents, 12 per day. 13 to f 10 per week. Convenient to allferrieBaiidcltyraili'oads. NEW FURNITURE. NEW MANAGEMENT. 4 ly THE MOULD'S MODEL 9UUAZIKE. A Combination of He Knte-talning, thi Useful and the Beautiful, with Fine AM En graving!, and Oil Pictures in each. Xumber r.ie Model Parlor Magazine of the Woild, , Contains the essentials of all others, including origiuat Poetry, Sketches and Mories, by the best writers to every branch of entertaining nnd useful Literature. It Is enriched with Engravings and Beautiful Illustrations worth more than Us cost; also. Floriculture, Architecture. Household Matters, Reliable Fashions and Full-size Pat terns, with other rain and beautiful novelties calculated to elevate the taste and make home attractive and happy. No one can afford to do without this world's acjtnow'edged Model Magazine. The largest in form, the largest in circulation, and the best in everything that makes a magazine desirable. Single Copies, 25 Cents. Yearlv, H.00, with a val uable premium to each subscriber who selects fiom a list of twenty articles. Bend your address in a postal card, and receive In return full par ticulars, sample C pie mailed on receipt of 7kn UmM. READ THIS. A Tribute to American Journa'lsm by the Repre sentative Press of Furope. "Demorest's Magazine, a literary conservator of the artistic and tiie useful. Got up In America, where it has enormous sales, the most remarkable work of the class that has ever been published, and combines the attractions of Beveral English Maeazlnes." Ijondon Time. "We have received another number of this delightful magazine, and we tlnd ourselves bound to reiterate with greater earnestness the high ecomiums we have already pronounced on pre ceding numbers. We are uot given to disparage unduly the literary aud ailstio publications which emenate from the London press, but we are bound, lu simple fairness, to assert that we have not yet met witliauy publication pretending to a similar scope and purpose which can at all compare with this marvelous shilling's worth." London Hudget, The American Bookseller says i "There are none of our monthlies In which i lie beautl ml aud the useful, pleasure and proltt, fashion and liter ature, sre so fully presented as In Deinorest's." IN REMITTING, small amounts can be sent in Postage Btamps, but sums of one dollar or more, a post office order is undoubtedly the most fecure and convenient; or money my be sent in a regis tered letter, or by a draft made payable to our rder. Address W. JEXSIXCS DEMOREST, 17 Eat Uth, St., JVeto 1'ork. w. Agents wanted everywhere, to whom extra ordinary Inducements will be offered. Kend your address ou postal card for Circular and Terms. JyJEW WAGON SI 101. THE undersigned hiving opened a WHEELWRIGHT SHOP, i IN NEW BLOOMFIELD, are now prepared to do any kind of work In their line, In any style, at prices which cannot fall to give satisfaction. Carriages of all styles built and all work will be wariauted. 8TOUFFER & CKIST. New Bloomfleld, April 23, 1874. REWARD Blind, luLuiff.nr Ulo4raUl rilnwUiM Dclitsnff's Pits KfmrdytbiUtoaurt. Gin ilUOMxllMlJI tolief, Ullt MNI of Lung tuodm in 1 week, tvnd ordinary omi 1b I drs. riiiTinM . ----' Xi m wnw bwi wnun yttow u ynimioniti htch m U mf AVcMM. a.tj pr.'J. P. Milltr'4 lllm, Mia. 1 boltl. Boll biralldra.if.Ui. Hint lj mall (.J J.l. Uu i ru,M. I), W.mAaoUi w4 Area Bl.,l,liUi.,W; la ly 100 A Shrewd Detective. THIS STORY, lo which I Lave given the above title, Is among the most singular Instances of mistaken circum stantial evidence during later years, and Is still remembered In France, where it occurred, as the Despenard affair. . MouBleur pespeuard was a retired speculator on the Bourse. He was re puted to be very wealthy, and occupied a charming Suburban villa on the banks of the Seine. Ills family consisted of himself, his wife and two children, a boy nnd a girl, aged respectively five and seven years. One night about nine o'clock, in the summer of 1804, the servants were startled by the report of a pistol, accom panied by the sound of breaking glass ringing through the house. After a few moments of hesitation lest it should be burglars, they rushed In a body to the library, from which the sound had seem ed to proceed, and found their master fallen face downward upon the floor, with the blood flowing profusely from it wound iu the temple. A hasty and horrified examination showed he was dead, the bullet having penetrated his brain, while the shattered glass of one of the large windows also proved that the assassin, whoever it might have been, had Btood on the veranda outBide and taken aim at the victim through the glass. Fully ten minutes must have elapsed before the slow wits of the servants had arrived at this conclusion, and then they began to wonder that Madame Despe nard had not also been aroused by the noise. Could It be possible, they asked themselves, that she also t had fallen a victim ? And with this fear In their minds, they proceeded to her boudoir and knocked on the door. No answer being returned, they open ed the door, which was unlocked, and entered the room only to find it empty ; and they were looking at each other still more surprised than before, when one of them, more self-possessed than the rest, suggested that the police should be sent for. Word was accordingly sent to the nearest station, and within half an hour four gendarmes, accompanied by two detectives in plain clothes, arrived upon the scene. Still, Madame Deepens rd had not ap peared, and vague suspicions of her were gathering in the officers' minds, when the street door opened, and the lady en tered. Her face had a terrified look, while the lace shawl she wore about her shoulders was torn almost in two, and upon the particulars of the tragedy that had taken place during her absence being told her, she fainted away. Carried to her bed chamber, and re storatives applied, Bhe only recovered consciousness to pass from one hysterical fit into another, until the physician who had been summoned began to fear she would have an attack of brain fever. Meanwhile, the officers had charge of the house, and the detectives, pursuing their investigations, found link after link of a chain of evidence to encompass the perpetrator of the crime. Long before daylight the detectives had left the house, and, returning to the station, laid their report before thechief, who at once granted a warrant to arrest Madame Despenard for the murder of her husband. The lady had by this time become calmer, and she received the newB in a silence which might either have been the sullen submission of conscious guilt or the apathy of utter despair. The course of French justice is prover bially dark and secret, and, though the publio was excited to the hlghtest pitch, no Inkling to appease their curiosity was revealed until the whole evidence was cut and dried ready for her publio trial. Then a case was presented against her, overwhelming in its evidence of her guilt, and perfect even to the minutest detail. From the preliminary evidence of the servants, it was proved that on the pre ceding day Monsieur Despenard and hla wife had had a violent quarrel. The lady's own maid testified to its bitter ness, and that she had overheard the prisoner accuse her husband of deceiv ing her by a false marriage, and that he had another wife still Irving. This the murdered man had denied, though not vehemently, saying she was dead. This testimony supplied the required cause for the quarrel ; while the circum stantial evidence thajb pointed to her as the assassin could hardly be more con- vinclng. i First, there was her unexplained ab sence from the house at the time the murder was done, and her strange agita tion on returning. Her own story that, having a headuche, she had wandered alpng the banks of the river, where she had been attacked by an evidently in sane woman, who tore her shawl and disarranged her dress, waa at once set down as a weak invention. Besides the hesitating air with which It was told still further went to confirm the convic tion of prevarication. The weapon with which the deed was done was found lying in the garden hut a few yards away from the spot where the deadly shot had been fired. It was a small, elegantly-mounted pocket-revolver, which every member of the house hold Identified as having beeu given the prisoner by her husband several months before. Caught in the catch on the shutter outside the window was found a shred of lace shawl, which exactly matched the pattern, and fitted the rent in the one Madam Despenard had worn when Bhe returned to the house. In the soft mould of the garden were found foot prints,- undoubtedly those of the prisoner. She had an elegant, though peculiarly shaped foot, and there could be no mistake on this polnt.-r-Moreover, the identical shoes were found thrown down a well in the garden, while the fact that the boots she had worn on her return to the house were but partially buttoned, had not escaped the vigilant eyes of the detectives. Her manner too, during her trial, Im pressed the spectators with a feeling that she was-gullty, and when a verdict to that eflect was brought in, she bad but few sympathizers among the audience. A sentence of life imprisonment was pronounced and she was carried from the court insensible, and regaining con sciousness, it was only to pass into de lirium of brain fever. She still lay in the hospital ward when the case, which had begun to fade in the publio mind, was again recalled prom inently to their remembrance. One day a lady called upon the execu tors of the murdered man and claimed a share of his property, alleging that she was bis wife, legally married to him fif teen years before. Though there could be little doubt of the validity of her claim, the executors who were personal friends of the mur dered man considered it their duty to con test it, and the alleged widow at once Instituted a suit against the estate. The claimant, who, though evidently on the shady side of thlrty-flve, was still a remarkable handsome woman,' had almost universally the publio sym pathy, and the verdict that awarded her claim was received by a burst of ap plause throughout the court-room. Graciously acknowledging it with a bow and a triumphant smile upon her face, the woman was about to leave the room, when a man dressed in black, with a scrap of red ribbon in his button hole, advanced and laid his hand upon her arm. " Not so fast, madame, If you please," he said. " The case Is far from being ended yet." The look of triumph fudetl from the woman's face, leaving it deathly pallid as she turned and faced him. "Who are you 1" she gasped, "and what do you mean by this outrage ?" " My name," the man answered, calmly, " is Jules Chasson, of the Sev enth Division of Detective Police, and I arrest you for the murder of Henri De Bpenard, once your hnsband." The audience was struck speechless by his words, even the court sharing the general surprise. " This is certainly a remarkable pro ceeding, M. Cbasson," the Judge said at length, " and one, I must say, that requires further explanation." " Which you shall have, my lord," the detective answered with a respectful bow. " In the first place then, thla wo man was really married to M. Despenard fifteen years ago in a small village in the south of Norfnandy. After a few months, however she eloped with an other man, and for more than seven years following M. Despenard heard nothing from her, w blch in the eyes of the law annulled his marriage. There fore when he again married, it weB per fectly legal, and the lady now unjustly under sentence for his murder wag law fully his wife. I say unjustly accused, my lord, for the real murderess la the woman who now claims her widow's dowry." The detective paused a moment, and all eyes turned upon the woman by his side were startled by the change lu her countenance. It was pallid to the very lips, which were slightly parted as if to utter words which her voice refused to speak, and her eyes stared into vacancy with a look as if she ouce more saw her victim, arisen from his grave, standing before her. "About a year after his second mar riage,'' the detective went on, " the first wife returned, and commenced a regular system of blackmail upon Mon sieur Despenard, which, for his wife's sake he submitted to until about ft week before his death. Then, when he refus ed to submit any longer to the extortion a scheme of almost fiendish subtlety en tered her mind. Through the conniv ance of Madam Despenard'a maid, she gained admittance to the house while the lady aud her busbaud were absent, and pomnwsed herself with the revolver and shoes, which were afterwards found in the well. The lady's story of being at tacked by a woman was true, and the shred of lace was torn from the shawl for the purpose of affixing it to the shutter. This however was afler the time when ascending the veranda, the murderess, peering through the window saw her victim seated in a ebalr . read ing. Ills face was half turned towards her, and raising the revolver, she took deliberate aim and fire " A wild blood-curdling laugh ringing through the apartment interrupted the detective's narrative, and the breathless audience, once more turning, saw that it proceeded from the arrested woman, whose eyes were rolling wldly, and upon whose Hps a foam had gathered. Her crime had been found out by man's lngeunlty,but the retribution had come from an avenging God. The sud den shock of discovery, at the very mo ment she had deemed her success com plete, had overthrown her reason, and Bhe was an incurable maniac. The detective had not spoken without proof to support his assertions, and the wronged wife, now the object of public sympathy, was at once released from confinement, and restored again to her children. Still it was months before she fully recovered from the terrible shock she experienced, and before then the woman who had so cruelly wronged her, had still further paid the penalty of her crime. In one of her paroxysms of maniac fury Bhe had burst a blood ves sel and expired. An Editor's Dream. HE FELL asleep after a time, and lo! he dreamed again. And it seemed to him in a vision that having armed himself with certain papers and books, he turned his steps once more toward the place and knocked at the gate. "Hello, is that you again?" said Peter. " What do you wish f " " Let these persons again come forth " replied the editor, and Peter this time made them all pass through the gate and stand outside. They came as before and uttered the the same cries as before. " Why didn't you notice that big egg I gave you ?" yelled the first. " Because It was rotten," replied the editor. " Why didn't you write up my soda fountain ?" cried the druggist. " You had your tickets printed at the other office," calmly replied the local man. ' : " Why did you write about old Tom llnson's hens and never speak of my new gate?" shouted the third. " Old Tomllnson paid for his adver tisement and you didn't. Here's the bill," said the editor. " Why did you spell my name wrong iu the programme V" groaned the local talent. "Take a look at this manuscript of yours and see for yourself?" said the editor with a grim smile. The rest ot the company yelled their complaints in unison, and the editor calmly sorted out a serious of bills, for unpaid subscriptions, and presented each one; and it was so, that when they had received them, they all tore their hair, and rushed violently down a steep place into the sea, and St. Peter taking the editor calmly by the hand, led him within the gate and said : " Come friend : these chaps managed to slip in here in spite of us, but, thanks to the press, we know now what sort of fellows they are. Come in and stay; we ueed a few such men as you In here." Treasure-trove Revealed while Plowing. Mr. E. P. Puckett, while plowing in au old field, iu Blount county, his plow struck something hard, and upon exam ining It be found a box, and on opening it be could scarcely believe his own eyes as he gazed upon over $1,800 in gold and sliver coins. There was $1,200 in gold, and $000 iu sliver. Upon inquiry Mr. Puckett became convinced that this money was buried during the late war by Mr. A. W. Arnold, now deceased, a citizen of that vicinity. Several efforts had been made by Mr. Arnold's family to find this box, they being aware that he bad burled it when the Federal troops threatened that section of the State. The money was turned over by Mr. Pucket to the widow of Mr. Arnold, who now resides in Marshall county. She is represented to be a worthy lady, having several children, who will be benefited by the money their father bur ied. It is stated that a great number of persons in that section of the State bur ied considerable quantities of gold and silver coin about the same time that Mr. Arnold did. A Crass Baby. Nothing la so conducive to a man's remaining a bachelor as stopping forone night at the house of a married friend and being kept awake for five or six hours by the crying of a cross baby. All crosg and crying babies need only Hop Bitter to make them, well and smiling. Young man, remember this. Ed. 8 2t SUNDAY READING, A Problem For Men and Boys, Johnny was purlng over his mental arithmetic It was a new study to htm, and he found it Interesting. When Johnny undertook anything he went about it with heart and hand. He sat on his high stool at the table, while his father and mother sat Just op posite. He was such a tiny fellow, scarcely large enough to hold a book, you would think, much less to study and to calculate. But he could do both, as you shall see. Johnny's father had been speaking to his mother, and Johnny hud been so Intent on his book that lie had not heard a word ; but as he leaned back on his high chair to rest a moment, he heard his father say : "Dean got beaBtly drunk at the club last night ; drank ten glasses of wine. I was disgusted with the fellow." Johnny looked up with bright eyes and said : " How many did you drink, father?" " I drank but one, my son," said the father, smiling down upon the little boy. "Then were you only one tenth part drunk," said Johnny, reflectively. "Johnny 1" cried his parent, sternly in a breath ; but Johnny continued with a studious air. "Why, yes; if ten glasses of wine make a man beastly drunk, one glass will make him one tenth part drunks and-" "There! there! interrupted the fa ther, biting his Hp to hide the smile that would come, " I guess it is bed time for you. We will have no more arlthmetio to night." So Johnny was tucked away in bed, and went sound asleep, turning the problem over and to see If he was wrong. And just before he lost him self in slumber he had thought: "One thing Is sore, if Dean hadn't taken the one glass he would not have been drunk ; and if father had taken nine more be would have been drunk; so it is the safest way not to take any, and I never will." A Fable. Once upon a time there was a king, and the thing he liked best was wisdom, and the thing he liked worst was the king who ruled next door. He wanted to find the wisest man in the kingdom, and so he asked the question : " What is the lowest order of creature ever created on the face of the earth ?" And the astrologers and wise men came together and argued ; and some said a " carrion crow " and some said a " pole-cat:" But the king wasn't satisfied, and all the astrologers got sick and some com mitted suicide; but the king was not to be comforted. Then a young man came in aud said : " Oh ! king, tbelowest order of creature is the gossip antf tale-bearer." And the king's countenance brighten ed, and sweet-toned harps were played upon, and they put a gold ring on the young man's finger, and ail the nobles pulled down their vests as he went by. And the kingdom grew and waxed strong, and waxed all its enemies ; and so did the young man, for he was exceed ingly wise. MarkThls,.Boy. Did you ever know a man who grew rich by fraud, continue successful thro' life and leave a fortune at death ? This question was put to a gentleman who bad been in business forty years. After reflecting a while he replied : "Not one. I have seen many men be come rich as if by magic and win golden opinions, when some little thing led to au exposure of their fraud, and they have fallen Into disgrace and ruin. Arson, perjury, murder and suicide are common .crimes with those who make baste to be rich regardless of the means." Boys, stick a pin here. You will soon be men, and begin to act with those who make money. Write this good man's testimony in your mind, and with it put this word of God : "He that hasteneth to be rich bath an evil eye. and congidereth not that poverty shall come upon him." Let these woVdtt lead you to resolve to make baste slowly, when you go into business, in the matter of making money. The Lord's Prayer. In the services of all Christian con gregations the impressive custom pre vails of repeating, more or lesa frequent ly, the Lord'a Prayer. Sometimes, to our sorrow, we have heard clergymen vary the words, enlarging upon and paraphrasing the simple, grand original. Against this to us unhappy practice, allow an earnest protest. When our Lord's disciples said " Teach us to pray," then said He. vi When ye pray, say " Our Father who art lu Heaven." We will use these words as they were taught m by the blessed Jesus ; and let no vain trifling by mi-judging mortals be indulged. There are no words so sweet, so expressive to the Cbristain heart, as those hi Saviour used ; and though oft Ihry he repwitwi, be khall never weary .f nor il-ire lo exchange them.