THE TIMES, NEW BLOOMFIELl), PA.. JUNE 29, I860. RAILROADS PHILADELPHIA AND READING R.R. ARHAN9EMKNT OF PASBENG KM TRAINS MAY 10th7 1880. , Trains Leave Harrisbiirg bs Follows t For New York via Alleutown, at' 6.15, 1.08 a. m, ami 1,45 p. m. . .. . Kor New York via Philadelphia and "Bound Brook lloute," 6.iu, (bast Kxu.) B.& a. m. and lYirtniRh car arrives In New York at U noon. Forl'liliailoliilila, at 6.15, .4'l lat Kxp) 8.to, (throuoU ear), U.50 a. in.. 1.45 and 4.ou p. in. For iWllim, at 5.15, 0.40 (Fast Kip.) 8.05. 9.50 a. m.,1.44.uo. and B.onp. in. ... FottotuvllW at 6.15. 8.05. 9,50 a.m. and 4.00 p. in., and via Boliuvlklll and Husuuolianna liraneh atS.40 p. in. l'or Auburn,' at b.f a. in. For Allelitown.at 5.15, 8.0ft, W.Ooa. m., 1.45 and ' The SHili, 8.05 a. m. and 1.45 p. rn. trnttis have through cars for .New Voi k. via Allentowu. SUNDAYS I i For Now York, at 6.20 a. m. For Allentowu and Way stations, a! 5.20 a. m. For Heading, l'lilldelaplHa, and Way stations, at 1.46 p. in. Trains IiCutc for llarrlouiirg as Follows t Leave New York via Alleutown, 8.45 a. in . 1.00 4lLeave Sew' York via "Bound Brook Route." and Philadelphia at 7.45 a. in., l.ao and 4.00 p. in., ar rlvlnx at IIiuiInDiii k, 1.50. a.uu p. in., and u ucp.iu. Tlirmmli oar. New York to jiarrllurf. Leave I hllhiielplila, at U.45a. in., 4.00 and 6.50 (Fast Kxji) and 7.45 p. in. ... Leave I'oiisville. O.iki. ,10a. in. aud 4.40 p. mi. Leave He.ullUK, at 4.60, 7.15, 11.50 a. m., 1.3' , 0.15, 7.45Hiidlo.:tep. in. Leave Hotlsvllle vlnSeliuylklll and Susquehanna Branch, 8.2 a, in. .,. Leave Alleutown, at 5.50, 9.0d a. in., 12.10, 4.50, and U.05 p. in. SUNDAYS! Leave Now York, at 5 an p. in. Leave riillnilelphiii, at 7.45 p. m. Leave Heading, at T..V a. in. audl0.85 p. in. Leave Alleutown. at 9.05 p. in. BALDWIN WUNC1I. Lnve IlARIURnClta forl'axton, Lochleland Hteellon daily, exoept Sunday, at 6.40, . a. in., and 2 p. in. i dally, exeopt tiaturday and Hunday. 6.45 p. m., and on Baturday only, at 4.4u, 0.10 ""jKrMl leave BTK ELTON dally, exoept Bunday. atf.H0, 10.00 a. in., and SJ.fflp. m.i dally, except Saturday and Hini'lay. 0.10 p. in., and on Baturday only 5.10, 6.30, 9.6u p. in. J. E. WOOTTEN, (Jen. Jlannuer. CO. Hancock, Uoueral l'asneiiuer and Ticket Agent. HE MANSION HOUSE, New Bloom 11 eld, Penu'a., GEO. F. ENSMINUKR, Proprietor. HAVINOleasedthls property and furnished It In a comfortable manner, I ask a share of the publio patronage, and assure my friends who stop with me that every exertlou will be mado to render their stay pleasant. a- A careful hostler always In attendance. April 9, 1878. tf RATIONAL HOTEL. CORTLANDT BTEET, (Near Broadway,) NEW ZOIRTZ. HOCntCISS&POND, Proprietors ON THE EUROPEAN TLAN. The restaurant, cafe and lunch room attached, are unsurpassed for cheapness and excellence of service. Rooms 50 cents, 12 per day, H to 110 per week. Convenient to all ferries and city railroads. NEWFUBN1TURE. NEW MANAGEMENT, sly GRAY'S SPECIFIC MEDICISE. TRADE MARK The great Eng TRADE MARK lisli Kenieuy. an unfailing cure lor . Bemlnal weak 1 ness. Spermator rhea liiipotency. and all oiseuses that follow, as a ftequeuce of Kelf Rbuses as LossofJ iM.n,n,-v. ITitlvor- BEFORE TAKltQ. sal Lassitude, AFTER TAKINQ. Tain In the Hack, Dimness of Vision, Premature old age, and many other diseases that lead to In. senity or Consumption, and a Premature Grave. WFull particulars In our pamphlet, which we desire to send free by mail to everyone. 5-The Bneoltle Medicine Is sold bvall druggists at 81 per package or six packages for 15, or will bo sent free by mall on receipt or the money by address ing TUB GRAY MKDIOINE CO., Mechanics' Block, Detroit, Mich. Bold by druggists everywhere. 21aly. UnDCC 8end 25 cents In stamps or currency rlUndt Tor a new HOK8K BOOK. It treats all diseases, has 35 tine engravings showing posi tions assumed by sick horses, a table of doses, a DflfW large collection of valuable recipes, DUUIX ruies for tailing the ageot a horse, with an engraving allowing teeth of each year, and a large amount of other valuable horse Informa tion. lr. Win. H. Hall says: "I have bought books that I paid 15 and 110 for which I do not like as well as I do yours." SEND FOR A CIR CULAR. AGENTS WANTKD. B. J. KEN DALL. Enosburgh falls, Vt. 20 ly jr The Rook can also be had by addressing " Tub lixea," New Bloomtleld, Pa. A f r a WEEK In your town, and no caul I i I tul risked. You can givethebusiness a trial without expense. The best t 1 1 opportunity ever offered for those . 1 I willing to work. You should try f I I nothing else until you see for your 'UU self what you can do at the business we offer. No room to explain here. Ynn run rtrv,it nil vnur time or onlv vour sua re time to the business, and make great pay for J every nour t&at you wora. women can mane as much' s men. Send for special private terms and particulars, which we mall free. 15 Outnt free. Don't complain of hard times while you have snoh a chance. Address H. HALLKT & CO.. Port land, Maine. 401y t 60 to S125 m Month .ENCYCLOPEDIA lvpr np Law and forms for Mini- II OW TO Ubtn Men, Farmer, Ma- YOUR OWN?,1Un''8t- Iw price. '"' Jzr-ZZm. Great aucceas. One aeiut Kii otherlM in SS dava. an. (hf-r 7& In IS rinya. fiavoi ten limea Ita cost, and v'rvtxidy nnt it. Xrnd for circulars and teriui. jlUiicncrul A goots Wanted. Addreiii t. W. I1KGLEU A CO., 1,000 Arch St., rbU'a, Ta. laly A FUtTL ASSORTMENT OF HARDWARE, IRON & STEEL WILL BE FOUND AT OUR NEW STORE-ROOM. F. MORTIMER, Xtio ISIoom field. SUNDAY READING. BEAUTIFUL . 0 Beautiful liandi aro those that do Work that Is earnest, brave and true, Moment by moment the long day through. Beautiful feet ara those that go On kindliest mlulstrlos to and fro, Down lowliest way, If God wills It to. Beautiful shoulders are those that boar Ceaseless burdoni of homely care, With pattont grace and dally prayer. Beautiful lives are those that bless Silent rlveri of happiness, Whose hidden fountains but few may guess. ' And the Door was Shut. How BuJJen, Low cotuiilete the change. One moment the light Btrenmg out from the scene of gladness within, through the open door ; the next, the blackne&B, the gloom of midnight, the darkness the more profound by reason of the light bo blight hut the moment before. Buch la the picture presented In our Bavlour's words. How profound nnd original hla teachings that could find In the simple closing of a door a lesson so solemn as this. It Is the door of Bill vat Ion. It Is the Lord Jesus, the Master of the feast, who himself uhuts the door, and when he shuts, no one can open. But when Is ltBhut? When Is mer cy's door shut V No question more Im portant can be asked by a sln-ladened son of Adtim. " now far may we go on In Bin, How long will God forbear f Where docs hope end, and whore begin, The confines of despalrl" No man knows when this door will be closed to any soul. Alwuys at the eud of life, but whenever the soul Is finally left of the Holy Spirit the Beal is set. No more strivings of the spirit; no more hope. Thank God if you have not already grieved away his Holy Spirit, and hast en to cuter In. If the door Is closed and you are within, think how blessed your state. A truest at the marriage supper of the Lamb, you will walk In the light and share its eternal joys. Nothing from without can get in to break the peace of your soul. No foe can assail, no sin disturb, no care be-cloud your soul forever. But if without, then no ray of light breaks in upon the - gloomy darkness. No hope cheers the soul; but bitter regrets for opportunities lost will add intensity to all its miseries. Selfishness. Selfishness cannot flourish where mag nanimity reigns. The man of large soul sees far beyond his own little orbit; his heart thrills in sympathy with joys and boitowb that touch not' his own life. Like the astronomer, who sees our earth to be hut a speck in the great universe, he sees himself to be hut a speck la the great humanity that Uvea and throbs all around him. Instead of fixing an intense and microscopic gaze upon himself, with his little round of interests, hia large heart swells with sympathy for others and his hand hastens to do them good. Generosity, however liberal may be self-conscious ; but the essence of magnanimity is to forget the claims in self in the yearning for others, to pass by the less in the search of the greater. t3T" A man who forgets that he may die at any moment is very foolish. A man's business ought to be kept so closely In hand that he will be able to leave it at any moment in eucu condi tion that it can be settled up. Much more is that man most foolish who does not live with his soul prepared to meet God. The mos certain of all future events is that we must die. The most uncertain of all is the time when we shall ail die. We work hard here to make our lives here comfortable. Do we work equally hard to make our eter nity happy V H3T For some years past, a large num ber of Germans, Christians and Jews have, been establishing themselves in Jerusalem, and our readers will proba bly be surprised to hear that the domi nant language in that town is German ; twelve thousand Jews speak it. Re cently the Germans in Jerusalem start ed a quarterly review, devoted mainly to local interests, which is very ably con ducted. O The young man who shirks his duties as often as possible never succeeds in life. You may set it down at once that sooner or later he will be a drone In the great hive of human industry. If you begin life a shirk, you may set it down as a fixed fact that the habit will follow you through life, aud Instead of success you will be an utter failure. rF If anything iu the world will make a man feel badly, except pinching his fingers in the crack of a door, it la a quarrel. It degrades him in the eyes of others, and, what U worse, blunts his sensibilities on the one hand, aud in creases the power cf passionate irritabil ity on the other.- An Extraordinary Scone. THE LoulBvllle Courier-Journal, in a recent issue, says ! When the night express train on the Ohio and Mississip pi railroad which left Cincinnati at 0:G0 last night, reached Milan, Ind., an hour and a-half later, an exciting episode- oc curred which revealed a sensational elopement to the crowd of passengers, and aroused very intense feelings among them. Two ladles had been occupying a seat together in the ladles' car and seemed to be In great trouble. One was a lady of some thirty years or more, while the other was a beautiful young girl not out of her teens. As the train stopped the elder lady rose excitedly and seizing the young girl by the arm Bald to her : ' Come, we must get oft here." , The girl declined to move, and Bald she was not going to get off the train. Both became excited and attracted the attention of the passengers and the con ductor, who'came along at that moment. To this official the lady appealed say ing : 5' This girl is my sister, and Bhe la running away with a married inau who is on the train. I want her to go to my father who lives here." This announcement created a decided flutter, and the passengers crowded around. The girl still refused to get off, and tho conductor said he had no au thority to compel her, as a man in the next car had a ticket for her through to St. Louis. The elder lady was almostfrantlo with excitement aud despair. She said she was Mrs. Schultz, of Cincinnati, and the girl was Louisa King, who had been living with her for a year or two, and had been intimate of late with Walter Chamberlain, the man with whom Bhe was eloping., Mrs. Scbultz suspected last evening that they were going to meet and run oil', and determined to go with her Bister and prevent it if possible. While this was being related the listen ers and the participants were wrought up to a pitch of great excitement. The girl laughed at all advice from the pas sengers, and her Bister appealed again for assistance to compel her to get off. At this moment Chamberlain himself walked in from the other end of the car a big, line looking, dashing fellow, un der middle age. Going up through the crowd he told the girl not to get off but stick to the train. " You are a married man and you know It," said Mrs. Schultz, " and you are a dirty scoundrel to take this girl away." The crowd pressed up, and some one BUggested that the conductor Bend for an officer to arrest the girl and take her off. At this Chamberlain put his hand in his pocket and, drawing a revolver, passed it to the girl with the remark : " Take care of yourself with this If they try to force you." " You scoundrel," screamed Mrs. Schultz, and raising her parasol she hit the fellow a full blow in the face. As he recovered himself he raised his hand as if to strike her, when a big Indlanian who had crowded up among the excited passengers, put his hand on Chamber. Iain's arm to prevent the blow, and said coolly : " You wouldn't strike a lady would you V" "Yes," Bald Chamberlain, " and you too." " You will, will you," shouted the gi gantic HooBier, as he put his hand on his adversary's shoulder, and, wheeling him about caught him by both arms from behind and held him as though he was in a vise. At this juncture Mrs. Schultz, almost crazed with the turn of affairs, dropped her umbrella, and using her fists struck Chamberlain in the face, blow after blow, calling him " thief, gambler, ruf fian and scoundrel." The passengers watched the beating with interest, and urged her to her utmost, until Chamber lain cried out " Enough," and was re leased by the big Hoosier, with the quiet warning that he had better behave himself and let the girl go. Chamberlain doggedly declined to give up his prize. The crowd grew furious, and it was proposed to take him off and apply a coat of tar and feathers. The conductor had quietly gone out, at the suggestion of some of the passesgers, and telegraphed for a policeman to meet the train at North Vernon. Hear ing the threats of summary vengeance, he signaled the train to go ahead, and carried all of the party along, including the brave Indlanian, who lived at Milan but went along to see the end of the af fair. During the run to North Vernon the foolish girl was talked with by several passengers. She laughed at the idea of going home, and eatd she would go with Chamberlain some time, bo it was no use to send her home. "You know he's got a wife?" aald Mrs. Schultz. "Yes I do," said the girl, "audi know where she is, but I won't tell you." The excitement quieted but little. On reaching North Vernon two police ofJW cers boarded the train, and upon lmv lng Chamberlain pointed out to them arrested him, saying ; " We love to get hold of fellows like you.". He was hustled out and carried off to the village calaboose, in the midst of a Jeering crowd, and threats to give him a dose or tar. Mrs. Schultz and Miss King got off also, accompanied by the gigantic Indlanian, who laid he would see them to the hotel and take tlum back to Milan in the morning. The gentleman who detailed these facta to the Courier. Journal, and who was an eye-witness, says he never saw such intense excitement, and that If the train had not started out of Milan just when it did Chamberlain would have been mobbed. The same feeling was transferred to North Vernon, aud he would not be sur prised to hear of his being roughly handled last night. Mrs. Shultz is a milliner and a man- tau maker at 100 Longworth street, Cin cinnati. Her sister, Miss King, has been living with her for about a year and a half. Their father is a respectable old farmer named King, who lives three miles from Milan. He married a second wife two yearB ago, on which account the girl went to live with her sister. Chamberlain, it seems, occupied rooms over Mrs. Bchultz's store In Cincinnati, and thus made the acquaintance of the pretty but silly girl, M ho was going to leave home and friends for him. Mrs. Schultz said he was a gambler and fust man and had a wife living. SHE HELD MM ON. A YOUNG society swell of Washing ton has been visiting in the inte rior of Virginia, and at one occasion at least had an experience that was not al together happy. He visited church and after service a young lady, who owned a very comfortable place near there, in vited him to go home and take dinner with her. There were three or four very interesting young ladles stopping at her house, and, of course, he accept ed her invitation with great pleasure, but his hair fairly stood on end when she said to him : " I guess you will nave to take one of tne girls on your horse ; in dividing up our party one at least comes to you." The young man in question is not a heavy weight physl cally. He does not weigh over ninety pounds. The young woman who fell to his lot, was a bouncing Virginia lass, plump and pretty, who would weigh at least 140 pounds. He was in no haste to get Into the saddle. He watched very care fully how the rest of the fellows got their fair companions upon the upper deck. lie was the last man to swing his horse Into line. He had a little doubt, too about the horse. The horse was very high-spirited and had never been -ridden double. He darted up to the horse block and the young woman was ready. The blanket was arranged behind after the most approved fashion He edged his chestnut up to the side of the horse block. She gave him one hand, and in a sec ond she bounded firmly to her place be hind him and wound her arms around him in as firm a hold as the proprieties of the occasion demanded. She was not the only one that had bounded. The horse bolted about ten feet in the air and came down on his four feet, and, as the young fellow said, suddenly be came very light behind. . The young man although a very good rider, said he would have gone over the horse's ears several times if it had not been for the young lady. ; She held on, and he felt perfectly convinced that if he went off she would not, and so he stuck. Hla horse fought, shied, jumped and balked, greatly to the amusement of the young lady, who nearly cracked several of his ribs in holding on to him when his horse bolted to the right and left. It was five miles to his destination. When he got off his horse and walked into the farmhouse three great streams of perspiration slowly trickled down the side of his face. He was very weak and trembling. AN ESSAY ON WOMAN. A FTEIt man came woman. rt. And she has been after him ever since. She Is a person of noble extraction be ing made of a man's rib. I don't know why Adam wanted to fool away his ribs in that way, but I suppose be was not accountable for all he did. It costs more to keep a woman than three dogs and a shot gun. But she pays you back in interest by giving you a house full of children to keep you awake all night and smear molasses candy, all over your Sunday clothes, Besides a wife la a very convenient article to have about the house. She is handy to swear at you when you cut youself with a razor and don' feel like blaming yourself. Woman Is the superior being in Mas- pachueietts. There are about sixty thousand more of her sex than males In that slate. This accounts for the terrified, hunt ed expression of the single men who emigrant from the east. Woman was not created perfect. She has her faults she has Mm hair and false complexion and so on. But she is a deal better than her neighbors, and she knows It., Eve was a woman. She must have been a model wife, for It didn't cost Adam nothing to clothe her. Still I don't think they were a bit happy. She couldn't go to sewing circles and air her information about everybody she knew, or excite the envy of other ladlee by wearing her new winter bonnet to church. . fence and gossip with her near neigh bors. ' All these blessed privileges were de prived her. Poor Eve 1 She's dead now. And the fashion she inaugurated Ik dead now. If it hadn't been for the cmifounded " snalk" perhaps the ladies of the pres ent day would dress as economically as Eve did. But the only place where primitive style is emulated Is in certain portions of Central Africa where the women con sider themselves In full dress when they have on but a postage stamp stuck In. tho centre of their forehead. Woman Is eudowued with a tremeu- doua fund of knowledge and a tongue to , suit. She has a capacity for learning every thing she was divinely intended. to . know, and a few extra items besides. Young ladles take a great deal of stock iu classics and learn fast. A woman may not be able to sharptc a lead pencil, or hold an umbrella, but Bhe can pack more articles in a trunk than a man can in a one-horse wagon. The happiest period in a . woman's life is when Bhe is making her wedding garments. . The saddest is when her husband comes home late at night and yells to her from the front door stops to throw-, out a bunch of keyholes of different sizes. ' There is some curiosity in feminine nature. For Instance, I once knew a young lady who could easily pass another one on the street without looking around to Bee what she had on. Poor thing' , She was blind. . rainting, won me uriae. A -. - . 1 .lit.... .AK 1 ,.l ,1 . Pollocksvllle, N. C, lately. It seems that Mosea John Miller and Alexander Bibb, two well-to-do young farmers were in love with the same girl, Leonora Lloyd. She was unable to decide which she liked best. On Sunday morning Bibb walked home from church with' her, and left her under the impression, that she would marry him. On Sunday night Miller went to see her, and under stood her to say that she would marry him. Both men on Monday morning went to the court house to get out a li cense. Each procured the necessary document and started off to marry Miss Lloyd. They met at the court house door, and, after some talk, agreed that the first man who reached the lady s house should marry her. The residence of Col. Lloyd was one mile distant, and- both men started on the race for the bride. Bibb soon quit the main road and dashed into the wood, expecting to make a short cut and reach the house first, but Miller kept the road, and got in on the home stretch eight minutes before hia rival. The men were in sight of each other going up the lane to the-" house. Bibb'g effort to overtake m rival was almost superhuman. v when they reached the house Bibb from sheer exhaustion, fainted on the porch, fall ing almost at the feet of his lady love. When the situation waa explained to iler she said she had come to the conclu sion that she liked Mr. Bibb the best,, and therefore she would marry him. Her sympathies were won over by see ing him faint. She said she believed that both loved her, but that he who- fainta at the danger of losing a bride, . . .. . , . . i. i , . ... lUUSfc wo UC1 1UU1C UJ&U JJV W11U 19 cu-Ji' and unconcerned in the midst of it a!L The Rev. Aaron Jasper, the well-known Baptist minister, married Mr. Bibb and. Miss Lloyd. A romantic case of suicide occur red recently at Melbourne, Australia. A lad of fifteen poisoned himself for the love of a girl of twelve. It seemed that . the girl, not requiting the ty's attach ment pettishly told him he might kill himself, perhaps after he had threatened it. The lad was employed by a photo grapher, and destroyed himself with cyanide of potassium, which is used in the photographic business. Having taken sufficient for the tmrnosp. he lai.l down to die opposite the girl's residence, having previously a ldresied her a note.