JULY 27, 1680. RAILROADS. PHILADELPHIA AND READING R.R. ARRANfJEM feNT OF l'ABBKNOKl TRAINS MAY l6lli7 1880. Trains Leare Harriiiburg as Fellows ( For New York via Allentown, at 5.1S, 06 a. m. aKolr'Nw York Via rhllsddphla and "Bound Brook Route," 6.43, (lrat Exp.) tM k ni. ana ''Vhrmiiih er srrlvM In New York at M noon. Kurl'hlfa.lelpliliM at 6.1ft. 6.4(1 . ftfVSliWteVA. B.TO fcm.and 4.M p. m.. ami via Bctaiiylklll and Huiiqiielisiiiia Branch at 4.40 p. m. For Auburn, at b.Wt a. ni. For Alleutowu,atB.18, 8.05, 11.60 a.m., 145 and '"Xlie 8.05 a.m. and 1.45 p. tn. trains have through cars for New York, via Allentown. BUNDAY8 I For New York, at 5.20 a. m. For Allentown iiud Way Htatlon., at 5.20 a. m. Vnr Kvitdlug, l'lilldelapliia, auil Way Stations, at 1.45 p. ni. Trains Lcare for llarrlsburg as Follows I Leave New York via Allentown, 8 45 a. m . 1.00 "iave fi'ew'York via "Bound Ilrook Route." and Philadelphia at T.45 a, m., l.W and 4.00 p. in., ar riving at HarriRDiirH, 1 W, 8.20 nml U,'P.", Throuuli car, New York to llarrlHUui-R. . Iave I'lilladelphla, nl l).46a. in., 4.0U and fi.r0 (Fait Kxp) and 7 45 p. in. Leave I'ottsville.e.oo. 0,1" a. m. and 4.40 p. tn. Leave Keaillim, at 4.60, 7.'i'), 11.50 a. ih., I.', 0.15. 7.46 audio. p. m. , Leave PoUsvlllevlaacliuylklll and Siisquoliaiina Branch, 8. 2i a. ni. . .,,,. Leave Allentown, at 5.50, 9 Oj a. m 12.10, 4.S0, and 9.05 p. in. HUNDAYBi Leave New York, at 5 30 p. in. leave Philadelphia, at 7.45 p.m. Leave Reading, at 7.35 a. in. and 10. 35 p. m. Leave Allentown. at 9.05 p. m. BALDWIN BRANCH. Lave HARRlBHCROforPaxton, Lochleland Bteeltondally. except Monday, at 6.40, 9.3o a. in., and 2 p. in. i dally, except Baturday and Sunday. 5.45 p. in., and on Baturday ouly, at 4.4o, tUO ttnKeturnln; leave BTEELTON dally, except Sunday, at 7.00, 10.00 a. in., and 2.20 p. in. ( dally, except Baturday and Bumlay. 6.10 p. m., and on Baturday only 6.10, 6.80, 9,6u p. m. J. K. WOOTTEN, Gen. Manager. 0. O. Hancock, General Passenger and Ticket Agent. HE MANSION HOUSE, New Bloomfleld, Penn'a., GEO. F. EN8MINGKR, Proprietor. HAVING leaned this property and furnished It In a comfortable manner, Iask a share of the publlo patronage, and assure my friends who stop with me that every exertion will be made to render their stay pleasant. ... - A careful hostler always tn attendance. . April 9, 1878. tl ' RATIONAL HOTEL. . . QORTLANDT BTEET, (Near Broadway,) 3STEW "OPtlC HOCB KI8B & POND, Proprietors ON THE EUROPEAN PLAN. The restaurant, cafe and lunch room attached, are unsurpassed for cheapness and excellence of service. Rooms 50 cents, 12 per day. 13 to 110 per week. Convenient to allterrlesandcltyrallroads. NEWFOBNITURB. NEW MANAGEMENT. 41y GRAY'S SPECIFIC- MEDICINE. TRADE MARK The great Eng- TRADE MARK llsh ltemeay. an unfailing cure fur , Bemlnai w eak 1 ness, Bperniator. rhea IiuDotency. and all diseases that follow, as a sequence of Self abuse ; as Loss of' iimniirt lTnlvnr. BEFORE TAKINB. sal Lassitude, AFTER TAIIRI. 1 Pain In the Back, Dlmners of Vision, Premature old age, and many other diseases that lead to In sanity or Consumption, and a Prematura Grave. S-Full particulars in our pamphlet, which we desire to Bend free by mall to everyone. rThe Bpeolllc Medicine Is sold by all druggists at II per package or six packages for to, or will be sent free by mall on receipt of the money by address ing " THK GRAY MKDICINB CO., Mechanics' Illock, Detroit, Mich. Bold by druggists every where. . ,. 24aly. UflDOC Bend 25 cents In stamps or currency nUilOt. for a new HOUSE BOOK . It treats all dlmasoe, has 35 fine engravings showing posi tions assumed by sick horses, a table ol doses, a Dfifll large collection of valuable recipes, DUUIx rules for telling the age of a horse, with an engraving showing teeth of each year, and a large amount of other valuable horse Informa tion. Dr. Win. H. Hall sayss "I have bought books that I paid 15 and 810 for which I do not like as well as I do yours." HKND FOR A CIR CULAR. AGENTS WANTED. B. J. KEN. DALL, Enosburgh Falls, Vt. 20 ly , r The Book can also be had by addressing " Thi Times," New Bloomllekl, Pa. K f r A WEEK In your town, and no cant. I f I tal risked. You can give the business a trial without exiwasn. The best i "1 1 opportunity ever offered for those a 1 I willing tn work. You should try F I I nothing else until you seetoryour- v ' self what you can do at the business we oner. i4o room to explain here. You can devote all your time or only your spare time to the business, and make great pay for every hour that you work. Women can make as much as men. Send tor special private terms and particulars, which we mail free. 85 Outnt free. Don't complain of bard times while you have such a chance. Address H. HALLKTl CO., Port land, Maine. 401y 50 to S125 a Month. ENCYCLOPEDIA mj0mg ff Law and form for Bnil- rlOsV TO UEm Men, F.rmr, H- YOUF? OWN fielhnglMt. Low price. " Oreat ulceus. Una agent I AWYPU told 500 In one town, an il" Ww other 158 In M .j i, .ii. other 75 In IS days. 8veg ten timet Id co.t, antl v,-rybotly wnuta It. hand for circularaaiiU tarm. AW General Agents Wanted. Addrcu P. W. Z1KGLEB CO., 1,000 Arch SU,Fbl"a, Ft. laly A FULL ASSORTMENT OF II ARB WARE, IRON & STEEL WILL BE FOUND AT OUR NEW STORE-ROOM. r. noitriMEit, Xew liloom field. Courting Under Difficulties. SAM LEWIS was a boy, He wbb a rich farmer's boy. He was not a particularly wicked boy, but lie was tilled with that natural and pure spirit of cussedness without which a boy is never truly a boy. Bam had a sister a good-looking, Intelligent young lady of twenty, who bore the aweet name of Mary. Bam loved her in his way, and she certainly loved him ; indeed she was about the only one upon the prem lses who could do anything with him, or for whose Wishes he cared. Mary, like every good-looking daughter of a rich farmer, had plenty of beaux. Each of these bad to pass the scrutiny of Barn's eye, and the judgment of Barn's mind as to his fltnesB to pay court to his sis ter. If Bam set his face against the wooer ; then woe be unto him ; for unre generate youth would find more ways to make thlngB generally uncomfortable for the love lorn visitor than ever Mob cb discovered for the torment of Pharaoh . Bill Bykes lived three miles across the country from Mary 'a house. He dwelt with his widowed mother upon the 40 acres that had been set apart to her as dower out of the estate of her deceased husband. He had that angu lar, coflln-shaped countenance which invariably accompanies self-conceit. His reddish yellow hair wbb oiled inim itably, and plastered carefully down over lils contracted forehead. His moustache dyed with, acid and stiffened with beeswax, was twisted in a neat, scratch-awl style. Now place upon his vest a huge brass chain and cock a " plug" hat over his ear, and you will gain some idea of his appearance when dressed for a courting expedition. Bill's ouly possessions were a skeleton wagon and a nick-tailed nog, which hit ter, he was always swearing could trot " all around" any horse in that part of the state. It is perhaps needless to add that his own asseverations constituted the sole evidence of the animal's speed. About four o'clock on Sunday after noou, in the pleasant month of Septem ber, Bill reined up In front of farmer Lewis' gate, bent upon a formal visit to Miss Mary. He was courteously receiv ed, and shown by the young lady into pleasant parlors, through whose open windows the odors of orchards and meadows came floating. The caller seeming disposed to protract his visit, the lady stepped into the the next room requested Sam to " please put Mr. Bykes' horse in the barn." Bam started promptly to obey, for there were few things he would not do for his sister. As he came where the pony and skele ton stood he was Unfavorably impressed. He thought it looked like an upstart, tricked out affair, which nobody of sen sible and solid qualities would be likely to own. He performed his sister's bid ding, however, muttering to himself, " Bykes Bykes who Is this Bykes I wonder V As he passed back into the house, he contrived to get a fair view of the visitor. He was disgusted, and in wardly resolved to bring Bykes' visits to an untimely end. Perhaps Sam's dis pleasure might be justified upon other grounds than mere personal pique, for Bykes' acquaintance with the Lewis family, and especially with Miss Mary, had been only the most limited and dis tant character, and certainly could not warrant the familiar and protracted vis it he was now making. Bam character ized the visit In his own emphatio style as being " d d Impudent," and pro- posed to treat it accordingly. It was nine o'olock before Bykes announced his readiness to depart,and Sam was request ed to bring his horse. He soon returned from the barn with the announcement that the bridle to Mr. Sykes' harness could not be found. Bykes went out to assist In the search, lantern In band,but the most careful examination of the premises failed to reveal the wherea bouts of the missing article. Finally Bam lent him one of his father's bridles with the understanding that he was to return it the next morning. Bam found the brMle before Bykes came back, and as he exchanged it for the one returned he was pleased to noticed that Bykes looked " mad enough to fight," as he said to Mary. For this reason he had hoped that Bykes' first and last visit had been made. But he was doomed to disappoint ment. The second Sunday at the same hour as before, Bykes returned. The horse was put In the barn by Bam as before at his sister's request, When he had completed his task he sat dowa up on the woodpile to meditate. What was to be done V Here was this Bill Sykes, who did not know enough to take a bint, aud was too obstinately con ceited to learn anything, It was evi dent that something more significant than the hiding of bridles must be re sorted to. Sam finally rose from his seat, threw away the stick he was whit tling, and took a course across the fields to a neighboring farm-house where lived , several of his playmates. At dusk that evening Bam might have been seen in consultation with three other boys of nearly his own age, upon . some' subject which to Judge from their manner, keenly enlisted the sympathies of every one of the party. It was soon fully dark. Bykes was In Farmer Lewis' parlor, making himself as disagreeable as possible to Mary, and Maty was doing her utmost to keep her temper and trout him decently. But the boys we have mentioned, led by Bam, had business of Importance Upon their hands. They drew SykeB skele ton around behind the barn and there with the help of Mr. Lewis' carriage wrenoh, took It to pieces. They took o(T the wheels, took off the seat, the dash-board and the thills. Then they took each separate piece and section of the vehicle and placed It in the top of an apple tree In the adjacent orchard, eaoh In a separate tree, and as widely scattered as the size of the orchard would allow. Sykes stayed even later than upon his first visit, and it Was hajf-past nine when be finally rose and said he "guess ed he must be going." Mary went to speak to Bam but found that Sam and her parents had gone to bed. Bykes as sured her that he was familiar with the barns, and If she would furnlsn him a lantern he would get his own horse. She brought the lantern aud he went out. He found his horse he found his harness, even to the bridle, but his skel eton he did not find. Round and round the yards and bams like a will-o'-the-wisp went that lantern around the house, down to the orchard out luto the highway still no skeleton could he find. What was to be done V The case was a fearful one. He pondered, he wept, he swore. As he thought of the storm of ridicule that would burst upon htm from the whole countryside, he absolutely raved. Yet there was the awful fact.the skeleton was gone.1 Mary had retired, the house was dark, and be was ashamed to arouse the family. In anguish of spirit, he bestrode his nick-tailed pony, harnessed as he was, without saddle or blanket, and rode slowly home. , Sam was away when Sykes returned next day to see about his skeleton. The events of hunting up and getting togeth er the scattered members of the vehicle, the immeasurable fun that was had, aud the storms of relentless ridicule through Which the victim passed, we leave to the reader's imagination ; only adding that Mary Lewis was never troubled with any more visits from Bill Sykes, nor was Sam's strategy ever known to be insufficient for any similar emergency. THE ST0BY OF THE COQUETTE WELL. ONE of the most famous of the oil farms that were developed in the early days of the petroleum excitement on Oil Creek was the Hide & Egbert farm near Petroleum Centre, Pa. Dr. Egbert of Franklin and his partner had between them $1,000, which they paid for the farm. This was considered an immense price for it, as it had not yield ed enough under cultivation to pay tax es. In 1804 they struck oil on It. They had several good wells, but none that compared with the great gushers that had spouted their 2,000 and 8,000 barrels a day further down the creek. Hyde & Egbert's superintendent had a brother who lived in an Eastern town. He was in love with a young lady of the place, who was noted in the neighbor hood as a great coquette. One night in the early fall of 1804 a troupe of Indians gave an exhibition in the village. The young man and the young lady in ques tion attended it together. After he had escorted her home, he seized an oppor tunity that offered and asked her to be come his wife. She refused him. He went to bed disappointed and despond eut. He had long entertained the idea of seeking his fortune in the oil regions and before he retired that night he had determined on carrying out the idea without further delay. Before morning he had a dream. He thought that he stood in a wild, mountainous place,alone and friendless, i. Suddenly an Indian, Hideous in war paint, sprang from a thicket and rushed toward him with his tomahawk raised. The dreamer was unarmed. He tried to save himself by flight, but he could not move. He had resigned himself to his fate, when an other person appeared on the scene. It was the coquette who had rejected his suit. She had a rifle. She quickly placed the weapon I if her jilted lover's hands and disappeared. The lover cov ered the Indian with the rifle and fired When the smoke cleared away the In dian was gone. Where he had stood there gushed from the ground a stream of oil of great volume. It flowed down over the land in a miniature river. The young man awoke from his dream. It made a great impression up on him. He interpreted it as a good omen for him, not only lq business mat ters, but in his love affair. He departed for Oil Creek uext day, and went first to the farm where his brother wns work ing. One day the superintendent was showing his visiting brother over the Hyde & Egbert farm. Suddenly the latter stopped and looked about him with an explanation of surprise. 'This Is the very spot that I saw In my dream," said he. He then related his dream to his broth er. The spot was not considered a fav orable one for striking oil, but the dream of the young man so impressed the superintendent that he determined to sink a well there. The result was awaited with Intense Interest by the two brothers. . The drill, at the depth of 000 feet, struck a literal river of oil. The rich deposit spouted out of the earth at the rate of 2,000 barrels a day. The well became famous at once. It was given the name of the " Coquette," because of the coquettish nets of the young lady that resulted in its being drilled. Thousands of persons flocked to the farm : to see it, and a fee of ten cents a head was charged for a sight at it, pouring its wealth Into Dr. Egbert's tanks. It flowed for fifteen months. Dr. Egbert made an immense fortune from it, and then sold a one twelfth Interest In it for $276,000. He gave the young roan $20,000 whose dream led to the discovery of the Coquette well. With this Bum to start with, the fortu nate dreamer In a few months made a handsome fortune. He returned to his native village. Still loving the young lady who had refused his hand, and learning that since his departure she had ceased entirely to go Into society, he proposed to her again. This time he was accepted, and he married the form er coquette. Bhortly after the well ceased to yield oil voluntarily, fell to a small " pumper," and then became en tirely exhausted. A few rotting timbers of the derrick that stood above the Once famous well Is now all that marks the spot where the river of oil burst forth. A Rich but Foolish Farmer. Isaac Steele, a farmer, living near Pe trolla, Butler county, made $100,000 from the oil production of his farm. He Is an old man, and lives with his daugh ter. He keeps not less than $50,000 In green Docks in nis bouse, ana lie lias no faith in bank or any Investment for money. Three years ago he had $1C0, 000 in bank notes locked in boxes and trunks about his house. The money be came damp, mildewed and mouldy. When he discovered the condition of the money he took the notes from their hiding places and spread them in the sun about his orchard to dry. The spec tacle of a fortune lying loose on the ground among the trees was witnessed by hundreds who were attracted to the farm by the singular proceeding. The money was thus exposed for two days, guarded by old Steele, his wife, daughter and hired man. When considered in good condition again it was returned to the trunks and boxes again. Three nights after the greenbacks were housed Steele, woke up to find three masked men In hisbed room. They bound the old man and bis family, and had discov- ered and secured $1,000 of the hidden treasure when ' they were frightened away by the return home of the hired man from Petrolia. Even this expert ence did not move the old farmer to make a different disposition of his money. On the night of the 28th of last April, his house was again broken into by three men wearing masks. The old man and his wife fought them until they were rendered unconscious. In the struggle the masks were torn from the faces of two of the men. They were recognized as Jas. James and Wm. Mc Donald. The third man was not known. The men began to search the house, but before they had secured any booty Steele's hired man had alarmed the neighbors, and the robbers fled. In an oiu cox unaer Bteete's oea mere were $10,000 in greenbacks. The robbers were followed, but escaped to the woods. Three days after the two were captured, They have Just been sentenced to five years each in the penitentiary. ' Comfort for Backward Children. From the fact that the lower animals arrive at maturity much earlier than man, and the inferior races of men de velop more rapidly than the superior, French biologist Infers that precocity indicates a low order of development. 0 A young pastor who has recently had a son born to him notifies a brother pastor as follows : " Unto us a child is born, unto us a son Is given. Is. 9 : 6." It was written on a postal card. The receiver showed the message to a sister of his church. . " Ah. yes." said the sis ter after reading it, it weighed nine pounds and six ounces." . , How She Saved Her Daughter. " I shall never again feel so awfully nervous about my babies teething," writes a grateful mother. "We almost lost our little darling by a long attack of cholera infantum, but happily heard of Parker's Ginger Tonic in lime. I took a few spoonfuls myself, which soon cured my nursing baoy entirely, and an occasional dose has kept me and I by in such perfectly good health, and made us so strong and comfortable that I would not be without this reliable medicine for worlds." A Mother of Brooklyn. 29 lm SUNDAY HEADING. Blot out a Day. t keep on S desk before me a calendar of the year, with a day of each week by numerals. When the day is passed, I draw a pen across a figure or the figures representing a day. It Is gone and I blot it out. So far as the column of nu merals is concerned, I can do so. flJut I am Startled by the words, " I blot out a day." A day is a wheel in the great machinery of life a link in the chain of my probation. It is as truly a part of vital and essential being as a year or a century. The day is giv en me. Will It vanish at my bidding ? I did not originate it; I only received it. I have no more power to blot it out than to bring it in. , It was a gift. How should I treat the giver if I could and would blot it out t It came as a proof of the love of the Giver. To many that day came not. It was on Its way ; but the chain broke. ' But divine kindness would not allow me to be a loser. Shall I not honor the Giver? A day of sadness perhaps! Blot it out for that reason 't It my sins made the sadness of the day, then let the day 1 stand a memento of and reminder of my folly. That day Is worth saving that brings such a voice of reproof. Perhaps the day was sad under divine discipline. Surely, then it ought to stand lest, blotting it out', offence be giv en to Him whoaffllcts "forour profit that we might be partakers of His holi ness." A day of gladness, perhaps the sky bright, the air balmy, Joy in friends and all worldly comfort above all Joy in the Lord and gladness in his salvation. Shall I mar such a beautiful picture '( Shall I blot out such a day V As I erase the figure with a pen shall I drop It out of my mind as If there had never been such a day ? Is this the kind return 'I : A day I That day just erased fron my calendar,, how much could have been accomplished in it I What a no ble river of holy emotions might have rolled through my soul in that one day I what fervor of lovetrdor in prayer, and workings of faith, bringing the light and joy of heaven into the soul I There hangs my calendar. I cannot, blot out much longer. The last day of the year is at hand. The symbols of what remains may be erased by my driving pen ; but these links of life these way-marks Of the path to eternity, these gifts of God, these opportunities of usefulness my gratitude shall wel come them, my love and zeal carry out their great design. They shall aid in the grand result, that my name shall not be blotted out of the Book of Life. The Thin Partition Between Life and Death. When we walk near the powerful machinery we know that one single misstep, and those mighty engines would tear us to ribbons in their ponder ous jaws. Bo, when we are thundering across the land in a railway car. and there is nothing but half an inch of Iron flange to hold ns upon the rail. So when we are at sea in a ship, and there is nothing but the thickness of a plank between us and eternity. We imagine then that we see how close we are on the edge of the precipice. But we do not see it. Whether on the sea or on the land the partition that divides us from eternity is something thinner than the oak plank or half an inch of iron flange. The machinery of life and death are within ns. The tissues that hold these beating powers in their place are often not thicker than a piece of paper, and If that thin partition was pierced or ruptured, it would be Just the same with as as If a cannon ball bad struck ns. Death Is inseparably bound up with life in the very structure of our bodies. Struggle as he will to widen the space, no man at any time can go further from death than the thickness of a sheet of paper. ' ' tW Wealth is the possession of the few, but intellectual culture is happily within the reach of all in . the favored land of school and books. Wealth has opportunities to surround itself with treasures of culture and art, but it will wish to call to the enjoyment of these possessions those who ' can appreciate them. Wealth is at much greater loss for culture than culture la for wealth. Wealth without culture is a subject for laughter and derision. Culture without wealth ever commands' profound re spect. Then let young people seek first, if they were ambitious to belong to good society, a genuine intellectual culture. aETTbe religion of to-day needs more than anything else a strong infusion of the divine and Biblical element. It has become weak, flaccid prattling. It says too many sweet, soft, pretty things to tickle the ear and catch the crowd. Men are needed with the power and Bplrit of Eiiiah to say strong, deep, powerful words. Then religion would reach the masse just as electricity reaches the subterranean streams.