THE TIMES, NEW BLOOM FIELD, PA., OOTOBEltlO, 1880. RAILROADS. PHILADELPHIA AND READING R.R. ARRANGEMENT OF PA88BNQB RTRAIN8 MAY 10lh7l880. Trains Leave Hnrrltihurg as Follow : For New York via Allentown, at 6.18, S.05 . m. anil 1,46 p. ni. , ,. . For Hew Vork via Philadelphia ana "Bound Brook Route," B.4o, (Fast Jixp.) 6.K a. m. and 'T&roiigh oar arrives In New York at 12 noon. Kor IMiliadelphla, at 6.15, 8.40 (rastExp) 8.05, (throuah car), 6.50 a. m., 1.45 and 4.00 p. ni. For Heading, at 5.15. 6.40 (Fast Kip) 8.05, 9.50 a. m., 1.4.i,4.ou, and 8.0 p. m. ... . . . r or rousvme, hip. in, o.w, . i. m., aim via ocuuyiniii h """ lianoh at 2.40 p. m. For Auburn, at 6.30 a. in. . . . . . . . . r. . . i ii a nr. Q Ail a m 1 ami rur Aiieuiuwu, ai o.iu, o.w, e.w ..... "The' 6.15, 8.05 a. m. and 1.45 p. m. trains have through cars for New Vork, via AUentowu. BUNDAYB t For New York, at 6.20 a. m. , .... For Allentown and Way Stations, at 5.2ft a. m. For Heading, l'hildelaphia, and Way Stations, at 1.45 p. m. Trains Leave for Harrlbbnrg as Follows I Leave New York via Allentown, 8 45 a. m . 1.00 '"Sheave Sew York via "Bound Brook Roule."and Philadelphia ' 7.45 a. in., 1.80 and 4.W) p. m., ar. rlviim at Hairlsoui g. 1.50, 8.20 p. m., and B.OCp.m. Through car, New Vork to llari'lsbur. Leave Philadelphia, at 9.45a. ill., 4.00 and 5.50 (Fast Kxi) and 7.45 p. in. , Leave i'onsville. 0 00. ,10a. ni. and 4.40 p. m. Leave Reading, at 4.50, 7.25,11.50 a. m., 1.31,0.15, 7,45 and 10.35 p. in. . , Leave Pottsvllle via3chuylklll and Susquehanna Branch, 8.2 a. m. . Leave Alleiuowu, at 5.50, 9.05 a. m., 12.10, 4.30, and 9.06 p. m. SUNDAYS! Leave New York, at 5 30 p. m. Leave Philadelphia, at 7.45 p. m. Leave Reading, at 7.35 a. in. aud 10.3s p. m. Leave Allentown. at 9.05 p. m. BALDWIN BRANCH. Leave IIARRI8BCRO for Paxton, Lpchlel and Steelton dally, except Sunday, at 6.40, 9.3a a. m., and 2 p. m.( daily, except Saturday and Hunday. 5.45 p. m., and on Baturday only, at 4.4o, 6.10 Bltet?rSin5: leave BTEELTON dally, except Sunday, at MO, 10.00 a. in., and 2.20 p. in. t dally, except Saturday and Hunday. 6.10 p. in., and on Saturday only 5.10, 6.30, 9,50 p. m. J. E. WOOTTEN, Gen. Manager. O.O.Hancock, General Passenger and Ticket Agent. JHE MANSION HOUSE, New Bloomfleld, Pciitt'a., GEO. F. ENSMINGER, Proprietor. HAVING leased this property and furnished it In a comfortable manner, task a share ot the public patronage, and assure my friends who stop with me that every exertion will be made to render their stay pleasant. ...,., jtf a careful hostler always in attendance. April 9, 1878. tt RATIONAL HOTEL. COUTLANDT STEET, (Near Broadway,) USTEW YORK. HOCHK.ISS & POND, Proprietors ON THE EUROPEAN PLAN. The restaurant, cafe and lunch room attached, are unsurpassed for cheapness and excellence of service. Rooms 50 cents, 2 per day. f3 to 810 per week. Convenient to allterrlesand cltyrailroads. NEW FURNITURE. NEW MANAGEMENT. 41y OKAY'S SPECIFIC MEDICLNE. TRADE MARK The great Eng- TRADE MARK unfalllngcurefor i Seminal wean I nou Hnermator- ihao Imnotencv. and all diseases that follow, as a sequenced oeii . abuse; as Loss of Memory, vjiiivui- rrnnr Tiima. i Lassitude. AFTER TAKINB. Pain In the Back, Dimness of Vision, Premature old age, and many other diseases that lead to In. sanity or Consumption, and a Prematura Grave. a-Full particulars in our pamphlet, which we desire to send free by mail to everyone. -The Speciflo Medicine Issoldbyall druggists at 1 per pacaage or six pacKKBB iui free by mall on receipt of the money by address. ing THE GRAY MEDICINE CO., Mechanics' uiock, ueiiuu, m Bold by druggists everywhere. 24aly. UflDCC 8end25centsln stamps or currency nUrtOL for a new HORSE HOOK. It treats all diseases, has 35 tine engravings showing posi tions assumed by sick horses, a table of doses, a Dfini large collection of valuable recipes, DllUa t . n ., .. t 1, a hnraA. with - - 1UIOS1U1 WIUURm0.ftV.Wv.l ...... an engraving showing teeth of each year, and a large amount oi oinur vuiunuic uuiw " lion. Dr. Win. H. Hall says: "I nave bought books that I paid 85 and 10 for which I do not like as well as I do yours." SEND FOR A CIR CULAR. AGENTS WANTED. B. J. KKN. DALL. Enosburgh Falls, Vt. 20 ly T The Book can also be had by addressing " Thi Times," New BloomUeld, ia. $66 , a WEEK In vour town, and no caul I tal risked. You can give the business a trial witnoui expense, ine uest I opportunity ever onerea lor inose willing to work. You should try nothing else until you see for your self what vnu can do at the business we offer. No room to exDlaln here. You can devote all your time or only your sparo time to the business, and make great pay for every hour that you work. Women can make as much as men. Send for special private terms and particulars, which we mall free. 5 Outltt free. Don't complain of hard times while vou have such a cnance. Aauress a. ualiI.&ii land, Maine. 401y .iO.to SlSSa AUnth.ENCYCLOPEDIA mm m m Law and form, for Itntl- HOW TO USjneM Men, Kurmem, Ho- . naBa elianici mid YYorkiiifinicn YOL1S? O WN Sclllngfant. Low pile,-. w . Great iuccess. One tent I &UYI-P sold MO In one town, an " ether 1M In M days, an 4thr 75 In IS itays. Bares ten tlmea Its cot, at:l evryboly wadi it. rnd for circitlara and turuu. AUo General Agents Wanted. Address P. W. ZILULtU A CO., 1,004 Arch Bt.,PuJ:'a, Ta. la ly GUIDE to HUCCESS, wnn FO R 3X S For Business and Society IS bv far the best Business and Social Guide and hand-book ever published. Much the latest. It tells Doin sexes comnieieiv now to uo everyining in the best way. How to be your own Lawver, How to do Business Correctly and Successfully. How toaut iu Society and In every part of life, and contains a gold mine of varied Information 111 dlspenslble to all classes fur constant reference. AGFNTS WANTED for all or sum e time. To know why this book of real value and at mictions sells belter thun any other, apply for terms to H.U.SOAMMKI.LftOO, St. Louis, Missouri. 32 tin Wepuy all freight. WOULD SHE SUIT YOU? There's Just one thing a man can have In all this World of woe and strife, That makes the business not too bad, And that one thing's an easy wife. Dost fancy that I love my girl For rosy cheeks or raven hair 1 Ehe holds my heart because she laughs Because the laughs, and doesn't care. I put my boots Just where it suits, And find them where I put them too That Is a thing, you must allow, A chap can very seldom do. I leave my papers on my desk t Bhe never dusts them In a heap, Or takes to light the kitchen stove The very one I want to keep. On winter nights my cosy dame Will warm her toes before the fire i Bhe never scolds about the lamp, Or wants the wick a trifle higher. On Sundays the Is not so fine But what her ruffles I can hug I light my pipe Just where I please, And spill tho ashes on the rug. The bed Is never filled with " shams" A thing some women vilely plan To worry servants half to death And spoil the temper of a man. Bhe lets me sloop to any hour, Nor raises any horild din If It juBt happens, cow aud then, To be quite late when I come In. I toll yon, Jack, If you would wed, Just such a girl who lets things run She'll keep her temper like a lamb, And helps yon on to lots of fun. Don't look for money, ttyle or show, Or blushing beauty, ripe and rare i Just take the one who laughs at fate Who laughs,and thows the doesn't care. You think perhaps, our household ways Are just perchance a little mixed Oh, when they get too horrid bad, We etlr about and get things fixed. What compensation hat a man Who earns his broad by sweat of brow, If home la made a battle-ground, And life one long, eternal row ? THE DELAYED LETTER. WHEN Harry Hunt and Hetty Hope had been engaged three months, the time came for him to leave I . He had been only a Bummer boarder at Grandfather Hope'B farm house, and he had fallen In love with hU nelce, and had won her heart. Bhe wore his ring, and in a year they were to be married, But, alas 1 that year was to be spent apart. Harry was going to China, in the interests of the firm of which he at present was only an employee. On his return he would be made a junior part ner, and would be able to marry com fortably. In her secret heart Hetty wished that, poor as he was, Harry would ask her to marry him then and there, and go on the voyage with him. But a girl must keep her thoughts to herself. And now she had driven with him to the depot, to see him off; and the train bad come and he stood beside the light wagon holding her hand, and whispering these words ; " Ifp so hard that I cannot kiss you at the last. Good-bye, darling I good by 1" Hetty was trying not to cry there at the depot, before all those strangers. Bhe almost wished she had not driven down to see Harry off, though if she had not come she would never have forgiven herself. " Good by," she whispered faintly. Then Harry Jumped upon the train, not an Instant too soon, and in a mo ment more Hetty only saw a handker chief fluttering from the window as the engine puffed its way out of tho depot, and flew around the curve of the road. " Drive, home, Peter," she said to the boy who held the reins ; and happily she had power to keep the tears from her lashes until the people who had stared at her at the depot could stare at her no more. On the platform shade hats and sun bonnets were gathered in a group dis cussing the fact that Hetty Hope had been down to see her beau off, and that there was no longer any doubt that they were engaged ; but Hetty did not know or care for that. Bhe was crying softly in the back of the little light wagon, while Peter drove on, whistling the Star Spangled Banner all outof tune.and now and then stopping to break off a branch full of wild cherries. It seemed so hard that Harry should be going away for a year a whole, long year. It was al most as dreadful as though he were dead for what might happen In a year V No one could ever tell ; and the tears fell again. The only comfort Hetty could think of was ber first letter, and it would be three day before that could come, However it came. Grandpa brought it In his pocket and gave It to her with a slow nod and a slower laugh, and aunt Maria Inquired with her usual down rightness whether that " was from her beau '("' and cousin Tilly, by and by, in privacy In their own room, asked If she would let her see it, and was otTended that she did not. These relatives of bers were not alway delightful to poor Hetty but her father was a busy man, who traveled the world over, making a for tune for the daughter he saw scarcely twice a year, and her mother died in her babyhood, and Hetty had no other home than Grandfather's." They were very good to her, that old man and his wid owed daughter, Aunt Maria. And cousin Tilly wa soft and pretty, and as silly as a little white kitten. It might have been very much worse, yet who can blame Hetty for looking forward to the time when she should have a home of her own a home that suited her y Papa sent her plenty of money now. Bhe could do what she pleased with ' It, and she bought smart caps for Aunt Maria, and gay ribbons for Tilly and slippers for Grandpa but the home was not under her control. The prim parlor waB not to be touched by her hand. The blue shades, and red and green carpet, the wax fruit under a glass and the por trait of Washington over the mantle piece, remained as she had first seen them, when as a child she regarded that parlor as a sort of a sacred place not to be pluyed in. Bhe filled her own tiny sleeping room with what Aunt Maria denominated Jim-cracks ; but the fami ly disapproved of vines about the house and there was not a tree within the small, prim garden palings, and good as they all were, the people who lived in the house were exactly like it. They had no sense of the beautiful and no yearning for it. So Hetty dwelt Inwardly alone and built her air-castles, and lived on one letter until she had another, and the time of her lover's absence wore on wearily until six months were gone, and then came a letter which made Hetty hold her breath while she read it, and burst into tears as soon as she had fin ished it. , " Dear Hetty," it said, " an unfore seen thing has happened. My employ ers desire me to remain in China for for some years. If I do so they will make me a partner, and I shall be able to live well and comfortably, and to grow rich In time; but will you be will ing to live here with me V Will you come out to me under safe protection and spend years of your young life In this strange land t Think it over, dar ling. The case stands just thus ; If you refuse, I will return, but I shall then have no prospects ; no means whatever A penniless man who must take any po sition that offers will be your husband in that case. The choice is In your hands ; or, perhaps It would be honora ble in me to set you free. The thought almost breaks my heart. Dear Hetty, what shall I say ' I think I could make you happy even here. If you are will ing to come, write to me. If you desire that I should return, and seek my for- in your native land, write that frankly ; but if you feel that neither alternative pleases you and desire your freedom do not write at all ; let silence be my an swer. I confess that I have hope that even under my altered circumstances you will still be true." More followed lover's tulk with which we have nothing to do ; and Het ty cried over the letter and was sorry, but she wrote at once.and the last words of her letter were these : " I will come to China whenever you send for me." The mail bag was nearly ready at the post office, which was also the grocery store. Grandfather Hope stopped his wagon at the door at that moment. . " Hullo I" cried he, ' here's another letter for ye. My neice has written to her beau In Chauy, and you've got to send that." The postmaster laugh ed and took the missive, stamped it properly, and took the silver coin from Grandfather Hope's outstretched hand. ' Seems as if there was a resumption of specie payments," he said, " I got a five dollar gold piece this morning." And then the two old men fell to talk ing politics, while Hetty's letter was carried toward the post office by the clerk. Only toward it for the train was not yet due, and Miss Candor wanted four pounds of coffee sugar crushed in a great hurry. The letter was put down on the counter and the sugar weighed. The clerk pushed the parcel toward Miss Candor and the letter with it. There was a wide crack between the top and the side of the counter, and Into that the leUer slipped unseen. Other things had slipped down the same crevice before pennies and hairpins, skeins of silk, and pieces of tape but no one knew it. As for this letter the clerk never remember ed it again. The postmaster believed it to be in the bag, and Grandfather Hope went home aud told Hetty that be had seen her beau's letter safe off to Chany, with no idea that he was not telling her the honest truth. Harry waited at the antipodes for his letter in vain, and Hetty waited to be sent ior. Any other two friends, relatlves.stran gers would have written again, but lov ers are always ready to be suspicious, to doubt, to fear they are deserted and for gotten, aud with the world between them these two pined for each other grieved, grew angry, never forgot and never wrote any more. 'She has broken ,our engagement," said he. 1 He wanted to break our engage ment," said she. And soon the village began to know that Hetty Hope was not going to mar ry Harry Hunt. Hetty married nobody. Bhe refused all her offers, and lived on with her grandfather. Aunt Maria died. Tlllie married. Hetty kept house for the old man still. She was not young any long er. Girls called her an old maid. Bhe had left off caring much about her dress though she was now a rich woman, for the father she was almost a stranger to, had left her an heiress when he died In a far-off land. The farmhouse was prettier and more tasteful, and she had one or two chosen friends, but her life was woefully quiet, and over her heart she always wore a locket with Harry Hunt's hair In It, and under the locket lay a regret too deep for utterance. One saw It sometimes in her eyes, or guessed It from the tone of her voice, that was all. a It was a bright autumn day, twelve years from that on which grandfather Hope had carried the lost letter to the poet office. The mail bag was being made up again, aud the carpenter was at work at the counter. "Hullo I" cried he. "Well?" replied the postmaster. "You seem to have been hiding things here," said the carpenter. " I've a mind to keep all I find. Beo here I" What's been dropped Into the cracks? I tell you what you needed a new coun ter bad." " Bo we did so we did," said the post master, putting on his glasses. ' Well, I want to know V Cake of bees wax, paper of plus, hair pins, sheet of stick ing plaster hullo I a letter I Here put this in the bag it's stamped ; some one has left it on the counter. Hullo I let's see what else you've found 1" He tossed the letter to his little grand son. This time it went into the post bag this time after lying in the dark for twelve years, It was actually on its way to China. A man of forty, with his hair already silvering, stood amongst his employees in the great Canton warehouse. Silks and strange rich, gold-threaded stuff, fans, umbrellas, screens, cabinets were being packed under his submission. " Mlsser Hunt," said a small, shrill Chinese voice at his elbow. " Ship has come bring letters." " Very well," said Harry Hunt. "Put them down, Chi Foo, and see to those fans. My Yankee boy there don't un- derstand them." Chi Foo went to work at the fans. Harry Hunt turned over the letters. These were mostly business missives Instructions from his senior partners replies to letters he had written con cerning sales and purchases ; a highly perfumed note bearing a monogram and a coat of arms from a cousin who wrote occasionally to borrow money, a news paper, a magazine, and, lost but not least, a dirty, time-yellowed envelope with a corner bitten off by a hungry mouse, with the superscription half ob literated. A thrill ran through Harry's frame as he looked at the handwriting. He tore It open ; within lay a letter fresh as though written an hour before, dated September 4th, 1800, and ended thus " I will come to China whenever you Send for me." Harry Hunt read It, understood what had happened, though not bow it had happened ; and leaving his silks, shawls and Chlneses brio-a-brao to take care of themselves, he rushed to his office, and there Indited a strange incoherent letter to one who for all he knew might be dead, or married to another but who must know the truth If she lived. And so a little later, Hetty sat in her little light wagon at the station waiting for a train, and from that train, when it arrived, descended a man older and darker than the Harry from whom she parted twelve years before ; and this time they did not care for the combined stare of all the town, had all the town been there to see, but kissed each other with such kisses as those who meet in Heaven may great each other with for they had been dead to each other for twelve long years anu were auve again . , -m-9 EF Teach a girl to be thorough In whatever she undertakes, and later on she will find that one talent will gather many to Itself. A smattering of any. thing is always dangerous. Learn less but learn more thoroughly should be the rule for a girl's education. i mm KS'In the northern part of Sweden, there has lust been discovered, a moun tain in which lies a vein of magnetic) iron ore (Loadstone) or unknown lengtn, and more than a metre in aeptn. (3r Write to Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham No. 233 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass. for pamphlets relative to the curative properties of her Vegetable Compound In female complaints. 4J SUNDAY READING. HOW TO SAY NO. Many a promising young man has been ruined because he did not under stand how to say no. Hannah Moore, In her story of ' Parley the Porter," illustrates the evil results of dallying with temptation. The porter parleyed with the enemy till the house was rob bed and ruined. There are many people who say " No," but so faintly, that the words stick In the throat, and only In vite further persuasions. Bald one little boy who was advised to persuade his mother to reconsider some decision to which she had come: "When my mother says ' No,' there is no ' Yes' in It." Many a man tempted by. appetite within, and by associates without, says No," but feebly and faintly. His No" has a " Yes" in it, and the "Yes" finally prevails. We remember an anecdote of a young Rhode Island boy, which we put on rec ord in substance as we heard it related. He was coming along the street one day with a young man who was somewhat exhlllrated with strong drink, and after walking along awhile his companion drew a bottle from his pocket and said to the boy : "Have some?" ' Well.hand It over here," replied our friend. The bottle was passed to him, and raising it aloft, he hurled it with a crash against the stone wall, and, turning to his dazed and astonished companion, ex claimed : ' There 1 Don't you ever put a bottle to my Hps again I" The young man was perhaps a little inclined to be Irritated, but had sense sufficient to restrain his anger, and while his friend had no further occasion to resist his solicitations to drink,' there is reason to suppose that the forcible ex ample set before his companion had. a restraining influence to hold him from an evil and ruinous path. That young man's " No" had no " Yes" In It, and his parents look with a Just parental pride upon a son who has grown up undefiled by alcohol and kindred abominations, and who is theii joy and hope for years to come. There are hosts of young men who need the decision that this young man had. Thousands of men are to-day drifting, wrecked and ruined, down to the drunkards' grave, who might have been saved If they had possessed the courage to smash the bottle and stand free from Its defilement and its curse. What we need Is men who can Bay : " Get thee behind me, Satan 1" and who would crush a rum bottlo as soon as they would a serpent's poison head. The man who does this will never be a drunkard. PEACE. The believer's peace is like a river for continuance. Look at it, rising as a lit tle brook among the mosses of a lone green hill ; by and by it leaps as a rug ged cataract ; anon it flows along the fair valley where the red deer wanders and the child loves to play with hum of pleasant muslo the brook turns the village mill. Hearken to its changeful hum as it ripples o'er its pebbly bed, or leaps adown the wheel or sports In ed dies where the tree bends down their branches to kiss the current. Anon the streamlet has become a river, and bears upon its flood full many a craft. Then its bosom swells, bridges with noble arches span It, and, grown vaster still, It becomes a stream broad enough to be an arm of old father ocean, pouring Us water-floods into the mighty main. The river abides the lapes of ages ; it is no evanescent, moving cloud, or transient rain flood, but in all Its stages it is per manent. " Men may come, and men may go, But I flow on forever." Evermore, throughout afk generations the river speedeth to its destined place. Buch is the peace of the Christian. He has always reason for comfort. He has not a consolation like a swollen torrent, which la dried up under the hot sun of adversity; but peace la the rightful pos session at all times. Ever is the river in its place. And ever thus come night come day, come sickness, come health, come what will, the peace of God which passeth all understanding will keep the Christian's heart and mind, through Jesus Christ. C3F Happy Is he who has learnt not to Beek for what Is pleasant, not to shrink from what is painful, but to go on doing everything that be knows to be good and kind and right, in utter disregard of self. How a man might ennoble and invigor ate bis life If he would work this princi ple into every grain of his mind and strenuously act upon it, invariably striv ing not after what would be pleasantest, but what would be best 1 In fact it is the very essence of all that is good and great in human life ; aud not only that it is the true road to happiness.