THE TIMES, NEW BLOOM FIELD, PA., NOVEMBER 30, 1880. J3 RAILROADS. PHILADELPHIA AND READING R.R. ARRANGEMENT OF PASSENGER TRAINS, NOYEMBErTsUi, 1880. Trains Leave Hitrrlsburg as Follows : For New York via AUentown, at .05 a. m. and l,4fin. m. For New York via Philadelphia and "Bound Brook Route," 8.60, 8.t5 a. m. and 1.4ft p. m. For Philadelphia, at tUin, 8.0S, (through car), 0.50 a. m., 1.4f and 4.00 p. In. For Reading, at 6.00, 8.0ft, 9.50 a. in., 1.15,4.00, and 8.tx p. in. For Pottsvllle. at 6.00, 8 0S, 9.50 a. m. and 4.00 & in., and via Schuylkill and Susquehanna ranch at 2.40 p. m. For Auburn, at 6.30 a. in. For AUentown, ate. 00, 8.05, 9.60 a.m., 1.45 and (.00 p. m. The 8.05 a. m. and 1.45 p. m. trains have through oars for New York, via AUentown. SUNDAYS t For AUentown and Way Stations, at 6 00 a. m. For Reading, Plilldelaphla, aud Way Stations, at 1.45 p. m. Trains Leave for Harrlsbnrg as Follows t Leave NewYork via AUentown, 8.45 a. m.. 1.00 aud 6.80 n. in. 1-eave New Yorkvla"Bound Brook Route."and Philadelphia at 7.45 a.m.. 1.30 and 5.30 p. in., ar riving at Uairlsourg, i.5o, 8.20 p. in., and 12.86 a.m. Leave Philadelphia, at 9.45 a. ra 4.00 and 7.45 p. m. Leave Pottsvllle. 7.00, 9,10 a. m. and 4.40 p. m. Leave KeadtUK, at 4.60, 8.00,11.50 a. in., 1.3(,ii.l5, and 10.36 p. in. Leave Pottsvllle vlaSchuylklll and Susquehanna Branch, 8.3o a. m. . !ave AUentown, at 6.25, 9.00 a. m., 12.10, 4.S0, and 9.05 p. m. SUNDAYS: Leave New York, at 5 30 p. in. Leave Philadelphia, at 7.45 p. m. Leave Reading, at 8.00 a. m. and 10.35 p. m. Leave AUentown. at 9.05 p. m. BALDWIN BRANCH. Leave HARRISBURG for Paxton, Lochleland Steelton dally, except Sunday, at 6.25. 6 40, 9.35 a.m., and 2.00 p.m.! dally, except Saturday and Sunday, at 6.45 p. in., and on Saturday only, 4.45, 6.10, 9.30 p. m. Returning, leave STEELTON daily, except Sunday, at 6.10, 7.00, 10.00a. m., 2.20 p. m.j daily, except Saturday and Sunday, 6.10 p. m., and ou Saturday only 6.10, 6.30, 9,50 p. in. J. E. WOOTTEN, Gen. Manager. O.O.Hancock, General Passenger and Ticket Agent.. JHE MANSION HOUSE, New Bloomfleld, Penn'a., GEO. F. ENSMINGER, Proprietor. HAVING leased this property and furnished it In a comfortable manner, I ask a share of the public 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 attendance. April 9. 1878. tf RATIONAL HOTEL. CORTLANDT 8TEET, (Near Broadway,) HOCHKISS & 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 810 per week. Convenient to allferrlesand cltyrallroads. NEW FUBNITURE. NEW MANAGEMENT. 4 ly GHAT'S SPECIFIC MEDICIXE. TRADE MARK The great Eng- TRADE MARK nsti itemeav. an unfailingourefor , Seminal weak- 1 ness, spermator rhea Impotency. and all diseases that follow, as a sequence of Self- Buns) ; no i i.vx -, iaritvorfiimsiimnt on. and a premature urave. -Full particulars in our pamphlet, which we desire to send free by mail to everyone. -The Specific Medicine is sold by all druggists at 81 per package or six packages for 15, or will be sent free by mail on receipt of the money by address ing THE GRAY MEDICINE CO., Mechanics' Block, Detroit, Mien. Sold by druggists everywhere. 24aly. UflBGr Send 25 cents In stamps or currency nUnOL for anew HORSE BOOK. It treats all diseases, has 85 line engravings showing posi tions assumed by sick horses, a table of doses, a RflfW large collection of valuable recipes, OUUIV rules for telling the ageof a horse, with an engraving showing teeth of each year, and a large amount of other valuable horse Informa tion. Dr. Wm. H. Hall says : " I have bought books that I paid t5 and $10 for which I do not like as well as I do yours." SEND FOR A CIR CULAR AGENTS WANTED. B. J. KEN. DALL. Enosburgh Falls, Vt. 20 ly 49- The Book can also be had by addressing " Th Times," New Bloomheld, Pa, ' i0 to S125 m Month. ENCYCLOPEDIA HOW TO BE-- rMt YOUR OWN w"nVwc " i . , , . - . V. Great suoceiw. On. agent LAWYER oltl 600 in on town, an " otber In) III M d.y, an. other 76 In 18 days. Bares ten timas ita coat, and everybody wants It. friend for circulara and terma AImo General Agents Wanted. Addreaa P. W. ZIEQLEU CO., 1,00 Arch St., Phi' 'a. Fa. laly GUIDE to SUCCESS, WITH 1 O lfc MS For Business and Society IS by far the best Ruslness and Social Guide aad hand-book ever published. Much the latest. Ittells both seies oompletelv how to do everything In the best way. How to be your own Lawyer, now to do Business Correctly and Successfully. How toact In Sooiety and In every part of life, and contains a gold mine of varied Information ln dlsnensible to all classes for constant reference. AGENTS WANTED lor all or spare time. To know why this book of real value and attractions ells better than any other, apply for terms to H. B. SUA MM ELL Hi CO , St. Louis, Missouri. We pay all freight. 'i em OTICE ! In Vie Court of Common Meat oj Perry County, JVo. 7 AuuuHt Tbrui, 1&B0. HinniET Pjittehhon. by her next friend, Allen Savior vs. H M. Pattbbkosi. To R. M. Pattkkbon. Respondent. Sir: Please take notice that Ilia Court has granted a rule ou you to show cause why a di vorce a vinculo matrimonii should not be decreed In lavor of the libellant in the above case. Re turnable ou llrst Monday of January next. Personal service upou you having lailtd on account of your absence. J. A. GRAY. Sheriff. Nov. 16, 1880.pd Uukrin, All y. if 1 Mir- MAKING GLUCOSE. AT the late convention of Insurance men, held In Chicago, Mr. A. P. Red Held read an essay on the "Fire Hazard of Glucose Factories," The pa per commenced by saying that there is a general interest In glucose. Even the child Bmacks its Hps when told that the number of factories of this commodity is constantly increasing ; that one of them at Buffalo is 180x210 feet In dimen sions, eight stories high, and makes 150 tons of sweetness per day ; that the cost of the product Is less than half of cane sugar, and that It is largely used In making candy. The general publlc.sur prlsed by the fact that there has been made In the United States during the last year or two about 300,000,000 pounds annually, being about 600 tons per day, and that we have eaten nearly all of it without knowing it, are getting Inter ested in it. Of the nine or ten factories that were in existence In 1879,two burn ed, which makes the proportion of burn ings enormous. Glucose is the sugar or sweet product that comes from fruits, grain, peas, beans or potatoes. It differs from the product of sugar cane or the maple tree, which are called by the chemists sucrose, in the fact that glucose will not crystallize, at least not readily. Chemically speak ing, it is grape Bugar in liquid form. The paper then discussed the history of the discovery and manufacture of the substance. It was discovered in 1812 by a German chemist named Ktrchoff, and In after years was imported extensively into America. In 1838 there were about twenty factories in France and Germany which increased to eighty-five in 1878, while there were more than one hun dred in the Austrian empire, though they were not established there until 1835 or 1840. Most of the glucose of Europe, except that of Hungary, is made from potatoes, on account of their cheapness. In 1807 the manufacture of glucose in America was commenced. Since that time numbers of manufactories have been established in the United States, until now there are fifteen, and others are being built, so that it is estimated that within a few years the annual pro duct will be about forty pounds per head of population. Each bushel of corn makes twenty-six to thirty pounds of glucose, which brings two and a half cents per pound, the profit upon which in some cases is as high as forty to fifty cents per bushel, but the Interest on the investment and incidental expenses re duce the profit so that it is not greater than that of ruoBt enterprises requiring the same capital investment. Besides the great care, experience and skill re quired in the business, one item of ex pence Is generally overlooked, namely, the great waste and wear upon the building and machinery. A competent witness says that he put solid oak tim bers into the construction of a glucose manufactory, and that they had to be replaced in eighteen months,having rot ted away, the cause being the peculiar processes and the materials used. An other manufacturer told the writer that the costs of repairing per annum was something like 20 per cent, of the first cost of the business. In making glucose the shelled corn is soaked in large tubs of hot water for 36 hours or longer, until fermentation be gins. It is ground while wet and run on vibratory sieves. The finer, starchy part of the corn is washed through the sieves into tanks and settled. The wa ter is then drawn off and the sediment mixed with clean water and treated with alkali, about one pound of caustic soda being used for each bushel of oorn to separate every trace of gluten from it. It is then poured into metal-lined troughs, descending slightly, most of the water running away, leaving the starch in the bottom, which is left to dry. Up to this point the process is similar to starch making. For glucose this " green starch," is washed again and then treated with acids, sulphuric being mostly used.although hydrochloric nitric and oxalic acids are also used to some extent During this process which converts the starch into glucose it is brought to a boiling point by steam pipes. The mixture is then treated with some alkaline or lime substance to neutralize the acid. The syrup is then treated with different chemicals to further purify it, boiled down and filter ed through charcoal. The paper also discussed the uses to which glucose is put, it being used in the manufacture of sugar, syrups and oonfectionery, these products, in nearly all cases, having in their composition from 10 to 100 per cent, of glucose, the paper taking the ground that, if the pro cess of manufacture is carefully carried on, the product is not unwholesome. The paper then proceeded to discuss the fire hazard of glucose factories, men tioning first the moral hazard. This is not great at present, as most of the es tablishments are making money. The incendiary hazard was also mentioned. A glucose factory is sometimes consider ed a nuisance because of its stench, and hence Is liable to be burned by an enrag ed populace, but a reasonably good sew erage and care not to leave the foul water stand to stink will obviate this source of offense. The physical hazard is greater. The Davenport factory took fire and burned from the corn-sheller. TheVlncennes factory took fire from a locomotive. The buildings used for the business are grand in propor tions, but bad fire risks for that rea son. A fire started in a room 180 by 210 feet with a draught made by windows, doors and elevator shafts, will defy the extin guishing power of the best fire depart ments in the world. When there are eight of these rooms, one above the other, in the same building, the danger is largely Increased. Most of these es tablishments had their immense steam boilers in the main building, which is unsafe, although they are generally safely arranged and the rooms light and roomy. Some buildings were made originally for other purposes and are badly arranged, being dark and crowded where they should be light and roomy, especially around the kilns and boilers. This is true also of a large part of the factories that were built for the purpose and have been enlarged many times since. The corn-shellers are a great source of risk, but most of the factories at the present time buy their corn already shelled. As kilns containing retorts are used in all the factories, they are the chief physical hazard. They ought to be outside the main building, entirely cut off and detached, and, wherever they are used, their surroundings should be made entirely of brick, stone, iron, or other incombustible material. They are much more dangerous than malt kilns, because their heat is much greater, the retorts and the bone in them sometimes being subjected to a white heat. The handling and storage of the bone charcoal after it Is burned is a great source of danger. It is supposed to be cooled before it goes into the filters, but it is often too hot to hold in the hatld, and sometimes it is red-hot. Spbntane ous combustion may occur even when it 1b cool when drawn. No wood Bhould ever be allowed to come in contact with it. It should be stored on a brick or earth floor, and all tools and barrows used to handle it Bhould be of iron. The use of kerosene lamps in factories was mentioned as a prolific source of danger. The use of acids add somewhat to the hazard, although most of them would extinguish fire If poured upon it. They may however, combine with other substances used, such as starch, and make a violently explosive compound. The fact that most of the processes in the manufacture are wet ones is a favor able one, although the reader, in closing related that the present rates of insur ance upon glucose factories are entirely too low. intervIeweiTby A WOMAN. SHE looked just like that kind of a woman when she came into the sanctum, and all the seniors became in stinctively very busy and so absorbed in their work that they did not see her, which left the youngest man on the staff an easy prey, for he looked at the visitor with a little natural politeness, and was even soft enough to offer her a chair. "You are the editor ?" she said, in a bass voice. He tried to say "Yes," so that she could hear him, while his colleagues in the sanctum couldn't; but it was a fail. ure, for the woman gave him dead away in a minute. "You are?" she shouted ; " then listen to me ; look at me ; what am I ?" The foolish young man looked at her timidly and ventured to say, in a feeble voice, that she looked to be about forty sev " Am I not a woman ?" she said. The youngest man weakly tried to correct his former error, and said she seemed more like a glr But again she broke in on him with a scornful hiss : " Gir-r-r-1 1" she said, "lama wom an ; a woman with all the heaven-born aspirations, the fathomless feelings, the aggressive courage and the indomitable will of a woman. What can you see on my face P" The position of the youngest man on the staff was pitiful, but none of the old heads appeared to observe it. At least they didn't offer to help him out. So he looked at her face for a second, and said timidly : "Freckl " " Nursling," she shrieked, " had you the soulful eyes of a free man you could see shining on my brow the rising light of a brighter dawn." " Could I," asked tbe youngest man timidly. " Yes, you could I," the woman said In tones of Immeasurable scorn. Now hear me, have you a but I cannot bring myself to use the hateful expres. slon in the style of masculine posses slon ; are you auy body's husuaud ?" The youngest man blushed bitterly, and said he wasn't as yet, but he had some hopes. "And you expect your that Is you expect the woman whose husband you will be to support you V" . The youngest man blushed more keen ly than before.and tremblingly admitted that he had some expecllons, that, that, being the only daughter of his pro posed father-in-law, if he might put it that way. 'Yah !" snarled the woman ; "now let me tell you the day of woman's emancipation Is at hand. From this time we are free, fer-reel You must look for other slaves to bend aud cringe before your majesties, and wait upon you like slaves. You will feel the change in your affairs since we have burst our chains, and how will you live without the aid of woman ? Who makes your shirts now V" she added fiercely. The youngest man miserably said that a tailor ou Jefferson street made his. " Hm," said the womau, somewhat disconcerted. " Well, who washes 'em then!"' Bhe added triumphantly. A Chinaman just west of Fifth street," the youngest man said with a hopeful light in his eyes. The woman glared at him and groan ed under her breath, but she came at him again with : " Proud worm, who cooks your victuals?" The youngest man said truly that he didn't know the name of the cook at his restaurant, but he was a darkey about forty years of age and round as a bar rel, with whiskers like the stufllug of a Bofa. The woman looked at him as though she was going to strike him. "Well," Bhe said, as one who was leading a forlorn hope, " who makes up your bed aud takes care of your room?" The youngest man replied with an air of truth and frankness, that he roomed with a rail road conductor and an ex Pullman car porter took care of their room. She paused when she reached the door and turning upon him with the face of a drowning man who Is only five feet away from a life buoy. -"Miserable dependent," she cried, " who sews on your buttons ?" The youngest man on the staff rose to his feet with a proud, happy look on his face. "Havn't a sewed button on a single clothes," he cried triumphantly, " pat ents, every one of 'em, fastened on like copper rivits, and nothing but studs and collar buttons on my shirts. Have not had a button sewed on for three years. Patent buttons last for years after the garments have gone to decay." And the woman fled down the wind ing passage and the labyrinthine stairs with a hollow groan, while the other members of the staff, breaking through their heroic reserve, clustered around the youngest man and congratulated him upon the emancipation of his sex. A Curious Petition. This was addressed to the governor of South Carolina, in the year 1733, by six teen maidens of Charleston. It ran thus : " The humble petition of all the maids whose names are underwritten. Whereas, we, the humble petitioners, are at present in a very melancholy state of mind, considering how all the bachelors are blindly captivated by widr ows, and our own youthful chances thereby neglected ; in consequence of this, our request is that your excellency will for the future order that no widows presume to marry any young man till the maids are provided . for ; or else to pay each of them a fine for satisfaction for invading our liberties ; and likewise a fine to be levied on all such bachelors as shall be married to widows. The great disadvantage it is to us maids is that the widows, by their forward car riage, do snap up the young men, and have the vanity to think their merit be yond ours, which is a great imposition on us, who ought to have the preference. This is humbly recommended to your excellency's consideration,and hope you will permit no further insults. And we poor maids, in duty bound, will ever pray." The maidens all forlorn would have much approved the edict of the Portuguese king which forbade widows more than fifty years old from remarry ing, on tbe ground that widows of that age commonly wedded young men of no property! who dissipated the fortunes such marriages brought them to the prejudice of children and other rela tives. " Fees of Doctors. The fee of doctors Is an item that very many persons are interested in just at present. We believe the schedule for visits is j mi. wnicn woum tax a man confined to his bed for a year, and in need or tiany visits, over $i,uou a year ior meuicai auenuance atone I Ana one single bottle of Hop B titers taken in time would save the $1,000 and all the year s sickness. Port 47 t SUNDAY BEAMN3. MORNING. Oh, mystery of morn, Bo stainless and so fair I Thy birth should wake the world To penitence and prayer. Each day Is a reprieve To erring, sinful man, And angel spirits grieve To view the wasted span. What griefs may hidden He, In ambush 'mid the hours j What blessings In that Bummer sky, To fall like Summer showers t Father I our hearts prepart, For all Thy love may send ) Help us to serve Thee day by day, And trust Thee to the end. The Living Christ. The picture of Jesus Christ could never have been drawn had there not, been a living Christ from which to draw it. The life, character, the teachings of Christ could never have been written by mortal men, If that life had not first been witnessed, If that character had not been seen, if those teachings had not been heard. If this is so, then the simple existence of these books Is suffi cient proof of their historio truth ; for the reason that what they describe is be yond human Invention. Here is the marvellous picture. Here are the books. They must In some way be accounted for. No respectable scholar denies that they have been in the world from the earliest Christian avyv Eithe Jtmis Christ lived, and this is a natural record of his real life, or Bomebody of that age invented it. Now, for four unknown aud unletter ed men to conceive of such a character as that, to actually set him In motion, with all the graces and virtues of an in imitable and noble manhood, to supply wisdom for him, to furnish him with the strength and loveliness of Jesus Christ, to carry through consistently a being making such stupendous claims, to make that airy fiction the source from which streams all our best thoughts of God, and to make him, at the same time a real brother man, bo real that we clasp him as our own flesh and blood for four unknown men, I say, to have risen in the darkness of the old Roman and done that, is a miracle of author ship which surpasses any miracle Of the New Testament. The Character of Jesus is the supreme miracle. It is far easier for me to believe that Jesus Christ came down from heaven, as these men say he did, than to believe that they manufactured him. The Bird's Fear of the Dead. It is not mere sentimentalism that pleads in favor of the most merciful form of Heath being adopted in the case of the slaughter of animals intended for human consumption. There is no ques tion that much suffering would be spar ed cattle If they were not allowed to see each other slaughtered. Not easy is it to conceive the kind of torture they feel and cannot express. How observant are animals is proved by a case which came under my own observation. Among the inmates of my house is a jackdaw, an ill-grained and vituperative bird as ever accepted, under protest, hu man companionship and human atten tion. He prefers so distinctly sleeping in a cage where no enemy can assail him while he is off his guard that he is allowed to have his own way in the matter. One day, while he was in the cage, some pheasants, which had just arrived in a hamper, were placed beside Titm. TTIa riranrl it thpaa Ttrna remarka ble to witness. A bird whose whole lif was passed in defiance of things strong er than himself,in aggravating a mastilK" that would not make two bites of hi or, or in pinching surreptitiously the flam-, boyant tail of his arch enemy the cat when it came within reach of his cage went at this sight into an ecstacy of terror which could not be appeased un til the uncanny objects were removed. What InBtinct caused this strange dem onstration in the presence of death shown in one of its own race, albeit so different a species, is not to be guessed. Much food for reflection and speculation is, however, afforded. Virtue pardons the wicked, as the scandal tree perfumes the axe that strikes it. O" God's treasury is absolutely inex haustible. He can never fail a trusting heart. No matter what may be your sta tion, you can so Jive that men through you and in you shall see God. A Foolish Mistake Don't make the mistake of confouud iug a remedy of acknowledged merit with the numerous quack medicines that are now so common. We speak from experience when we say that Parker Ginger Tonic Is a sterling health restora tive and will do all that Is claimed for it. We have used It ourselves with the ha) pie. results for Kheuuistini and wli"i worn out by overwork, mti'.-l'i l'