THE TIMES, NEW BL00MFIEL1), PA.. MAllCll 15, 1881. n RAILROADS. - PHILADELPHIA AND READING O AKKA.NWEMENT OF r A88KNOK J1TRAIN8 NOVEMBElttTsth, 1880. Trains Leato Harrlnburgr as Fallens : For New York via vUlentown, at (.OS a. at. d 1.45 n. 111. Kor Hew York via rhllaclelplil and "Bound Brook Itoute." ti.to, g.HS a. iu. anil 1.4 " p. in. Fur Philadelphia, at U.uo, (.06, (thruiigh car), 9.50 a. ra., 1.45 and 4.0u p. in. For Heading, at 0.UO, 8.05, 8.50 a. m 1.45, 4.00, and fuia p. ra. Kor rottsville. at 6.00. 8 03, 0.50 a. m. ad 4.0 p. m., and via Bchuylklll and Husguehanna Brauoh ati.40 p. 111. For Auburn, at 6.80 a. in. For Allentown,at6.0u, 8.06, (.50a.m., 1.4ft and 1.00 p. in. The 8.05 a. m. and' 1.45 (1, m. trains bava through curs for New York, Tla Alleatown. SUNDAY i . For Allentewn and War Stations, at 6 00 a, mi For Heading, 1'hlldelauhia, and W ay stations, at 1.45 p. III. Trains Leaie fur HaiTlsbtirg as Follows t leave MewYork via Alleutowu, ( 6a. in . 1.00 aiid6 (u b. in. , heave iw York via "Bound Brook ltoul."ana PlillRdolplilii at 745 a. m., l.au and 0.80 p.m., nr. riving at UiirrlnDurg, 1.5o, 8.20 p. in., and 12.35 a. ni. 1 Leave fMl delplila, at 9.43 a. in., 4.0U and 7.46 p. III. . Leave I'otNvllle. 7. On. 9,10 a. m. and 4.40 1. m. Leave Heading, at 4.60, 8.U0,J1.W. ia., 1.3' ,IU5, and 10.35 p. in. Leave futtsvllle v.a -ieliuylkill and Susquehanna Branoli, 8.811a. in. Leave Allfitowii,at0.25,0.0; a. in 12.10, 4. SO, and 9.05 p, m, 8CNDA?8i teave New York, at 6 30 p. in. Leave Philadelphia, at 7.45 p. m. Leave HendtiiK, ai S.'ii a. 111. andlO.85 p. m. Leave Alleiitown.attf.u5p. ra. BALDWIN BRANCH Lf ave nARRTSTitJttd for PaittdM, Loclilel and Hteelton dally, except Sunday, at 6.25. 8.40, 9.35 a. in., and 2.00 p. in I dally, except Baturday and Sunday, at 6.45 p. 111., and on Baturday only, 4.45, 6.10,9.30 p. m. Returning, leave 8T HELTON dally, except Buuday. at b.l0,7.W, 10.00a. in.. 2.20 p. m.i dally, except Saturday and Sunday, 8. 10 p. in., and 011 Baturday only 6.10, 6.30, B.fiu p. m. J. E. WOOTTEN, Gen. Manager. O.O.Hancock, General Passenger and Ticket Agent. HE MANSION HOUSE, New Bloomfleld, Penn'a., GEO. F. ENSMINGKR, Proprietor. HAVING leased this property and furnished It la a comfortable manner, I ask a share at the public patronage, and assure uiy friends who stop with me that every exertion will be made to render their stay pleasant. M A careful hostler always In attendance. April 9. 1878. tl , jAONAL HOTEL. CORTLANDT STEET, (Near Broadway,) NEW ORK. HOCHK.IS8 & POND, Proprietors ON THE EUROPEAN PLAN. The restaurant, cafe and lunch room attached, are unsurpassed for cheapness and excellence of service. Booms 50 cents, (2 per day. (3 to 810 per week. Convenient to allferrlesaudcltyrallroads. NEW FURNITURE. 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KCBiMTliihcrrMtwr J Established la the World. i 1848 fl ft VFano wiifaiMMi4fMeMiiir(M. a (gHnOn, without obana of name, aj maiiAfferaont, or location, to "bock up " f a . inwM, tvvkmaig girn mm mi ovr yotu. Complete Ktenm Oua';w7wM.i.. fOUh Traction Kna tries arid llaia Jbualnea ever oon in the Amenc-an tiiM'kat. A multitude of ipeHoi faur and tmprevmtmt for 1881, totrether wilh &pmiar qvaliti in eetwtrvo. tUm and tncttwrial not dreAtned of by other m&kera. jrour miw or Hep&raton, iron uiui mocmm t air-drttTi oonnUr,t4y on band, from which ! built U lu-. TRACTION ENGINES Btronpit, wvi dvrabU. and eMr O AVI iO ULU4TSN7 vnvi Farmer Rtid Threshennen ar lnvitwl to InvMitltrato xlria rniatchU Thntrtiiiur Machluery. Olroulm moat t rea. A(llrH . NICHOLS, OHCPARD & CO. . Battla Creak, Mloriieai. $5 Outfit arat five to tboaa who wih to mjnur in the luuat I'leaaant aud prontuble bliailienB known. tverytkliMf new. Capital not reuulred. W will furnish yon everything. 10 a day and tipwmrrta U ailv- raadfl wlthoiil .UyliiK away fr.nu hiilna oer uliflit. 1 riV whatever. Many new wurkern wanted Jit nHoe. Mauf are miaklair forlunea at the liueiueaa. La:iiea niake ae uiucli aa meu, ami yomiM boa and ixiriamkeb-rnitiay. No into who i wiilinir to work taila to make luo'e nmney every isy tliKB oao tta Htta iu a week at auynntlnary eini"uei.t. 'i'lia wlio ' w at oiM' will find a a'lort r'id fortuue. Ad- e. ti U LLt T k CU., l'ortkm.l. Jlaiaa. I ly "Love in a Cottage." "'"PELL me, Cbarley, who la that X fasolnatltig creature Id blue, who wftltisea so divinely )" asked young Frank Belmont of hli friend Charles Hastings, as they stood playing "wall flower" for the moment at a military ball. " Julia Heathoote," answered Charles with a half algh. "An old friend of mine. I proposed, but she refused me." "On what ground 1" " Simply because I had a comfortuble income. Her head Is full of romantic notions, and she dreams of nothing but love in a cottage. Bhe contends that poverty 1b essential to happiness and that money is a bane." , " Have you given up all hopes of hery" " Entirely, tn faot, I'm engaged." " Then you have no objection to my addressing this dear, romantic angel V" "None whatever. But I see my fiance ; excuse me. I must walk the next quadrille with her. Good luck." Frank Belmont was a stranger in Boston-aNew Yorker Immensely rich and fashionable, but his reputation had not preceeded him and Charles Hastings was the only man in New England who knew blra. He procured an Introduc tion to the belle from one of the mana gers, and soon danced and talked him self into her good graces, In fact it was a clear case of love on both sides. The enamored pair were Bitting apart, enjoy ing a delicious tete-a-tete. Suddenly Mr. Belmont heaved a deep sigh. , "Why do you sigh, Mr. Belmont P" asked the fair Julia, secretly not displeas ed with this proof of her lover's sensibili ty. "Is not this a gay scene V" "Alas I yes ;" replied Belmont, gloomi ly. "But fate does not permit me to mingle habitually In scenes like these. They only make my ordinary life doubly gloomy, and even here I seem to see the bhadow of a fiend waving me away. What right have I to be here V" "What fiend do you allude to P" asked Miss Ileathcoate, with Increasing Inter est. . . "A fiend hardly presentable in good society," replied Belmont, bitterly. "One could tolerate a Mephlstopheles a digni fied fiend with his pockets full of money, but my tormentor, lf personified would appear with Beedy boots and a shocking bad hat." , "How absurd!" "It is true," sighed Belmont; "and the name of my fiend is poverty." "Are you poor V" "Yes madam ; and when I would fain render myself agreeable in the eyes of beauty this fleud whispers to me : 'Be ware I you have nothing to offer but love in a cottage.' " "Mr. Belmont," said Julia, with spark ling eyes and a voice of unusual anima tion, "although there are sordid souls in this world, who only judge of the merits of an individual by his pecuniary poss essions, I do not belong to the number. I respect poverty. There is something poetical about it, and I Imagine that happiness is oftener found in the humble cottage than beneath the palace roof." Belmont appeared enchanted with this encouraging avowal. The result was an elopement. The happy couple passed a day In New York, and then Frank removed his beloved to his " cot tage." An Irish hack conveyed them to a miserable shanty in the environs of New York city, where they alighted and Frank escorted his bride Into the room, which served as a kitchen, reception and drawiDg room, and was neither papered nor carpeted, Introduced Mad ame Julia to his mother. The old lady, who was peeling potatoes, hastily wiped her hands on her apron and saluted her " darter" on both cheeks. " Can it be possible," thought Julia "that this vulgar creature Is my Frank's mother P" " Frank I" screamed the old woman, you'd better go right up stairs and take of them hired close. The boy's been arter 'em more'n fifty times. Frank hired 'em when he went down East," she added, by way of explanation to Julia, " to look emart." The bridegroom retired on this bint, and soon reappeared in a pair of faded nankeen pantaloons' reaching to about the calveB of bis legs, a very shabby black coat out at elbows, a ragged black vest, aud, instead of his varnished boots a pair of immense, trodden-down bro gans. " Now," said he, sitting down by the cooklng-Btove, " I begin to feel at borne. This is delightful la't it, dearest P" and be warbled: Tho" eversohumble, there's no place like hone." Julia's heart swelled so that she could not utter a word. " Dearest I" said Frank " I think you told me you bad no objections to smok ies;." " None in the least," aald the bride. "I rather like the flavor of a good cigar." " Oh I a cigar," salt) Belmont that would never do for a poor man. . - And, oh horror 1 he produced an old clay pipe, and filled it from a blue paper of tobacco, began to smoke with a keen relish. " Dinner I dinner 1" he exclaimed at length. thank you, mother, I'm as hungry as a bear. Codfish and potatoes, Julia. Not very tempting, love, but what of that P Our aliment Is love." "Yes, and eeein' as how you've brought me home a darter," said the old woman, " I've gone and bought a whole pint Albany ale and three cream cakea from the Candy shop next block." ; Poor Julia pleaded Indisposition, and did not eat a mouthful. Before Bel mont, however the codfish and potatoes, ale and cream cakes disappeared with a very unromantlo and unlover-llke celer ity. At the close of the meal a thundering double knock preceded the entrance of a beer brewer man in a green waist coat. "Now, Mister Belmont," asfed the stranger, " are you ready to go worrdk P Be the powers 1 lf I don't Bee ye, to-mor-. row salted on the bench, I'll discharge ye without a carakter or a recommend, and then ye'll starve." . ' "Who Is that man that loafer," gasped Julia when the visitor had rrrtty ft ! " Mv pmnlnver a tailor and I'm a journeyman tailor and a bushelman," said Belmont. " Well, Julia, how do you like love in a cottage V" asked Belmont, entering the lady's room. " Not so well sir, as you seem to . do borrowed plumage." " Very well, you shall endure it no longer. My carriage awaits your orders at the door." " Your carriage, indeed I and your mother P" " I have no mother, ' alas I The old woman down stairs is a servant in the family. It a melancholy fact that I am rich, worth a million of dollars." " Then you have been deceiving me, Frank. How wlokedl" But she endured a fortune after all, and presided with grace at the elegant festivities of Belmont Hall, her bus band's seat on the Hudson, nor did she ever open her lips again about " Love In a Cottage." Didn't Know How to Take Them. HE was on his way home from Lead ville. He had on a ragged old summer suit, a bad hat, and he had been taking his meals about thirty hours apart to make his money carry him through. "Yes, 1 like the country out that way," he replied to the query. " The climate is good, the scenery fine, aud some of the people are aa honest as needs be. The trouble is knowing how to take the bad ones." "I should think tbat would be easy," was the reply. " Yes, it looks that way, but I had a little experience. I am the original dla klverer of the richest mine around Lead ville." "Is that bo P" " Yes, sir, I am the very man, though you wouldn't think It to see these old clothes." " Then you don't own It now ?" "Not a bit of it. I'll explain : I was poking around on the hills and found signs. I collected some specimens for assay ; staked out a claim and went off to the assayers. It wag two days before he let me know that I had struck the richest ore that he had ever assayed, and then I hurried back to my claim. Hang my buttons if it hadn't been jumped !" " How P". " Why, a gang of sharpers had found tlje spec and built up a pole shanty and hung out a sign of 'First Baptist Church' over the door. Sure' aa shootin' they had, and the law out there is that no miner can sink a shaft within 200 feet of a church building. They saw me coming, and when I got there they were actually holding a revival ! There was jest six of 'em and tbey got up one after another and told bow wicked they had been and how sorry they were, and, would you believe it they had the cheek to ask me to lead off in the slng lng. I went to law but they beat me. three days after the verdict the 4 First Baptist' burned down, and before the ashes was cold the congregation was de velopin' a mine worth over a million dollars. You see I didn't know how to take 'em." "Was there any particular way of taking them P" " You bet there was ! I ought to have opened on that revival with a Winches ter rifle and given the coroner fifty dol lars for a verdict tbat they died of too much religion." An Indian Makes a Call. A PARTY of Sioux Indiana were guests at aleadlriMllwaukee hotel, says Peck't ,S'im, andk fte ladle had a great deal of amulent with them, studying their custom. That Is, they all did except one lady. The ladles called upon the Indlarjg and the savages re turned them almost before the ladles got to their rooms. One lady called on a chief, and then went to her room, and retired, and pretty soon there was a knock at her door, and she found that it wag the chief. She told blm to come in the morning. The lady unlocks her door in the morning so that the porter can come In and build the fire before she gets up. She heard a knock In the morning, and supposing it wag the por ter, she aald. "Come in" The door opened and In walked Mr. Indian. She took one look at him and pulled the bed clothes over her head. He sat down on the bed and said "Howl" Well, she wag bo Beared tbat she didn't know "How" from Adam. She said to him in the best Sioux Bhe could command. 44 Please, good Mr. Indian, go away, until I get up," but he didn't seem to be In a hurry. He picked up pieces of her wearing apparal from the floor, different articles that he didn't seem to know anything about where they were worn, and made comments on them In the Sioux tongue. The stockings seemed to paralyze his untutored mind the most. They were these long, 90 degrees in the shade stockings, and they were too muoh for his feeble intellect. He held them up by the toes and Bald " Ugh 1" The lady trembled and wished be would go away. He seemed to take great de light in i. examining the hair on the bureau, and looked at the lady as much as to say, " Ppor girl, some hostile tribe has made war on the pale face and taken many scalps." He critically examined all the crockery, the wash bowl and pitcher, but be was struck the worst at a corset that he found on a chair. He tried to put it on hltmelf, and w as so haudy about It tbat it occurred to the lady tbat be was not bo fresh a delegate as he seemed to be. Finally she happen ed to think of the bell, and site rung It as though the house was on fire, and pretty soon the porter came and Invited the Indian to go down and take a drink. The lady locked that door too quick, and she will never leave it open again when there are Indians in town. She says her hair on the bureau, fairly turned gray from fright. How Did the Dog Know the Way. IN the current number of the Popular Science Monthly there Is a very inter esting article, which details the expert ments made by certain Ohio physicians to ascertain whether the faculty which some animals possess of returning to their homes by a nearly direct course after being carried a great distance by a circuitous rout is to be attributed to scent, memory, or any other intelligible cause. Everybody, of course, is aware of the fact that a cat may be put into a bag and taken ever so far away .from its accustomed hearth.and by ever bo round about a Journey, and yet turn up again in due time at the old place its ability to get back being apparently limited only by insuperable physical obstacles. The subject of the Ohio experimenters was a dog. The way they went to work and the result is thus described : A dog was made insensible with ether at Cincinnati, put Into a wicker basket, started on a train of the Cincinnati Southern Railroad, first southwest to Danville Junction, thence east to Crab Orchard, and finally northeast to a hunting rendezvous near Berea, in Mad ison county. This circuitous route was taken because on a former occasion, when the dog had returned from a point 160 miles distant from bis home, it wag suspected that he might have found his way back by simply reversing bis course on the railway by which be had come. At Berea the dog was shut up securely over night and well fed. The next morn ing he was taken out to a clearing on the top of a grassy knob at some dis tance from the railway, and let loose. Without any preliminary survey he Blunk off into a ravine, scrambled up the opposite bank, and struck first on a trot and then a swift gallop.not toward Crab Orchard, i. e., southeast, but due north, in a bee line for Cincinnati. He ran not like an animal that had lost its way but " like a horse on a tramway," straight a bead with his nose well up, as If be were following an air line toward a visible goal. He made a short detour to the left to avoid a lateral ravine, but further up be resumed his original course, leaped a rail fence and went headlong Into a coppice of cedar bushes, where they finally lost sight of him. The report of the experimenters was forwarded to the owner by rail and on the afternoon of the next day after re ceiving this report the owner met the dog on the street In Cincinnati, "wet, full of burrs and remorse, and apparent ly ashamed of his tardiness." (tyLydla E. Plnkham'g Vegetable Compouud will at all times, and unJtr all circumstances, act In harmony with the laws that govern the female y(em. Address Mrs. Lydla E. Plukhaui, VXl Western Avenue, Lynn, Maw., for cir culars, mt Sunday mriirs., , Tha Revised English Bible. Those who imagined that any of the accepted fundamental doctrines of Chris tianity were to be over turned by tho work of the committee' will find them selves greatly mistaken. In very few instances bag any text been changed so as to alter the meaning which attached to it In the King James version, and in still fewer instances Is the change mat, rial from a doctrinal point of view. As a general thing the changes consist of the substitution of the present for the past tense In the verbs, the use of the Indefinite article in place of the definite, and the changing of prepositions. The work la arranged In paragraphs, and the chapters and verses are printed in the margins. The familiar bead 11 tie? ine cnapiers wnicn serve so well as means of reference are expunged. This will make the book seem strange to the ordinary Bible reader. The text of each Gospel Is thus made continuous in the body of the book from the beginning to the end, and in order to find the subdi visions with which one has been famil iar, the margins must be consulted. Among the most notable changes is the omission of the doxology at the end of the Lord's prayer, and the prayer is to be delivered from "the evil one" In. stead of from "evil". " Take heed that ye do not your alms before men" men" is , J it ye do SI iiien." 1 shall it M made to read, ", Take heed that not your righteousness before: In the question, " For what profit a man If he shall gain the whole world and lose his own eoul P or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul P" the word " life" is substituted for " soul" and " forfeit'' for "lose." " This la My beloved Sou, bear Him," Is made to read " This is My Son, My chosen." In Mathew xlx. 17, the en tire meaning is changed, but no new doctrine is put forth, and no old one as sailed. In the King James version the verse reads : " Why callast thou me good ? There Is none good but one ; that is God P But if thou will enter into life, keep the commandments." In the new version the verse reads as follows : " Why asketh thou me concerning that which is good P One there Is who is good j but lf thou would enter into life, keep the commandments." In all tbe examples given, "Hades" is used in place of " hell," as, for example, ia ' tTie parable of Lazarus it is said of the rlcu man that in " Hades" he lifted up his eyes, being in torments." The story of the pool of Bethesda, as told in John v, is materially changed by taking from it that portion which relates to the mirac ulous powers of the water of the pool. In verse 3" In these lay a great multi tude of impotent folk, of blind, halt, withered, waiting for the moving of the water" the last seven words are strick en out, and verse 4," For an angel went down at a certain season into the pool and troubled the water ; whosoever then first after the troubling of the water stepped In and was made whole of whatsoever diseased he had," is omitted altogether. In the account of the trial of Paul before Agrlppa some rather in portant changes are made, and the Im pression that Agrlppa wag almost per suaded to become a Christian by St. Paul's eloquence Is dispelled. Tbe verses In the present version ffo as fol- lows: " And as he thus Bpal for him- self I estus said, with a loud voice : Paul, thou art beside thyself; much learning doth make thee mad. But he said, I am not mad, most noble Festus, but speak forth the words of truth and soberness. For the king knoweth of these things, before whom also I speak freely : for I am persuaded that none of these things are hidden from him ; for this thing was not done in a corner. King Agrippa, believest thou the prophets P I know that thou believest. Then Agrlppa said unto Paul, almost thou persuades t me to be a Christian. And Paul said, I would to God that not only thou, but also all that bear me this day, were both almost and altogether, auch aa I am. en' these bonds." In the revised' ver this scene ia described thus : 44 And a thug made bia defence, Festus n with a loud voice : Paul, thou art m, thy much learning doth turn thee madness. But Paul said, I am not m most excellent Festus, but apeak fo the words of truth and soberness, i s the king knoweth of these things, ui whom also I speak freely ; for I am p suadedthat none of these things a hidden from him, for this hath not bet , done in a corner. King Agrlppa, belief est thou the prophets V I know tin! thou believest. And Agrlppa said untt Paul, with but little persuasion the! wouldstfain make me a Christian. And Paul said, I would to God, wheth ! witn nttia or wltn much, not thou otii but also all that hear me this day, uM J ucvuuic buuu a x am, exctpi. jfUeel bonds." , y The above examples give a falride of the work done by the committer during the ten years they have been occupied with the revision. There Is Utile doubt that the work will he accepted by the . Convocation of Canterbury, 'the Amer ican committee has taken iio copyright uii me uuuk, ana me lutuuuou is to give it to the bubllo free, as the old Bible una oeen given. v