THE TIMES, NEW BLOOM FIELD, PA.. MAllClt 22, 1881. RAILROADS. PHILADELPHIA AND READING R.R aaaaaaaaaasa ARllANOEMKNTOF rAB8KNGKKTRAINS NOVEMHElTTith, 1880. Trains Leave Harrisburg at FolUwi i Tor New York via Allontown, at 1.0 . m. oil l, p, m. . . For New York via Philadelphia and "Bound Brook Koute," A.nO, d.uft a. m. aad I.4A p. , Forl'hllatlolphta, at tt.lW. J.Oo, (through car), 1.60 a. m., 1.45 and 4.00 p. m. . . m Kor Reading, at 6.U0, 1.06, .60a. m., 1.46, 4.00, and .(W p. m. ... . . M For Fottsvllte. at .00. S.05, 9.M a. m. and 4.os R. m., and via Hohuylklll and Huse.uehaana ranoh ata.40 p. m. For Auburn, at 6.30 a. m. For Alleutowu, at 8,00, 8.04, .60A.ra 146 and The' "yw a. m. and 1.45 p. m. trains have throughlars for New York, via Alleatewa. SUNDAYBi For Allentewn and Way Stations, at A OA a. m. For Keadlug, 1'ulldelaph.ia, and Way btatlous, at 1.46 u. in. Trains Leare for Harrlnburg as Follows t Leave NewYork via Alleutowu, 8 45 a. m .1.80 aud 6 so p. in. Leave Sew York via "Bound Brook Koute." and Philadelphia at 7.4A a, in.. 1.80 and 6 So p. in., ar. riving at llairbouig, 1.60, .1W p. in., aud 12.Sfta. in. Iave Phil delphla, At 8.45 a. m., 4.00 and 7.45 p. in. Leave Pottsvllle. 7.00.9,10 a. m. and 4.40 p. ni. Jeave Heading, at 4.60, 8.00,11.60 a. in., 1.3 ,0.15, and w.3is p. m. Leave Pottsvllle via:chuylkllland Susquehanna Branch, 8. Sua. m. Leave Alleutowu, at 8.25, 9.00 a. in., 12.10, 4.80, and 8.06 p. m. SUNDAYS: Leave New York, at 5 80 p, m. ' Leave Philadelphia, at 7.45 p. m. Leave Heading, at 8. in a. in. andlO.35 p. m. Leave AUentown. at 9.06 p. in. BALDWIN MUNCH. Leave nARRISBURG for Paxton, Lochleland Bteelton dally, except Sunday, at 6.25. 8 40, 9.36 a.m., and 2.00 p. m t dally, except Saturday and Sunday, at 6.46 p. m., and on Saturday only, 4.45, 6.10, 8.30 p. m. 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Kull information and all that la needed sent free. Addreaa HTINHON A CO., Portland, Maine TESTATE XOTICK. -Notice Is herebyrlv Jli en that Letters of Admliilstratlon on the estate of William V. Miller lute of Waits town, ship, Perry county, I'a.. deceased, have been ii anted to the uudursiuued icslUliig lu (he same township. All tiei Noua Indebted to said estate are requested fo niake Immediate, payment, and Ihoae liavliiu claim to present them duly autheullcuted for betlleineut to KVIOUY B MILt.KIl Administrator Feb. 8. 1881 pd J Wiuoa Lurrwit. Atfy. TOB PKI1STINO of every description neatly J and promptly executed at KeaaoHalile Katea at I lie Bl illeld Tillies Sleiini Job Olhce, L mm e. V The Missing Ring. " QTUANQE things ionietlmeg come kj under your notice I" I on day aid to a noted detective. " Yes, elr etrttnge, aud lornetlmes romantic," be replied. "If you will nlve rue the facts for a abort story I v 111 put them lu print," I rejoined. He reflected a little, and then remark ed that be recollected aome curious Inci dent that he thought would interest me. I expressed a strong desire to have them related, and he at once proceeded to tell me what I have here written down, word for word : Borne three years ago (he began), I was sitting alone in my office, when a fine-looking, well-dressed ttranger,about twenty-eight or thirty years of age, en tered, and asked to see Mr' Carbon, the detective. " I am the person named, and at your service, sir," I replied. ''Please be seated." " I do not wish to be interrupted in what I propose to tell you," he said, glancing around, "nor do I wish to have any listener except yourself." I arose and locked the door. He hesitated a little, colored Bome, and and then said : " From my air of mystery, I suppose you think I have something to relate of great Importance; but though it is im portant to me, and will be to you, if you trace out the real facts, yet I assure you, to begin with, it is nothing more serious than the loss of a diamond ring. The ring, however, I prize far beyond its nominal value, as an heir-loom of the family, which has come down to me through several generations, it being presented to one of my ancestors by the then Duke of Cambridge. "This ring," he proceeded, "came into my possession, as the lineal heir, on my twenty-flrut birthday; and though I have since worn it at times, I have always watched it with the most zealous care, and never left it out of my sight, except when locked in my safe, where I keep my most Important papers and a few valuables. " Now comes the mystery. My safe has a combination lock, and. that com bination not a living soul knows except myself not even my wife. I will take my Bible oath, that the last time I had the ring, showing it to a friend, I return ed it to the safe. That was a week ago to-day ; and when I yesterday unlocked the safe to get a private paper, I missed the ring from the little iron box, where I always keep It. Startled at this, I began a search for it. First locking my room door, that I might not be disturb ed, I took out everything in the safe, and examined every spot and paper with the utmost care, but without find ing the precious jewel, and then put everything back in its proper place. The ring was the only thing missing, and I found that nothing else had been disturbed. The loss of the ring grieves me, and the myBtery perplexes me ; and so, not knowing better what to do, I have come to you, to see if you can suggest anything to relieve me. Under stand that I intend to pay you well for your advice; and, if you succeed in re covering the ring, your reward Bhall be two thousand dollars." " Was the ring indeed so valuable as that?" I asked. "Intrinsically, no," he answered; "and yet, to me, invaluable for the reasons I have named. The actual cash value of the diamond would not exceed a thousand dollars, and yet I would give five thousand nay, ten thousand rather than lose it. Besides, there runs a legend in the family, that whoever parts with it will sutTer some great mis fortune." " You had it a week ago, you say you showed it to a friend you locked It up in your safe and you have uot seen it since ?" " That is my statement." " Who was the friend to whom you showed the ring V" " The Honorable Godfrey Tercy, the youngest son of an English nobleman, who has been spending a couple of weeks at my house as my guest." "Is he with you still V" " He is. I will be frank with you. My sister and I met him in London a couple years ago, and he is engaged to her, and will remain my guest till after the wedding, which is fixed for a week from to-day." " Was he with you when you locked the ring In the safe V" "Why that question, Mr. Carbon ?" 'Well' for anything you like. If you are to question my questions I fear we shall not get on very fast. If he was with you, of course be saw you lock it up, aud you have proof that you did what you think you did." "I beg your pardon Mr. Carbon. I thought your questions might imply some suspicion of my friend ou your part, aud I would Just as soon have you suspect my own wife. Yes, he was present and saw me put the ring in the Iron box, lock that, and afterward lock the safe, and he Is aa anxious as I am to have me solve the mystery by the recov ery of the precious Jewel." " So far so good. Now then you have servants, of course V" " Yes, six two men, a boy, and three females." " You do not suspect any of them J"' " How can I, when no one knows the combination of my safe lock besides myself." " It is a mysterious affair," said I, "and I can get no clue from anything you tell me. To make a start in the matter, it might be necessary for me to be an Inmate of your house for a few days, and even that might amount to nothing." " I would like to try anything that would promise even the shadow of a hope," he anxiously rejoined, with an air of depression. " Then suppose I beoome your guest for a few days V" I suggested. " If you will." " But not as an officer not in my real character," I proceeded. "You must Introduce me as a friend of yours, just come to town say William Perkins, from Boston and not even your wife must know to the contrary." " Very well I will arrange it, and to morrow, at three o'clock, I will meet and escort you home to dinner. But U it not possible that some one will rec ognize you." " I will take care of that," I an swered. We arranged the place of meeting at a certain hotel, and I was there a little before the time, disguised in a .manner satisfactory to myself. , Mr. George Howell, the gentleman in question, appeared according to appoint ment, but I saw at a glance that he did not recognize me. He took a seat, facing the door, and I let him remain some minutes over the time. Then I took a seat near him, and made some casual remark about the weather. He seemed uneasy, and not inclined for conversa tion ; and I casually remarked that I was waiting for Mr. Carbon, a well known detective, who had promised to meet me here at that hour. He turned and scrutinized me closely, and then observed: " I know the gentleman by sight ; and it is a little strange, if you have an appointment with him, that he fails to keep It." " You are also expecting him, I be lieve?" I remarked. " Why do you think that ?" he asked in surprise. " Because I am James Carbon, alias William Perkins," I smiled. He started up, exclaiming: " Clever ! very clever,! ndeed 1 1 should never have guessed it. Come, let us gol For three days I was an honored guest in the mansion of Mr. Howell ; and during that time I closely studied every inmate, got all the minutest de tails from my host concerning every thing I wished to know, and then took my departure in an open and formal manner, without leaving a suspicion be hind that I was other than I seemed. I then set my agents to work among the pawnbrokers of the city ; and the day before that fixed upon for the wedding of the Honorable Godfrey Percy and Miss Virginia Howell, I called upon the brother of the latter and banded him his missing ring. " Good heavens I" be exclaimed, fairly clutching it in his excited eagerness ; it is, indeed .the coveted prize I Where did you find it ?" "At a pawnbroker's." " Then it was really stolen ?" " Yes." " And have you any surmise concern ing the thief." "Who la he?" " I did not say it was a man." "Perhaps for your own peace of mind, you bad better never know," I hesitated. He turned deadly pale and trembled. " I understand you 1" he gasped ; "but even though the purloiner be my second self, I must have the truth from you. It was my own wife, then ?" "No, it was not your wife." " Ah, thank God for that at least?" he cried, with a great sigh of relief. "Hal my sister ?" "No, it was not your sister." " Who then 1 Now speak without fear!". "You will have it?" " Yes, I must know." " Can I not prevail on you to let the secret remain with myself?" for, as, yet, no other human being possesses It." " No, Mr. Carbon I must aud will have it." " What 'say you to your friend, then ?" ' What friend ?" he asked, in amazes ment. " The Honorable Godfrey Percy." He fairly staggered, as if he had re ceived a blow. " Impossible 1" he gasped. " It is true." He sank down upou a seat, aud for some time held his head with lit hands. " Are you sure you have not made a mistake?" he asked at length, in a hol low voice. " I am certain of what I aanert." " You can prove It ?" "lean." " Then you shall prove It I All, me I poor, poor, dear Virginia I It will break her heart. It will be tbe death of her, I fear. Willingly, would I give half my fortune to have this otherwise." " It is not too late, Mr. Howell," said I, sympathetically. " She need never know." He bounded from his seat, his eyes blazed like a madman's and he turned upon me with a haughty rage that I have never seen equaled, not even on tbe stage. " For what do you take me, sir?" he cried his now ashy Hps fairly quivering. "If this man is guilty, so help me God, were he even a prince of tbe realm, my own band should blow his brains out, sooner than he should make my beloved sister the wife of a dastardly thief 1 Step into my private room, Mr. Carbon. I will send for him. You must face him before me, and make good your accusation or take the con sequences 1" "Hark you, Mr. Howell," I said, "I see you are a high-tempered determined man ; and I want you to understand that I am another. I will faoe your honorable gentleman and make my charge in my own way. He may deny It, and convince you that his word is better than mine. But mark this. If he does deny it, and you ac cept his denial, I swear to have him ar rested for a felony, and all the facts publicly exposed from first to last!" " I accept the conditions," he said, and be at once conducted me to his private apartment, in which stood the safe that his friend had opened to rob him. A servant was dispatched for the Honorable Godfrey Percy, 'and in a few minutes he made his appearance, look ing quite unconcerned. I. had arranged to have everything my own way, and as I now appeared without my disguise, the honorable gentleman did not know me. He glanced at tbe two of us inquiring ly, but I did not keep him in suspense. Stepping up to him, I placed my hand rather roughly on bis shoulder, and said, with sharp severity : " Godfrey Percy, I arrest you for steal, ing your friend's diamond ring and pawning it at Isaac Jacob's. You will at once accompany me to the office of a magistrate and confront the witness es." He turned white as death, threw up his hands, and then fell down on his knees and begged for mercy. "For God's sake, spare me!" be prayed. Spare me, oh, for God's sake spare me 1 It was the first and only time I ever did such a wicked thing. I was wanting a certain sum of money, and too proud to ask you, my dear friend, for it. Oh, George, George, my dearest friend, for the love of holy Heaven, intercede with this officer, aud save me from public disgrace and utter ruin 1" "You did take my diamond ring then ?" said George Howell, in a quiet, even tone of voice that quite surprised me by its natural calmness. " Oh, yes, I confess it." "How did you open my safe?" I watched you one day when you were working the combination, and was able to make it out. That then became my temptation." " But the ring was also locked In tbe iron box." "You had a duplicate key to that, which was in anotber drawer that was not locked. Oh, my dear, dear friend George. " " Call me Mr. Howell, aud leave off tbe friend," calmly interrupted the other." " Godfrey Percy, you were to have been married to my sister, to-morrow. Only think of the disgrace which she, a Howell, has escaped from you, a Percy I In only another twenty-four hours she would have been the wife of a sneak-tbief. I am really grateful to the Providence that has saved her from that abyss and myself from murder, for I should have killed you. You must ruu away now, without saying a parting word to any soul in this dwelling. I give you twenty-four hours the start. If, after that time, any police officer, sheriff or constable can find you on American soil, I swear, before high Heaven, I will never rest till the iron gate of our State prison baa bolted you in as a loathsome felon. One word more from vou, aud I will do it now. This is all. Gol" He arose and pointed bis finger im periously toward tbe door, and the con. demned culprit in silence arose from his knees and slunk out of sight.' That was the last I ever saw or heard of him. George Howell then cooly opened his escritoire, drew me a check for twenty five hundred dollars, requested me to settle fairly with tbe pawnbroker, and never mention a true name in connec tion with these facts. I never have. All the n,ames I haves given you are fictitious. Both the brother and sister are now dead. What tbe interview was betweeu tbein I never knew. She died in a mad house in less than six months, and he was drowned on a liver excursion iu less than a year.