THE TIMKJ NEW BLOOMFIELD, PA., AUGUST 2, 1881. THE HIDDEN MONEY. IT vm the thlr.J of May, a brilliant Bprlng tlay, with tbe JunquilU and tlalTotlllg all In Mossom, the great white peonies, bursting llk balls of snow through their green calyxes, and the grass on the upland pastures as toft arid dellcately-tluted as velvet; aud even poor Mrs. Crofton, wearied and over worked though she was, felt something of the sweet Kprlng Influences pass Into her soul, as she stood on the door sill, buttering a bake-pan for the Baturday loaf of ralHln-cake. . "It's u lovely day 1" said Mrs. Crofton. "And somehow the smell o' them daffy, downdlllles reminds me of when I was a girl. Dear, dearl how time flies, t6 be sure I But there's a touch of chill in the air, all the same ; and I doubt if it's safe for Uncle Malachl to hit out much longer. Aud she went, bake-pan and all, uround the corner of the house, to the paved space In front of the south wing, where, In a wooden arm-chair, sat a lit tle old man, yellow-faced and wrlukled, with one sided wig pulled over his left eye, a patch-work covered pillow at his back, and a woolen blanket wrapped around him. "You'd better let me wheel you in, Uncle Malachl, said she listlessly. It's getting sorto' chilly, as the sun shifts around to the other side of the house; and you've been out here a good hour." "I wou't go in !" said Uncle Malachl, pettishly. '-It's pleasant here, aud I'm peaceable aud content. It's the strangest thing I ever saw that people can't be satislied to let me alone. Miles Lai kins' son was by here not ten minutes ago, chattering and crackling about the weather. What business of his is the weather V Aud why the old cat can't he let me alone ? Does he s'pose I don't know he's after the little bit of money I may leave? Bah I" with a movement of disgust. "I can tell 'em all they won't get a cent of It!" Mrs. Crofton 's dim eyes lighted up with a gleam of excitement. "Uncle Malach," said she, "how much money have you got, anyhow?" The old man screwed up his with ered features, like an attenuated mon key. ' " Ah-h-h!" said he ; "don't you wish you knew ? But you don't know. No, nor you won't ! P'raps it's fifty cents p'raps it's fifty dollars. Anyhow it's nobody's business but mine. Nettie will have It. I shall tell Nettle where it Is, some day. But not yet no, no, not yet 1" ""Won't you let me wheel your chair In, Uncle Malachi ?" persisted Mrs. Crofton. "No," snarled the old man. "I won't !" Mrs. Crofton was quite used to this sort of rebull", and took no notice of it; she only went back to her kitchen, with a Bigh. Ten years ago, she and her husband had given up their homestead to come and take care of Uncle Malachl Miller, who was supposed then to be dying of old age. " Whatever I have will be yours when I'm gone," said the old man ; " and it wou't be long it wou't belong!" But Uncle Maiachl's words proved incorrect. The years passed by. Mrs. Crotton wore herself out in taking care of him ; Mr. Crofton grew bent aud old trying to grind a living out of the stony Melds aud melancholy swamps of the Miller farm; and Nettle, the tall, bloom ing daughter, attempted to eke out the family funds by her slender salary as a school teacher; and Uncle Malachl eat on the old stone pavement iuthesuu thine, muttering to himself, aud seem ing to take no heed of the outer world. When Mr. Crofton came In to get his dinner he went for Uucle Malachi. "He's been settin' out there long enough," said he ; " he's a dreadful trial, but we musn't let him get the rheuma tiz." But when they went together to the 6uuny stone-paved yard, the old man Mat there, quite dead, with his glazed eyes stareing straight before him and his jaw dropped oil his breast. "Dead, eh ?" the neighbors comment ed in chorus. " Well, I s'pose you'll come into the property now, Mrs. Crof- ton?" "I suppose we should," said Mrs. Crofton ieebly ; " only, nobody knows where It Is." It was true. The wrinkle, little, old human magpie had kept his secret to the last, and his niece and her daughter were as poor as ever. "Never mind, mother," said Nettle, bravely. " We've done our duty, aud that's all that can be expected of any of os." In Uncle Malachi'a old leather strap ped memorandum-book there was only a yellow bit of paper, on which was marked the figure " 8." " Uouiuu t we make Borne sort ot a clue out of that?" said young Doctor s Drew, the village of Esculapius, who was to marry pretty Nettie, when they had scraped together money enough to keep them out of the poor-house. " No," said Mrs. Croftou, shaking her head. " Three was always Uncle Mala clil's favorite number. lie put oft all business until the third day of the month If he wanted special good luck ; he was born on the 3d. of January, and-" " Aud he died ou the 8d of May," said Doctor Drew. " Well, it is rather a curious coincidence. , However you had belter keep this old memorandum, Mrs. Crofton ; It can do no harm ; aud now we'll go to business." It was the day after Uncle Malnchl's funeral, and Doctor Drew had come to prescribe for Mrs. Crofton 's periodical attack of ague. " It's very strange," said the young medical mau. " There must be bad drainage somewhere. We can't attrib ute It all to the old swamp in the mead ow." " There's no fault about the drainage that I know of," said Mrs. Crofton, in the drawling, listless tone that had be come habitual to her of late. " Mother," said Nettie, " perhaps the sunken well." Doctor Drew pricked up his ears. " What sunken well ?" said he. " There was an old well close to It's the house," said Mrs. Crofton. "It never was much used, and it was dry most of the year. Bo, when they built on the south wing, the Just paved It over and dug a new one by the garden wall. That's the very stone pavement where Uucle Malachl used to take so much comfort 111 the sunshine, poor old man I" "Ah '."said the doctor. "It's very possible, then, that we may be able to account for this malarial all'ectlon. Have you a crowbar about the prem ises?" " You ain't going to uuebver the old well ?" said Zebedee Crofton, who wrap ped in blankets, was enduring his regu lar "chill." " Yes, I am," said Doctor Drew. Out they all three went Doctor Drew, Mrs. Croflou and Nettie. Neighbor Larkens was summoned to assist with the crowbar. "I declare I" said Mrs. Crofton; it does 'most seem as if Uncle Malachi would rise out of his grave to prevent us. lie was dreadful partial to this spot!" . " Well, it can't be of any more use to him now," said Nettie. " Hello 1" said Doctor Drew ; "there are nine paving stones, aren't there?" " Three each way," Baid neighbor Larkens ; "aud the old well was direct ly under the center stun. Land o' Goshen ! I recollect coverln' It up as well as if it were yesterday 1" "Three times three," said Doctor Drew. " Perhaps that accounts for the old gentleman's partiality to it." Nettie started. " I never though of (hat !" she said. " Heave yo ! " sang Neighbor Larkens who had sailed on a Greenland whaler once ; and impelled by the strong arms of the two men, the central stone came up, revealing the black and hollow mouth of the disused well. "Pah!" said Doctor Drew; there's enough bad air aud foul gas here to in fect a regiment!" " There's something else here," quiet ly added Nettie, who had stooped to look down. " A leather bag, suspended from a spike driven in between the stones." ) Neighbor Larkens who was long in the arms made a dive at it. " Land o' liberty!" cried he; It's full o' gold pieces eagles, by George ! Miss Nettle, I declare for't you've come into your fortunel" v It was only five thousand dollars; but to Nettie Crofton it presented a fortune indeed. Here, upon the central stone of the diverging threes, old Uncle Malachl had kept guard until it was too late to give any one the clue to his secret. The old well was filled up and proper ly drained. Farmer Crofton got rid of his ague, Nettie and her lover were married, and although Doctor Drew was not a superstitious man, be has ever since owned to a partiality for the figure "3." An Extraordinary Occurrence. THE Louisville Courier-Journal tell this wonderful stnrv A most extraordinary natural accident and one for the discussion of physician came to light a few days ago, In which a needle taken into the foot of a lady nine years ago worked out of the thigh of her third child, a baby of one year. The lady in question Is the wife of Mr Harry Isaacs the clgarmaker, who lives on Market street.near Wenzel. At the time of the accident Mrs. Isaacs was unmarrieu auu wag men Miss Pauline Coblens. The needle was encountered in a carpet, penetrating her foot at full length. A pnysician was called in tin mediately, but the needle could not be found, although it was known to be in the foot. She suffered great pain, and for four months was unable to leave her bed. During that period three physl clans made frequent attempts to extract the needle, aud the knife was used ex tenslvely ; however without success. Miss Coblens was quite fleshy before the accldeut, but fell off greatly from her long confinement. At length she was able to get about with tbe aid or crutch es, but she continued to gutter from the needle. The palu decreased gradually from the time she was able to get about aud she regained her former fleshiness. Finally she felt the needle only at periods when there was a change In the weather. The movement of the the needle seemed to be upwards, and the pain was not stationary, but moved with the needle. About five years ago Bhe was married to Mr. Harry Isaacs. Three children are the fruit of that union, the youngest of which Is a boy named Arthur, w ho Is about a year old. The pain which troubled the mother left her even before the birth of her child, and the total disappear ance of the pain she was wont to feel was a subject, of remark aud pleas ure to her. On Monday a week ago her baby, who had since Its birth manifested a kindly disposition, was very restless and cried unceasingly all night. The cause of the child's ailment was not learned uulll tbe following morning, when In giving it a bath the mother discovered something black protruding th rough the skin of the child's thigh. Bhe caught hold of It, aud was frighten ed when she found the thing of resist ing substance. Bhe, however, used a little force, aud soon extracted the dark object. Imagine her surprise when she fouud It was a needle, black aud corrod ed. The eye broke oft- in her hand while examining it. The recollection of the needle which has given her much pain came vividly before the mother aud Bhe felt keenly for the child. The remembrance of her relief from the pain forced itself upon the mother, and the connection of the two served as a :lue as to how the needle came to get u the child a thigh. The mother says t would be almost impossible for tlio child to have taken up the needle with out her Uncling It out, as the child would have made it known in piteous cries, as he did when the needle worked out. Queer Titles for Books. Borne of the old books, in the time of Oliver Cromwell, had queer titles. The authors verily believed that there was something In a name. For instance :"A Most Delectable, Bwect Nosegay for God's Baiuts to Smell at," "A Pair of Bellows to Blow Oil' tbe Dust upon John Fry;" "The Snuffers of Divine Love;" Hooks aud Eyes for Believers Breech es;" "High-heeled Shoes for Dwarfs in Holiness ;" "Crumbs of Comfort for the Chickens of the Covenant;" "A Sigh of Borrow for the Sinners of Bioa, Breathed Out of a Hole in tbe Wall of an Earthen Vessel Known Among Men by the Name of Samuel Fish;" "The Spiritual Mustard Pot, to Make the Soul 'Sneeze with Devotion ;" "Salvation's Vantage Ground, oraLouplng Stand for Heavy Believers;" "A Shot Aimed at the Dev il's Headquarters, Through the Tube of the Cannon of the Covenant;" "A Reap ing Hook Well-tempered for tbe Stub born Ears of the Coming Crop, or Biscuits Baked In the Oven of Charity, Carefully Conserved for the Chickens of e Uburcn, Sparrows the Spirit ana veet Swallows of Salvation;" "Seven Sobs of a Soul Sorrowing for Bin, or Seven Penitential Psalms of the Prince ly Prophet David." An Old-Time Estimate of the Passenger Business. About 1823 the Legislature of Pennsyl vania began to rouse to a sense of her rare facilities. Always slow, it deeded the activity of Maryland aud New York to rouse her. At last Philadelphia be gan to move, aud, after much discussion aud many (doubts, a small appropria tion was secured from tbe Legislature to defray tbe expenses of a preliminary survey, and to organize a Board of Com missioners of Internal Improvement. The three gentlemen appointed to begin this work, in 1823, made a report next year, I believe, and among other things stated, so runs the recollection of my in formant, that they had selected compe tent agents to count the number of per- sous passing from Philadelphia to Pitts burg, west aud east, and east and west, aud also the number of wagons aud teams hauling tbe freight over the same turnpike between the same points, and that these agents had now performed their duty at certain prominent places, and the commissioners felt sure that a canal between Philadelphia and Pitts burg would be a success if It was boldly pushed. The time would come, they predicted, from the data tney hud gath ered, when sixty persons a day would pass to and from J'ittsburg, and when sixty thousand tons of merchandise a year would be carried between the cities, one on the Delaware and the other on the Ohio, lteports of those early days show more amusing prophecies and de tails, and the historian or novelist would be startled at the ridiculous contrast between the hope and the fruition, aud between the seed aud the harvest. We have lived, not only to see sixty passen- gers a day passing east and west, but by all the routes at least as many hundreds, wniie the tonnage is simply beyond cai culatlon. SUNDAY READIN3, Importance of a Right Faith. The popular adage Is, " Oh, It makes no difference what a man believes, so he Is sincere." Let us tee. A family was poisoned In Montgomery county last year by eat ing toad-stools, which they sincerely be lieved to be mushrooms. Three of them died. Did It make no difference? A man endorses a note for a friend, whom he sincerely believed to be an honest man. He was a scoundrel, and left him to pay the note. Did It make no difference ? A traveler takes the train going North sincerely believing It Is the Southern train. Will he bring up at the South all the same ? If a man believes a certain thing, while the truth about It is entirely dif ferent, will his belief mako It all right ? The truth is, the popular adage is a lie and a very transparent one at that I TJ a man is sincere he will take pains to know the truth. For, where facts are concerned, all the thinking in the world will not change them. A toad stool remains a toad-stool whatever we may think about It. A Cheerful Giver. ' I was once attending a missionary meeting in Scotland," said a minister lu making an address. " There it is the custom to take up tbe collection at tbe door as tbe people go out. A poor woman, in going out, dropped a sover eign into tbe basket. The deacon who held the basket said' I'm sure you can not afford to 4glve as much as that." Oh yes, I can," she said. "Do take It back;" said tbe deacoii. She replied, " I must give It. I lore to yivc for Je sus,, sake. Then the deacon said, "Take it home to night, and if, after thinking it over, you still wish to give it, you can send it lu the morning." "In the morning I was sitting at breakfast with tbe deacon, when a little note came from this woman ; but the note contained two sovereigns. "You won't take them ?" I s'aid to the deacon. Of course I shall," said he. " I know that good woman well. If I send them back, she will sendour next time.'" This was indeed " loving to give." What "Wife" Means. Bays Buskin: "What do you think the beautiful word " wife" comes from ? It is tbe great word In which tbe Eng lish aud Latin languages conquered tbe French and Greek. I hope tbe French will some day get a word for it Instead offcmnic. But what do you think it comes from ! The great value of the Saxon words is that they mean some thing. Wife means " weaver!" You must either be house-wives or house, moths, remember that. In the sense, you must either weave men's fortunes aud embroider them, or feed upon and bring them to decay. Wherever a true wife comes, home is always around her The stars may be over her head tbe glow worm in the night's cold grass may be the fire at her feet, but home is where she is, and for a noble woman it stretches fur around her, better than houses celled with cedar or painted with Vermillion shedding its quiet light for those who else are homeless. This, I believe, Is tbe woman's true place and power. A Little Sermon. Sometimes I compare the trouble we have to undergo in the course of a year to a great bundle of. fagots, far too large for us to lift. But God does not re quire us to carry the whole at once. He mercifully unties the bundles, and gives us one stick, which we are able to carry to-day and then another which we are able to carry to-morrow, and so on This we might easily manage if we would only take the burden appointed lor us each day; but chose to increase our trouble by carrying yesterday' stick over again to-day, and adding to morrow's burden to our load befjre we are required to bear it. QT A religion which does not suffice to govern and control a men will never sufllce to save him. Tiiat which does not distinguish ill in from a wicked world will never distinguish him from a perishing world. 0"0ccasloii3 of greater adversity best show bow grett virtue each one hath. For occasions inake not a man frail, but show what he Is. Humbugged Again. I saw so muoh said about the merits of Hop Bitters, and my wife who was al ways doctoring and never well, teased me so urgently to get her some, I con cluded to be humbugged again ; and I am glad I did, for in less than two months use of tbe Bitters my wife was cured and she ha remained to for eigh teen months slixje. I like such hum bugging. II. if St. Paul. Pioneer J'ress. 1 31 2t POOBSBII Ell. THE GREAT roit RHEupnsia, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quins, Sore Throat, Swellings and Sprains, Burns' and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. No Preparation on enrth equals ST. Jacob OlT. as a 8n f. Hure. gtrnpht and ciep Kxtertml Heme'ly. A trial entails but the comparatively trifiine outlny of BO ( cnl, ami every one miflerinir vlth pain can have cheap and positive proof of Its claims. Directions In Eleven Languages. SOLD BY ALL DRUG9IST3 AND DEALEES IN MEDICINE. A.VOGELER & CO., Ilalllmori; 3td., V, 8. A. May3,18Sl-ly jyjUSSER & ALLEN CENTRAL STORE NEWPORT, PENN'A. Now'oller the public A KAKK AND ELEGANT ASSORTMENT OF DRESS GOODS Consisting of all shades suitable (or the season If LACK ALPACCAS AND Mourning Goods A SPECIALITY. BLEACHED AND UNBLEACHED MUSLINS, , AT VAKIOUB PRICES. AN KN'IX.ESS SELECTION OF FKINT8' We sell and do keep a good quality of SUGARS, COFFEES & SYRUPS Aud everything under the head of GROCERIES 1 Machine needles and oil for all makes of Machines. . To be convinced that our goods are CHEAP AS THE CHEAPEST, 19 TO CALL AND EXAMINE 8T0CK. - Na trouble to show goods. Don't forget the CENTRAL STORE, Newport, Perry County, Pa. TJ !S JE PUEE TINTED GLOSS PAINT! IiOlN'T make ejovwlrtents on your buildings with untried mid unreliable auticles at jour expense. DON'T I-VY for water and benzine tl.10 to li.CO per gallon. DO BUY the Lucas reliable and guaranteed Timed Gloss l'-rVIIS'TSS. Circulars and Sample Cards of Paint mailed on application. JOHN LUCAS & CO., HI North Third Street, 13 6m Philadelphia, Fa. I p Yourselves by making money vhfn a rokleii ULI U.'tiaiK'o in otferetl, thereby aiwavs keeping s' 1 1L.I poverty from your door. Thtme who ahva a take, advantage of the irood chances for makititr money that are ottered, treiierally bwoome weolthy. while to- who do uot improve ani-b etiaueea remain lu povrty. We want mauy lufii.aromvn. boj h aud tnrla to work f.j ! riirlit iu their own localitii-a. Th buine will pejr more tliau ten times ordinary waKs. turlnm aa-, exiuive outfit and all that you iued. free. No one who riiifim failmo make money very rapidly, low can devole yimr whole time to the work, or only y.iur spare moments. Full Information and all thai is neeovd acutlree. Address D UN SUM CO., PurUalui, Maine iy- . ESTATE NOTICE. Notice Is hereby given, that letters o( administration ou the estate ot Ke. 3. a. Kichinond late of Torone towmhip. I'eri j Conntv. Fa., deceased, have been granted totlie undesigned. 1'. O. Address lndlbuig. Ferry County. Fa. All persons Indebted to said estate are reinet. ed to make Immediate payment and those laving claims will present them duly authenticated for settlement to ALBERT E. RICHMOND, Cms. H. Fmilet, Att'y. Administrator. May 10, 141. OY. I i