oo rj u -.. VOL. XV. NEW BLOOMFIELD, P., TUESDAY, AXTGrTJST 23, 18B1. NO. 31. THE TIMES. Au Independent Family newspaper, 18 PUBUSIIBDIVKal TUESDAY BY F. MORTIMER & CO. TE1MIH INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. $1.50 rioa YKAlt, POSTAME Br" IS I : i SO m.FIIII 6 MONTHS. To subscriber residing In this couhty. where we have no postage to uv. ft discount at 2S. cents from the above terms will be made it payment Is made lu advance. Advertlslns ratal furnished upon appllca Ion. THE MISSING JEWELS. THE Baroness Rukavina Eltz was the most splendid and dasblug person age In the Er Valley. Her castle near Somlyo was the finest specimen of agreat residence In all that shadow of the Er Mellek, and she, Roumanian by birth and a Hungarian by marriage, seemed to unite all the brilliant characteristics of both these picturesque races. She was a widow to begin with, and since the animal man has speculated upon the varieties of the angel woman, a widow has been pronounced the most amiable variety of the species. She was very beautiful, tall, graceful, blue-eyed, black-haired, piquant, red and white, with the most scornful little mouth and the most delicate profile ; her hand and foot were models, although the latter were frequently stamped wheu she was not pleased. She was iu the third and last place, as the preachers say very rich, and had fallen heiress to two col lections of jewels which were almost fabulously valuable. A brilliant creat ure the Baroness. She owned villages and vineyards, and made a large income every year from her sale of Ruster, a grand wine of a pale golden hue, which had as full and peculiar a flavor as she had herself. The Baroness sent her wine to Vienna, where it was considered almost equal to Tokay. Of course, she had suitors, the beautiful, sharp Barou bA They came from Transylvania and Russia, from Rouuiania and all Hunga ry, from Austria and from the German Principalities; and for the unlucky wretches about Pus Pokl and the Behar Settlement, and the country gentlemen of Erdioszegh, they knelt aud worship ped in vain as she dashed past them on her fleet thoroughbred, for she was Di ana as a huntress aud the Queen of the Amazons also. Her black horse Teten yer was said to emit lire from his nos trils when he stopped to breathe. This grand lady was afraid of nobody, loved nobody, had uo friends, save the nuns at the foot of the Rez Gebirge and one old priest who seemed to be deeply in her confidence. Every year she made a grand visit somewhere Vienna, Paris, Rome, London or St. Petersburg. She spent money like water, and made everybody talk, wonder and admire, aud where her splendid Jewels were the envy of all the Court ladies. Yes, she was afraid of one man, and that was her steward, Keusiedler, he who for years had managed her vast estates, her vineyards and her wheat fields, her fields and fisheries. Keusiedler, was a crouching, cross eyed, mean-looking German Jew, mar ried to a bold black-eyed large-nosed woTiiau, who was twice his size, and who lived in the village, near the castle, and who spent her time envying and hating the Baroness. Madame Pasteur, the French companion, and Matllde, the French maid, who never left the Baron ess, thought that Neudsledier and his Wife had the evil eye and that they would some day wilt the Baroness. But Rukavina Eltz laughed at this fear, and keptou her course exultant. Still when the yearly pay day came round, and ehe had to look over accounts with Neusledler, she did show what she liad never shown before fear. Amoug her jewels was a splendid rope of pearl colored pearls, the rarest thing in the whole world, neither black nor white, but pearl color, with three great emerald )eudunts, each as large as a small a pear. The" Emperor always noticed this Jewel with a smile and a compliment when the Baroness Rukavl-na-Elrz went to a Court ball at Vienna. He told her that the Empress had noth ing half as handsome, and it Is to be feared that the Emperor spoke also of the white, linn neck on which the neck lace rested, for Rukavina-Eltz was apt to blush and look magnificently well at such moments. Then she had great chains of eapphires.as blue as her eyi s aud some big rubies which the Baron had given her (the old Baron, who was twice her age, who went down into Rau niania for her when see was 15), aud she had diamonds, of course every rich lady has diamonds and a grand box full of engraved amethysts aud antique gems, some that Cardinal Antonelll gave her In Rome, for he, too, had admir ed the wild Baroness. Indeed, if the Baroness Rukavlna-Eltz had ever written her memoirs, what a story she could have told ! But the end of every woman's history Is that she finally falls in love, and such was the beginning of the end of the story of Rukavina-Eltz. She went to England one summer, and there was a young Lord Ronald Somerset, or a Lord George Levenson Montague, or a young Lord Howard Plantageuet (they mix them up so, these English words, they ae not half so individual as our Huugarlau names), who could rliie better than she could. This was a dreadful blow to tho Baroness aud she wished herself dead. But when at dinner the soft-voiced, handsome, tall young Engllsmau, Sir Lyster Howard Lyster ( that was his name after all), sat next to her and talk ed so well and was so complimentary to her seat, cross country, and noticed the pearl-colored pearls, and the emeralds, with his lips, and the neck underneath with his eyes, Rukavina-Eltz forgave him, and began to talk of her home near Somlyo, and it ended In a large English party coming into the Er Val ley, under the shadow of the Er Mellek, for a long summer visit. And how they raved about everything the wine, the horses, the scenery, the wild barbaric splendor of the Baroness' housekeeping, and how they all hated Neusledler aud his big, black-browed wife who were in vited up to the balls. There was an English lady with very long teeth, and very long nose, and very high eyebrows, and they called her lady Louisa. She was very grand aud lofty, aud Madame Pasteur heard her say one day " Do you know, dear Barones, I think you are so very careless don't you know y about those beautiful jeylsi of yours do you know V" "But who could steal them V" said the Baroness laughlug . " There are none like them in all Hungary, and no one would dare to wear them, they are so rare?" "Ah! but some of these wild people of yours! they might swallow your em eralds, those .fierce Croats, the Rouma nians; and then you keep them in such opeu closets and . boxes." Madame Pasteur nodded her meek head, too. She had trembled for the jewels always. But the Baroness aud Sir Lyster be gau to think of other things thau jew els ; there were moonlight rides and walks, and there were long talks and many reveries. Lady Louisa went home, they all went, but Sir Lyster came back. And then, one evening, Madame Pas teur said afterwards, that she saw Keu siedler come iu and bully the Baroness, and she heard him hiss out the words " Remember, If you marry you lose all. Remember the Baron's will !" And Rukavina-Eltz turned pale and said, " Bully, traitor, fiend," between her shut teeth. She went off to Paris for one of her long visits, and Keusied ler squeezed the tenants aud made every one miserable. The castle was shut up and black Tetenyer grew tblu iu his stable. When she came back she looked older and more sedate.. She went often to see the nuns at the foot of Rez Gebirge. She saw the priest also very often, aud Madame Pasteur thought she waa grow ing devote. But she dressed In her usual dashing colors (for she was a very Rou manian at heart), and she wore one of those scarlet quilted peticoats that the Euglfnh ladies wore so much ; and very pretty it looked, with her dark habit and her dark dresses looped up over It. This with a scarlet feather in her hat, looked as if the Baroness was thinking of England. It was a miserable (Jay, that, when Madame Pasteur and Matllde came screaming down the long corridor. " The Jewels are gone 1 gone I gone I" The Baroness had the great bell of the castle rung, and Neusledler was sent for at once. Site was very pale, for she loved those penriB and emeralds. Neusledler was composed, every look was made to say, " I told you so ;" he had always warned her about the Jew els. " What can be done V" asked the Bar oness. " Search, whip, Imprison all who at tempt to leave the province," said Neu sledler, calmly. "Except women I will have no women whipped," said the Baroness. "I am glad to hear that," said Neusle dler, laughing hie malicious laugh, " for Madame Neusledler goes to Vienna to morrow." " Ah !" said the Baroness, " you know I could not mean, at any rate, that Mad ame Neusledler should be disturbed; send her in my little carriage with the three ponies to Erdiosegb." " Your excellence is very condescend ing," said Neusledler, bowing to the ground. The local police sought everywhere for the lost Jewels, hut uo traces of them could be found. The Baroness sat In a sort of stupor aud gazed out of the win dow. " I will go to England," said she has tily one day. " Neusledler, some mon ey, and arrange for me to be goue three months." " It is well, ruudame," said the stew ard. It was a very roundabout rout that the Baroness took for England. Wheu Ma tilda and Madame Pasteur reached the station at Erdiosegb. they were aston ished to see the Baroness dash into the ticket office and buy tickets for Vienna, and when they arrived, all of them, at her fine hotel at Vienna, who should step out to meet them but Sir Howard Lyster. Nothing but the well-known eccen trlclty of the Baroness apologized to Madame Pasteur for what followed. She commanded two dresses to be made, and. that Madame Pasteur should go with her to a Jewish masked ball at the Opera House in Vienna. "Sir Lyster Howard Lyster will go with us I said she, as a shade passed over he pale face of her companion. Oh I that a lady of sixteen quarter! ngs should be seen in Buch a low place! No: she was not seen ! She was masked ; but that she should even go ! What a sacri fice of pride and of decency, Madame Pasteur thought it, as she saw the Bar oness take the arm of one masked man after the other, aud theu go iuto the supper-room with a party who followed a tall mask in a black domino. A voice struck on Madame Pasteur's ear was It that of Madame Neusledler K was it could it be V Yes ! aud as she threw back mask and hood there sparkled on her neck the pearl-colored pearls and the emerald pendants of the lost jewels. O Heaven J "The necklace of the Baroness," shouted the impulsive, the imprudent Madame Pasteur. It nearly spoiled the plot, for Madame Neusledjer was among the friends and confederates. However, the tall Eng lishman stepped forward, and the two Viennese policemen arrested the woman. She behaved with extraordinary cool ness, and explained " It is indeed the necklace of the Bar oness, given by her to my husbaud for moneys which he had advanced to her. Let her deny it if she dare. I have her written acknowledgment of the .money, and I have come to Vienna to sell the necklace, where It is well-known." The Jews gathered arouud the won derful necklace, which the Chief of Po lice put iu his breast pocket, removing the woman Neuseidler. The Baroness went back to her hotel, and allowed Madame Pasteur to pass a wretched night. . She would explain nothing. AU Vienna was alive when the great case came on, aud uot a few ladies were glad to hear that the Rukavina-Eltz jewels were In pawn that envied necklace! Neusledler came to his wife's rescue, and told the story over again. The evi dence against the Baroness was damn ing. She had, according to his story, lived far, far beyond her Income and he had supplied her with money from the Jews. She had fabricated the story of the lost necklace to try and cheat him, but here were her signatures, and here waa the Baron's will, which she was about try to disregard his will saying that she should never marry, or, if she did, that she lost all her vast es tates. " Baroness Rukavina Ellz, what have you to say to this V What is your de fense 1"' said the prosecuting counsel. "Only this!" said tbe Baroness, holding up in her hand the pearl colored pearls and the emerald drops, the real necklace! On the Judge's desk lay a fac simile of the famous necklace. The two ornaments looked exactly alike. " Let au expert be brought aud say which is the real necklace and which the Imitation one, made in Paris, and used by me to lure this wretched and dishonest thief of a steward on to his destruction !" said the Baroness with a flash of Roumanian fire lu her eyes. It was true ! Neusledler had been foil ed ; he bad stolen a false necklace, which the Baroness had had made in Rue de la Paix. "He has beeu stealing from me for years; he has doubtless forged a false will of the Baron, for I have found the true one !" said Rukavina Eltz. I could not unravel the net that lie has throwu over me but for this happy thought of tempting him to steal some false jewels. Had he got the real ones, his story would have beeu plausible. Now, I trust, jus tice is convinced that it is a lie!" A dreadful noise followed this speech of the spirited Baroness ; Neusledler bad fallen duwu iu a fit. Never more would hedriuk theyellow-tintedRuster; never more would he return to the joys of crushing the peasantry of Somlyo of cheating the Baroness. The Baroness had cheated him at last. Sold ! sold I sold ! with fulse pearls and emeralds I Poor Jew ! poor Jew ! It was a very grand wedding, that of the Baroness to Sir Lyster Howard Lys ter, who though only au English coun try gentleman, proved to be richer than she, and who made her a loving and a hunting husband. The Emperor gave her away, aud she wore the pearl-colored pearls with the emerald drops, now become historical. " Ah ! Madame, dear Baroness, please tell me where you have kept the real jewels all these mouths '" said the pious Madame Pasteur.almost kissing the hem of her mistress' robes. The Baroness was dressed for travel ing, as her faithful adherent knelt and asked this question. She had on the quilted satin red petticoat ; tbe scarlet of old England. " Was it in the double-locked closet of the north tower V" "Ah, uo! faithful Pasteur,thou know est Neusledler had the key to that I" " Was it lu the jewel case of tby great ancestress, the Roumanian Princess V" "No. Guess again!" " Was it in the convent of the nuns of RezGiblrger" " No I Pasteur, I never gave them anything to keep but my sins!" " Was U iu the Barou's strong box, in the cellar?" " No, my dear Pasteur, uo. -You have the hiding place under your flrjger. They were quilted into tbe lining of this red satiu petticoat. I owe the idea to that good Lady Louisa. See here!" and gently raising the edge of her trav eling skirt, right over her left foot, the Baroness showed Madame Pasteur a neat little series of pockets, where the jewels had been safely hidden in a scar let prison." Had a Shock. " Yes," Mr. Messenger replied, iu au answer to the young lady's remark, "he was rather fond of bathing ; very fond of it, iu fact, but he received a terrible shock a few summers ago while in the water, and he has never recovered from it siuce." ." My !" she exclaimed, "did a snake bite him? Oh, dreadful!" "No," Mr. Messenger Bald ; "it wasn't that." " Did he come near drowning theu J"' she wanted to kuow. "No," he said, "it wasn't exactly that, but just as be was about ready to come out of the river he saw a tramp going up over the hill, about a quarter of mile away, with his hat, his pocket book, his vest, his watch, his handker chief, his stockings, his cigar case, his shoes, his collar button, his s-s suspen ders, his cane, and, well, iu fact, his trousers. And there was a Sunday school picnic only half a mile dow'n the river, gradually coming nearer, and he lounged arouud among the willows all that day and walked home alone lu the starlight. And the fact was he has never been able to enjoy a swim very much since that time. An Incident In the Napoleonic Wars. IN the memorable year 1814, when the allied armies were conceutrated about Paris, a young lieutenant of dragoons was engaged with three or four Hunga rians, who, after having received several smart strokes from his sabre, managed to send a bull into his shoulder, to pierce his chest with a thrust from a lance, and to leave him for dead on the bank of the river. On the opposite side of the stream a boatman and his daughter had been watching this unequal fight with tears of desperation. But what could an old unarmed man do, or a pretty girl of six teen V However the old soldier for such the boatman was had no sooner seen the officer fall from his horse thau he and bis daughter rowed most vigor ously for the other side. Then wheu they bad deposited the wounded man in their boat these worthy people crossed the river again, but with faint hopes of reaching the military hospital in time. "You have beeu very hardly treated, my boy, "said the old guardsman to him; " but here am: I, who have goue farther still, and have come home." Tbe silent and fixed attitude of Lieu tenant S showed the extreme ago ny of his pains ; and tbe hardy boatman soon discovered that the blood which was flowing internally from the wound on his left side would shortly terminate his existence. He turned to his youth ful daughter. "Mary," he said, "you have heard me tell of my brother; be died -of just such a wound as this here. Well, now, had there been somebody by to suck the hurt, his life would have been saved." Tbe boatman then landed, aud went to look for two or three soldiers -to help him to carry the officer, leaving his daughter lu charge of him. The girl looked at the sufferer for a moment or two. What was her emotion wheu she she heard him sigh so deeply, not that he was resigning life in iW first flower of his age, but that be should die with out a mother's kiss. "My mother! my dear mother! paid he, " I die without " Her woman's heart told her what be would have said. Her bosom heaved with sympathy, and her eyes ran over. Then she remembered what her father bad said ; she thought how ber uncle's life might have been saved. In an instant, quicker than thought, she tore open the officer's coat, aud the generous girl recalled bim to life with her lips. Amid this holy occupation the sound of footsteps was heard, and the blushing heroine fled to the other end of the boat. Judge of her father's surprise, as ho came up with two soldiers' when' be saw Lieutenant S ' whom he ex pected to find dead, open his eyes and ask for his deliverer. The boatman looked at his child aud saw it all. The poor girl came to him with her head bent down. She was about to excuse herself, when her father, embracing her with enthusiasm, raised bet spirits, and the officer thank ed her in these prophetic words : " You have saved my life; it belongs to you." After this she ten di .1 him and became his nurse ; nothing wuuld he take but from her baud. No wonder that with such a nurse he at length recovered. Mary was as pretty as she waa good. Meanwhile Master Cupid, who is very busy in such cases, gave him another wound, and there was only one way to cure it so very deep it was. The boatman's daughter became Madame S . Her husbaud rose to be a lieutenant general, and the boatmau's daughter be came as elegant and graceful as any lady of the court of Louis Philippe.