4: ... ADVEKTISING llATESt Transitu 'ft Cents per line for one insertion. Yi " " " two insertions 15 " " "three Insertions. HubIiiobs Notices in Local Column 10 Cents per line. Notices of Marriages or Deiitlis Inserted free Tributes of Uespect, ifcc., Ten cents ler line- VEAHLY ADVEUTJSHM ENTS. Ono Square per year, including paper, $ 8 00 Two Squares per year, Including paper, la 00 Ttircc squares " " " 10 00 Four Squares " " " 20 00 'J en Lines Nonpareil or one Inch, is one square. NEW 1IL00XFIELD, PEXX'A. Tuesday, June 31r 1&70. Sknatoks Klkcted. New Hampshire has re-elected ISeuator Cragin to serve as Senator for six years, from Match 4, 18.71. llhoJe Island has also re-elected fcieua tor Anthony for a like term. Ik Congressmen were to follow the exafnpleset by Senator Hamsey, they would be able to lnuke shorter west-ions. Lie made the best speech on record, and it was composed of the following seveu words : "Let us quit talking and commence vo ting." The Coloiied IJdys who were appoint ed as cadets to West l'oint, failed to pass the preliminary examination required of every applicant. Thc'coiisenjueuee is that they were rejected, and ISuinner and But ler will have to make another appoint ment. Perhaps they might find some some white lad who would be able to pass the examination. McFaklaxd is now trying to have the divorce obtained by his wife set aside, lie says he is not, and never has been insane. If that is so, the jury who recently tried him must have lied under a terrible mis take. Alter being slandered in such a manner by their verdict, the poor fellow ought to insist on another trial for the murder of Richardson. Theue has been no death reported in a long time in this country or Europe, which calls forth so universal regret, as the death of Charles Dickens. There are few families in this country or England, that do not possess some of his works, and in his death every such family will feel as though a personal friend had been called away. At the time of his death, lie was em ployed on another work entitled " The Mystery of Edwin Drood," which he ex pected to have ready for publication in a lew weeks. It is now announced that the lory will be completed by Wilkie Collins. The Trice of Wheat is a subject in which this community is deeply interested. The year past the price has been so low u to make farming a losing business. The present prospect is however much brighter fop our farmers, as while there is every indication of a largo crop iu this country, the foreign demand is largely on the increase.. Tho reason for this seems to be, the prospect of a very short crop in many parts of Europe, and particularly Erauce, caused by the long continued drouth, and the season is now so far ad vanced that even a change in the weather could not be of much advantage tothe crop. The consequence is, this country will be called upon to fill the deficiency.. Already large orders have been received fr-om Eu rope, and the advance in price has been quito decided, while the market is firm, with prospects of further advance. Cabinet Changes, which have so ltmg been rumored, have at last become a reality. On Thursday last, Attorney General Hour handed in his resignation, whhdi was accepted. The President at once sent to the Senate the nomination of Hon. AmosT. Ackerman of Georgia. The selection of such a man for this po sition took the Senate and the .whole ountry by surprise, aud cun hardly be looked upon in any other light than moth er Presidential mistake. J he oihco ol Attorney General of the United States should be filled by a man known to the whole country, as a statesman, as well as a- lawyer of decided ability. The man nominated nut only lacks those important qualifications, but was actively connected with the rebellion, having served as a member on Gen. Toombs' staff, during the wholo war. The nomination is certainly not complimentary to the many ablo meu who were actively engaged iu supporting the efforts of the Government during the Jark days of the rehclliou., hunts The Oorernor'8 Address. Governor Geary's address to the people of Pennsylvania is meeting with a very good reception from men of both parties, who were not directly interested iu the passage of the Omnibus Hail lload bill, which would have become a law if it hail not 1ieen for the faithful uso of the veto power. The nature of the Governor's address is an appeal to the people to support the veto of that bill, aud in order to do so, he urges upon thciti the importance of electing men for the next legislature who shall be pledged to vote against that scheme, which is sure to be againbrought forward. At the time the bill was passed, we called attention to the outrage that was about to be perpetrated on the tax-payers of the Commonwealth, and admitted to our columns communications on the sub ject, so that our readers are well posted in regard to the merits or rather demerits of the measure referred to. We trust this timely warning of the Governor's will have the desired effect, and cause the selection of candidates, by both parties, who will be pledged to defeat this bill, should its passage again be attempted. Ileaiy Bund Robbery. AV. 11. Hoar, who has just arrived from Chili South America, on Sunday re ported at the Central Police office, New York, the details of a robbery perpetra ted upon him. It seems that on Thurs day last he drew from a banking house inChicago, 810,000 in 5-l!0 bonds, a lew moments before starling for that city. Proceeding to the Sherman House he found his baggage in the office ready for shipment. Stepping to ono side in the rotunda he drew out the envelope contain ing ths bonds, put iu with them $100 in currency, and turning to his valise, then iu charge of the porter, opened it and deposited the envelope and contents there in, lie proceeded direct to the cars, keeping the valise in his own possesssion. The following night, on retiring, he placed the valise in his berth, and he avers, with the exception of while he slept, it was not a moment out of his sight. On arriving iu New York on Sat urday he discovered that the bonds had been extracted. It is probable that he was followed from the banking house to the hotel and the train by a thief, who opened the valise with a i'alsc key while ho slept. Mr. Hoar is a partner of tine of the United States Consuls in Chili and has lost by this robbery nearly all his worldly possession. A Daring Youngster. A gentleman, who was a passenger, stiites that when the train coming east arrived at Jefferson City, Mo., on June 7, the inspector proceeded, as usual, to tap the car wheels, to test their soundness when he discovered a boy under one of the cars, who had been stealing a ride from Kansas City. He had formed a sort of net of rope in which he lay sus pended like a spider in its web, between the axle of one of the trucks and the floor of the car. The boy was routed out of his place, and quite a crowd gathered about him on tho platform.. He was dis posed to be saucy, aud said he had no fa vors to ask of anybody, lie stated that ho had ridden in this way thousands of miles. As the train was moving off slow ly from Jefferson City tho boy got iu his old place again under the car while it was in motion. The conductor was noti fied and stopped the train. The boy was hauled out from his lurking place, and taking up a stono was iu the act of hur ling it at the conductor when the latter knocked him down. Ho did not ''dead head" it any further on that train. Hearth & Home (dated June 2."th) contains the first of a series of sketches entitled Jethro Tnoop's Niijht Tliomjht, by John Thomas, who is no other thau Petroleum V. Nasbv. Tho great hu morist -will take an- houest country boy to the city, conduct him through the usual experience, and restore him to his home a sadder and wiser boy, satisfied that the peaceful, honest, aud temperate life of the farmer is tho best and safest life that can be lived. This is a lesson greatly needed at this time, and Nasuy is the tho man to teach it. Send to Petteugill, Datemt Co., publish ers, for a copy, or enclose them $1 for a year's subscription as you will be sure to like it. Altoona now can really claim to bo a city, since they are trying to support a daily paper. The Alaona Sun has commenced to issues a daily edition, and comes to us looking remarkably well. Long may it shine.. Sunset Cox on Corsets. lion. S. S. Cox, Congressman from the city of New York, thus objocts in the House against the proposed tax on cor sets. Ladies reward him : There is a bill before the House of Rep resentatives, reported by Messrs. Scheuck Kelley, Blair, McCarthy, Hooper and Maynard, to impose a national tax on corsets and hoop skirts. Against this tax the free women of America should promptly protest. Is there to be noth ing too sacred for the searching band of tho tax-gatherer ? Is there no limit to the Assessor ' Pid the committee who reported this know what they were doing? Did Gen. Sehenek intend to direct the Commission er of Customs and his deputies to thrust a baud into every gentle bosom and gath er u tax therefrom t Did he not know this was a reverse of all the best laws of mankind in every age and iu every clime '( Did any member of that committee not raised On a bottle willingly propose to collect this ud valorem tax in districts rendered dear to human memory since Eve nursed her firstborn, or V initio Ream shaped the bust of Helen '( Are there no men in Congress who will lilt their voices iu favor of the un taxed corsets, aud untaxed hoops? AVill the gentlemen from Onondaga Mr. McCarthy , iu his ze:d to protect salt, impose this tax on the great dairies of nature? Will the great champions of American labor and production vote for this bill to encircle with Sj3i(i3 an 1 ud valorem taxes tho infant manufacto ries of the land ? It will not do to say that the House is not aware that corsets aud hoops are of universal use. Members know that the Treasury Department can furnish all needed information on this subject. The women of America hive no rep resentation, and they have a right to protest against this unprecedented taxa tion. They have submitted to be taxed upon their shawls, hats and feathers, and every bit of lace and ribbon, but there is a limit toeven female submission. Around the sanctity of their corsets Liioy will draw the line. Let the woman's conventions take ac tion. Let them add to the demand for the ballot the cry of " free eor;iets, free hoops!" and, until they gain the latter, let the men who vote this tax be denied all knowledge of female habiliinonts, save what they get from the clothes-lines. A Tragic Court Sonne. On Friday the 10th ins1;., a case was being tried in the court rooms of the Tombs, New York, in which Miss Ada P. Myers was complainant, ami Mr. Robert Shroeder, a respectable merchant the defendant. Miss Ada had. lived with Shroeder as his wife, and the suit was brought to recover damages on the charge of her having been seduced by Shroeder into a mock marriage. Wh ile tho com plainant was on the witness stand, Mrs. Caroline Vreeland, the mother of Miss Myers, suddenly rushed upon the defen dant with a large knife, and striking with it at his breast, did serious injury to his coat and vest, but inflicted n.o more seri ous wounds. The court was, of course, thrown into a terrible state if excitement which ended in the suit being summarily dismissed. Mrs. Vreeland i;heu attemp ted, but very unsuccessfully, to play the role of a maniac. She was bound over to answer for the assault. It is tho same Mrs. Vreeland who some time ago figur ed iu a New York court, iu a suit brought by her against her third husband for abandonment, in which she exhibited the qualities of a strong-willed, active and ex ceedingly persevering woiuaiH. Shroeder was dismissed, and the fair Ada was han ded over to the care of the matron of the Tombs until she can be sent to one of the inst itutions for the care of young girls. Kay On Thursday last Chailes Pressor keeper of a largo lager beer brewery at Thirty-sixth & Sycamore st.s., Phi la., em ployed a German, and on Sal.arday dis charged him lor incompetency. About eight o'clock on Sunday night the dis charged employ cc went to a stone quarry near by, and procuring a twenty-live pound keg of powder placed it within 20 feet of tho brewery. A couple of men saw the movement from a distanco and hurried up to ascertain the cause. Mean time the Teuton, with two companions, made another visit to the quarry in search of more powder, firing a fuse sixteen or eighteen feet long before so doing. Offi cers Kelley and Dunn arriving at tho roper time, cut the fuse ore the fire lad time to reach the powder, aud thus saved not ouly tho property but perhaps somo lives. Sad Occurrence on the Schuylkill. On Tuesday evening Albert It. Raker, and William C. DeAnnoiid, accompanied by several ladies, went on a boating ex cursion up the Schuylkill. They proceed ed as far as the Falls, and about eleven p. m. started on the return trip. The party were all in a small boat. Just below the Falls the boat struck upon a ruck, and a bole was stove in the front nud wa ter poured in ut a fearful rate. DeArniond went forward to endeavor to stop the leak. Ilis in'A, got entangled in a rope and he was pitched overboard. The sudden movement caused the boat to make a lurch and the three other occupants were thrown out at the stern. The young men were good swimmers. DeArniond, however, could not got disentangled from tho rope. Raker seized one of the ladies around the waist and the other by the the dress. DeArniond told him to hold on, that he would be there iu a few sec onds. The whole party drifted down the river. When near tho Falls Bridge, B.iker and tho two ladies suddenly sank, aud were seen no more. The current swept the' boat against one of the piers id' the bridge. Then the rope which had held DeArniond fast, broke and be crawled up on the stones, from which he was afterward res cued in an almost exhausted state. The Schuylkill Harbor Police have endeavored to find the bodies cf the un fortunate victims, but to no effect. A Family Huicide. The journals of Berlin publish accounts of an extraordinary suicide in that city. A small dealer named Kuth, resided in the Strasse Sebastian, with his wife and four children, whose ages ranged from 10 to IS. A few days back a relative of the family received a letter from the el dest son, written iu such terms as to fore shadow .. catastrophe. The persons to whom the communication had been ad dressed, went and in firmed the police of his fears, and an entry into the house was effected, but too late to prevent the trag edy which had been consummated. The mother and four children were lying on a bed dead from strangulation, and the father was hanging by the neck behind the door. According to the letter of the son the entire family had consented to die together, but the motive for such a resolution remains a mystery. B"" The diamonds and bonds found in the possession of Richard Sweat, alias John Williams, a notorious English thief who was arrested on board an ocean steam er and committed to the- State Prison for smuggling, have been claimed by William Hart, the owner. Mr. Hart is an Englishman, residing in Paris, and he was robbed of the diamonds and bonds during a temporary absence from his house. Williams was aided by the girl Martha, who pretended to be bis wife on his arrival here. The property is worth in all about $30,000, and is at present in the possession of A.D. Keasby, United States District Attorney for New Jersey, to whom Mr. Hart has presented his claim. AST" An exchange says, tho "Treasury Department is now trying, a plan that is expected to render counterfeiting the currency almost impossible.. It consists of covering the face of tho bank bill with printing so finely executed that counter feiters cannot afford to copy it. In one case one word is repeated thirty-two thousand times." This is a good idea for all a person need do is to count the word and if it falls short of tho requisite thirty-two thousand of course the bill is bad, aud will bo re fused. ' Jfcy A young Baptist clergyman named MeMullon, has been arrested in Philadel phia, on the Jlth inst., on charges pre ferred by Mary L. Search, of Lcwisburg Penn., of seduction aud breach of prom ise of marriage, while he was a student in the Lcwisburg University. She is now the mother of an infant, whoso paternity she ascribes to the prisoner. 5S"'A Swedish farmer who was breaking land near Paeilio City, Kansas, bared with a plow a hugo log of antediluvian timber. Further research shows that an immense forest has at some former time been sub merged, and now lies about fourteen inches below tho surface; Tho trees are all lying in one direction, their tops toward the west. They aro black as jet, and capable of re ceiving a high polish. At Chicago at threo o'clock iu tho morning of the 14th inst., a burglar tried to enter the sleeping room of J. Kinsley, at No. 514 W. Twelfth street. Mr. Kinsley being alarmed, placed himself close to the window, and the moment it was opened by tho thief, tired, and the man ran oil', lie was found dead beside a fence near at hand.. IW Annie Troyman, a married worn: wit li two very pretty and interesting litt children attending her, was convicted assault aud battery wit h intent to comn mayhem upon Charles Neil, at I'hiladelph last week and was sentenced to two yea in the penitentiary. The evidence was the effect that her husband was in dang of discharge from a factory at Second ai Tililllin streets, where Neil was foreiua and she believing him to be I lie cause the trouble, purchased a quant ity of vitri and when an oppoitunity offered, dashi it into his face, lie quickly applied tl remedy, of milk, which saved him, but 1 clolhing was badly burned. E3' A story affecting the chastity of very wealthy young lady at Davenport, I; being circulated, she quietly watched un she could lind some individual repeating! and at last lixed upon tho mayor of V. city as a guilty parly. Thereupon si brought an action for slander against bin hut. the jury disagreeing, he wasaciuitte but bo says that that shall not lie tho ei . of the suit ; she will not rest until a verdic has been given for or against her, and tin sho will set not only her own, but all sla, ders of innocent girls an example. EL'S' A fanner in comfortable vircuinstaj' ces named Simmons St rubble, living i Sussex county, went to Newton oh Monda. week with a load of produce, which he dis posed of. lie then purchased a vial o strychniuo for the purpose, he said, r killing tho squirrels that infested his cor: lields. When he was within sight of th. house, on his return homo ho swalloweo the contents of the vial and died a few niin utes afterward. No cause can bo assigned for the suicide. Hunterdon Demoerat. Rend Some English Testimonials. fiUKK.NU'S SA1I.OHS' IIOMH, Poplar Street, London, England. I take this method ot making known the perfect cure. I have obtained from the uso of your valuable, medicine, the PAIN KILLElt. 1 was urged by a, friend tt try it, ami procured a bottle of Dr. Kor not, Apothecary. 1 had been anticted three years with Neuralgia' and violent spasms of the slomaeh, which caused a constant rejection of food. The doctors at West minster Hospital, gave up my ease in despair. Then I tried your VAIN KILLElt, which gave mo immediate relief from pain and sickness; and I regained my strength, and am now able to follow my usual occupation of sajlor. Ono bottle cured me. Yours respectfully, CIIAUI.ES VOW ELL. Sin I desire to bear willing testimony to tho wonderful elllcaey of that American Uemedy call ed Vain Ktller, which 1 believe has no equal in this country. I have beenalllieted with heart disease, and could lind no relief till I got tho Vain Killer, which soon made a cure. I am quite willing to answer any inquiries about my case. Yours, eto., FANNY S1LVKUS, Dudley, (Worcestershire,) England. Gf.nti-Umkn I can with eonlidence recommend your excellent medicine, the I'aia Killer, for liheu matlsm, Indigestion, nnd also Toothache, having proved its ellleacy in tiio above complaints.. Yours, &c. ItEUHKN MITCHELL, IJiidgoinan's Vlaco liulton. GKNTi.KMiiN 1 have very great pleasure in roe ommending your medicine, tho Vain Killer. 1 was suffering severely a few weeks since witli 15ron ehitis, and could scarcely swallow any food, so In flamed was my throat. 1 was advised by a friend to try your Vain Killer, and, after taking a few doses of it, was completely cured. Yours respectfully, T. WILKINSON, Bolton, Eng. V. S. I have recommended tho medicine to sev eral of iny friends; and, in every instance, it hat had tho desired effect. Sold by Druggists and Dealers in Faintly Medicines, and Dr. Striekler, New Uioonitleld, Va. Juno 21 lm Eklit Per Ct. in Gold. FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS OF TUE ISSUE OF $1,500,000, DY THE St. Joseph and Denver City RAILROAD COMPANY, In denominations of ?1.000 and coupon or registered, with Interest at Eight per cent per annum, payable l.Mh Fein nary ana August, in (iOLl) free from I'nited Slates taxes, in New York or Europe. The bonds have thirtv Mtars to run. payable in New York in GOLD. 'T'ruitoes, Fanners' Loan nud Tmst Company of New York. The mortgage which vccnies these bonds is at tho rate of jilt: All nor mile; covers a completed road for every bond issued, and is a llrst and ONLY mortgage. This line, connecting St. Joseph with Fort Kearney, w ill make ashoit and through route to California. The Company have a Capital Stock of 10,000,030 Alid a giant of Land from Congress, of l.iieo.U.o Acres, valued at the low- est estimate, at 4. C0,CC0 I'll st Mortgage Honda L.'W'.IOO Total, Sl.r),W,iil)0 Total length of road, 211 miles; distance lh eluded In this Mortgage, 1 1 1 miles; price. l7 l- and accrued interest, IN CI! HHfcNCY. Can be obtained from the undersigned. Also, pam phlets, maps and information relating thereto. These bonds, being so well secured and yielding a largo income, are desirable to parties seeking sale and lucrative investments. YVo leccumicnd them Willi entile confidence. W. P. CONVERSE & CO., . (OMIIEKCTAI. AGENTS, ATo.. 54 lytn Street, ATo York. TANNER & CO., FISC A Li AG EN TS, Xo. 40 Wall Street, New Toil. 4 22?mr.