4 ADVERTISING HATKS t TramieiU 8 Cents per Hue for one Insertion . 13 " " " two insertions 15 " " "three Insertions. Business Notices in Local Column 10 Cents per line. Notices of Marriages or Donths Inserted free. Tributes of Kespect, fcc, Ten cents per line. Obituary notices over live linos, 5 ceuts per line. YEARLY ADVERTISEMENTS. no Square per year, Including paper, $ 8 00 Two Squares per year, including paper, X'i 00 Throe bquures " " " 16 00 Four Squares " " ' 20 00 Tou Lines Nonpareil or one Inch, is one squaie. NEW UL00MFIELI), PENN'A. Tuesday, August 9, 1STO. 'Iiie jHciu aok ut the JNatiuiial debt during July was seventeen million thirty four thousand, fuur hundred and ninety five dollars. Affairs in North Carolina seem to be badly mixed. In several counties mar tial law having been, declared by the Gov euor, the militia' who are aetinjr under the conmianu of Col. Kirk have uuule numer ous arrests. In ecverhl instances individu als have been tried by court martial, and gross outrages have beeu perjetra tod under cover of the law. The court has been asked to interfere and huvo attempted so to do but their decisions are disregarded, and now the chief Justice of the states declines to is sue any more writs for the release of pris oners, as he says he has no means to en force them. If ail the reports of the doings of Kirk nod his militia are true, the hangman is cheated out of his rightful dues, aa long as they are left unhung. The Enropcau War. During Iho week past the French and Prussians have had several skirmishes two of them being of some importance. On the 3d Inst,, the French made an at tack upon Saarbruck coming of victori ous. The French profess to attach con siderable importance to the victory but the tenor of their despatches to the French capital indicate that the movement was made for the effect it might have on the public, and on the recruits in camp. The following is tho English accouut of the battle. "A. correspondent, who is indorsed by the Loudon Time as. trustworthy and neutral, gives the following interesting details of tho battle of Saarbruck, The French made some prisoners but captur ed no cannon. They lost 40 killed and .CO wouuded. The French force in bat tle Was estimated at 30,000 men and the Prussian at only 0000. Tho artillery won the fight. Thero was but littlo in fantry and no cavalry engaged. It was tho Fifty-ninth Prussian IJegiment, and not the Fif'tietfi, as before reported, which was engaged in-the battle. Three com panies of tho fortieth held their ground against the French until tho lattcr's force fully developed their strength. Tho small force of Prussians then' retired." This slight victory of the French was however more than overbalanced by the fight which occurred on the day following, when tho Prussians made an advance on tae fortress of Wcissenburg, tho result of which is told in a dispatch given be-' low, which was received in lierlin on the 5th inst. : The following despatch has been r ooived herefrom Neiderottcrbach, a small village on Lauter river, near Weissenburg dated b o clock on 1 hursday evening :- " We have won a bloody but brilliant victory The left wing was tho attacking body, and consisted of the 1 ifth and Eleventh Prussian Corps, with the Second Iiavarian. The force carried by assault under the eyes ot the rnnco lloyal, the fortress ot W eissenburg and Geisburg. " General ftonay's division of Marshal Mao Mahoo s l'reuch corps was splendid Iv defeated. Loins driven from its caniD. General Donay was himself killed, five hundred prisoners were taken, nono of them wounded. Many or lureos are Among tho captured. The Prussian General Kirchbaoh waa slightly wounded. Iho Koyal Grenadiers and Fifth llogt ment of the litie suffered heavy loaves," Further details show that the number of prisoners taken in the last engagement ' reaohod 800, including 18 officers, Five 1 J J I 1 M.. . V . Y 1 uuuureu nave uireauy arrived as rraDK fort on their way to Northern. Prussia. Eeporta of further fighting having takon place on Friday, and Saturday turn out to be unfounded. Recent move ments seem to indicate that Prussia is taking the offensive and U determined to attempt a march to Paru. Terrible Steamboat Disaster. Another terrible rtcamboat disaster oc curred at Pucifio Place, thirty miles above Memphis at twelve o'c'ock on the night of the 80th ult. The stern wheel boat Silver Spray, from Now Orleans to Cin cinnati, with a barge in tow, exploded her boilers, killing and wounding a num ber of the crew and passengers, and thcu took fire. Mr. Singleton, the second clerk, states that just at the watch was called the ex plosion took place, and in a moment the boat was wrapped in flames. Nothing was left for the survivors to do but to plunge into the river and swim some three hundred yards to the nearest shore. Ow ing to ihu darkness of tho night it was impossible to render any assistance to the wouuded. Some two hours after the explosion the steamer City of Cairo hove in sight nd went to the relief ot the sullorers. All who wore rescued were taken on , board and carried to Memphis. J lie spray floated down about two miles and lodged on a bar, whore she and the barge burned to the water's edge. She was seven years old and belonged to Captain I'attcix ii, of New port, v ho had stopped off for the trip, leaving Captain Jurdou in eliarre. 'J he boat hai near three hundred crates of queenswaro. three cabin and seven dock passengers nineteen deck bauds and roustabouts. It is believed by Mr. Singletou that twenty-six lives were lost. A Desperate Highway robber. About 10 o'clock on the iilJth ult., Joseph McCarthy, residing in New York was approached by a young man, who, without a word, walked up to him and drove a knife up to the hilt into his shoulder. In tlio meantime throwing his victim on the ground, he attempted to rifle his pockets. .McCarthy, although badly wounded struggled desperately and .-ucceeded in beating his assailant off, but not before he had received several more cuts in tho shoulder. Finally as the fellow made a desperate plunge, Mr. McCarthy gave him a severe kick iu the stomach, causing the knife to fly out of his assailant s hands. In the meantime .McCarthy possessed himself of the knife and the fellow teeing himself disarmed ran into a saloon near by, succeeded iu getting a number of tumblers, which he tired with terrible cfloct and woundnm McCarthy iu the face. The fellow again attempted to get possession of McCarthy's pocket-book, and another terrible struggle ensued. McCarthy got the fellow under but in a moment three or four fellows from the saloon, No. 301 Spring street set upon hini and took from McCarthy the coveted pocket-book. Tho wounded man's cries brought assistauco, and the villainous highwayman was lodged iu the cells. An Important Distinction. Dutchmen, or Hollanders, iu this country are very often called Germans while the difference) in Rationality and language is almost as great as that between English and French people. Dutchmen are Hollanders, natives of that industrious and illustrious little nation from whence came the first settlers iu N. York city and State. Holland, or the Netherlands, is a kingdom independent from any other Power, governed now by William III, of Orange. Never has Hol land been a part of Germany, though in tho sixteenth ccutury the Earl of Hol land was also King of Spain and Emperor of Germany, so that they could be called just as well Spaniards as Germans. As for the language, though thero are a very few words in the German language that are the same or sound like tho same in Dutch, a German cannot understand the Holland language, neither can a Dutchman the German, unless ho has had the necessary instruction. . . D3T Arkansas has a celebrated will case, which has been hanging iu the courts for thirtoen years. The jury at Marion, Ark., recently brought iu a veN diet for tho defendant, when tho opposing counsel demanded that the judge should cause the jury to be polled, and it was accordingly so ordered. Three names had boon oalled, and tho question' " Is this your verdict?" addressed to the fourth, a man named Mitchell, but before he could reply he uttered a kaeu, sharp Bcroara, as if in mortal agony, and drop pod apparently lifeless. Every effort waa made to restore him, but at last ac counts he was still unable to speak, and the great will case of Lacklad vs. Jones i still in abeyance. The doctors pro uouuee his disease apoplexy. If be dies before answering the. question, the whole case will have to be mod over again. Extraordinary Thieves. It is aeldoui we hear of people driven by hunger to steal-entering the house in the night, and after satisfying the cra ving of a hungry stomach, leaving the other property untouched. Such was the case a few nights ago, when a party of hungry people entered the house of Mr. llobert White, i t the corner of six teenth and Main streets, Kamai City. After effecting an entrance they proceed ed to work in a systematic manner empty ing milk out of a new pail into an old one, and taking pics an cakes out of pans and plates, carrying off nothing but food. Though the bureau and wardrobes were open and unlocked yet no article of value was taken. ffrThe valet-like habit of calling women " ladies," and men 'gentlemen," indiscriminately, is quietly satirized in the New York Vitiznt. which in a word of advice to the " sales-ladies" and "sales gentlemen" about the hardness of their lot. reminds them of the privations of ' other work-ladies and gentlemen." "There is the hod-gentlemcu, who has to carry heavy lo-ds on his shoulders up and down ladders in the broiling sun of summer, the coal gentlemen who puts in coal with a basket, the washer-lady who breaks her back over the tub of suds, and even the police gentlemen who is on his beat so long that one would expect him to be a ' dead beat' before he gets through. Each of these ladies and gentlemen should bear in mind the trials of the other." Miscellaneous News Items. tW A serious riot occurred at Shelby villc, 111., on the S'Jth ult., because the sentence of one of two men condemned to death had been commuted. The mob demanded that both or neither should bo hanged. A strong guard secured the execution of the law. VW Joseph Brads, a poor but honest dry goods clerk in Indianapolis, has been over taken at last by a fortune of $1,000,000, which has been three years looking for an owner. His brother at Terro Haute has an exactly similar experience C3T Edward Monihan, of No. 670 W. Forty-third street, N. Y., a produce dealer in Washington market, committed suicide last week, by shooting himself, at his resi dence, lie w;is reported to be in good cir cumstances. Ho leaves a wife and four children. tW The infected buffalo robes aro suppos ed to have reached as far as Chicago. Dur ing the past week two cases of small-pox were brought to the notice of the health ollicer. It is to be hoped that the " trail" may not be traced any further this season. tW The banking house of John llandlcy & Co. was robbed of $!10,000 in currency, at ten o'clock, on tho 1st inst., by parties entering the vault from the rear of the bank, while accomplices engaged the atten tion of the cashier at the counter. The plan was boldly and adroitly accomplished. There is no clue to the robbers. IW Port Byron, 111., was visited by a terrible storm on Wednesday, afternoon. It lilted a large tree by the roots, laying it across the railroad and breaking down the telegraph wires, and tore tho roofoiFabriok house, carrying tho main part about lfiO feet. Shingles wero blown as far as 400 feet. A calf was blown into the air fifty feet, and found dead a hundred feet from whore it first stood. A youth named McCay managed to make a very daring escape a few days back from the prisoner's box at Toronto, Canada, by squeezing his body through anaperature in the wall nine inches in width, passing through tho Grand Jury room, and jump ing from a window into the steot. lie had just been sontenced to two years and four months imprisonment lor larcony. tW About ten days ago, Frank Beliel discovered the decomposed body of a man Hoating in the Detroit river, pulled it iuto his boat, and since that moment ho has been sull'ering with a deadly nausea, ad no food or nourishment will remain for an in stant on his stomach. Nor does the ab sence of food relieve him from the horrible retchings that agonize his frame, and his death is greatly feared. tW A very singular freak of lightning occurred during a recent storm near Inde pendence, Ky. Eight men wore at work in a field threshing wheat, when lightning struck tho machine they were handling, stunning them all quite severely, and pros trating four horses. When the mon recov ered their consciousness, three of them found their tongues had been blistered, as if they l'eri-hot iron. The spots on each nun's tongue were exactly alike, and near toe nonw tW Long Bottom, Meigs county, Ohio, was disturbed by a nuisance in the shapo of a whisky boat, and no oue else being wil ling to abata it, the ladies took hold of the matter, The assembled en masse, and pro viding tbonisejves with, an apron full of rocks, prooeeflpd .to we landing,, untied the the boat, shoved it off, and then commenced its bombardment, and says an. eye-witness, perhape no boat ever, got such a pelting with rocks, the ladica following the boat lor nan a mue. COURT PROCEEDINGS. Court Convened in this borough on last week Monday. Judge Graham and associ ates Baker and Stroup all present. Common Pleas. At the opening of the Court not a single case was ready for trial, owing to absence of witnesses, which caused delay, and com plaint on the part of the Court. The first case was Daniel Mace vs. John Shott. This was an action of covenant. Jury found for the plaintiif $:1 89. W. It. S. Cook vs. Redsecker J. Young. This was a suit to recover for lumber sold by the plaintill. Verdict for the plaiutilf, $402 04. Samuel McCord vs. Andrew B. Smiley. Summons in trespass. Verdict for plain tiff, $1. John Reiber vs. Curtis Strino. Action in trespass, to determine the title to an alley iu the borough of Marysvillo. Verdict for plaintiff, $3. John Shull vs. Jos. llockenberry. An action of ejectment to a tract of land in Madison township. Verdict for the plain tiff, $118. James B. Leiby vs. Wm. Cumbler. An action of trespass. Verdict for plaintiff, $00. George Ycagor vs. Andrew J. Clouser. A summons in debt, for tho collection of a note which the defendant denied having signed. The note came into the hands of plaintiff beforo maturity, as commercial paper, and the jury found for the plaintiff for the face of the udle with interest from date, $133 44. Alex. Metz vs. Wm. L. Boalo and David Kistler. An action of assumpsit. This was a case to recover bounty, the defend ants being a committee for tho township of Madison. The jury found for the plain tiff, $420. Wm. Dum, endorsee vs. Same. Action as above. Verdict for plaintiff $139 35. Philip C. Rcisinger vs. Same. Action as above. Verdict for plaintiff, $001 25. Samuel Hartman vs. Same. Action the same. Verdict for plaintiff, $203 24. Quarter Sessions. Commonwealth vs. J. II. IJeinsling. This was an action under the new law against practising medicine without a diploma. Verdict not guilty and the prosecutor, Ja cob Heck to pay costs. Same vs. Elizabeth Shoemaker. Charge, assault and battery, and surety of tho peace. This was a petty quarrel between neighbors. The jury found the defendant guilty and she was sentenced to pay a fine of $1 and costs. The following is a list of cases settled with leave of Court : Commonwealth vs. H. W. Shuman. In dictment, Misdemeanor. Prosecutor, Geo. VY. Stewart. Same vs. John Black. Assault and Bat tery. Prosecutor, Wm. A. Fleming. Same vs. Shuman Miller and George Goodman. Surety of the peace. Prosecu tor, James Casner. Samo vs. James Casner, Ellen Casner and Utley Casner. Indictment, Obstructing the execution of a legal process and assault and battery. Prosecutor, Shuman Miller. Samo vs. Shuman Miller. Indictment, assault aud battery. Prosecutor, Win. U. Casner. Same vs. Reuben Reynolds. Indictment, obtaining money under false pretences. Prosecutor, J. 11. Dunbar. MlSCELLANOUS" BUSINESS. In tho Constablo returns there appeared to be a general disapproval of tho condition of the roads throughout the country. It will bo well for Supervisors to take uotice of this fact. Jonathan Allen was appointed constable for Newport borough, and Andrew Jackson for Buffalo borough. Samuel Nankivoll, -of Millcrstown, was Naturalized. The account of Goorgo Ppahr, assignee of Jacob Stouffor, of Carroll township, was confirmed. Wm. M. Butch, Esq., waa appointed to tako testimony iu application for divorce, in caso of Elizabeth Foose against Samuel Foose. The petition of J. C. Stuart, of Watts township, asking to bo annexed to Buffalo borough for school purposes, was granted. Samuel Shellei was appointed Sequestra tor on the estate of John S. Foose. The jietitions of citizens for a decree of incorporation for Christ's Reformed Church of Duncainon,and Trinity Church, of Ma rysvillo. were granted. Vlt ptilfUUU Ol UIMZUUN Ul UlAl JTBV1IIU, 11IO house of Samuel Strausbach was designated aa the place for holding general elections. Isaao G. Black waa appointed keeper of the Perry County Jail at a salary of $275 per year iu place of Thoa. J. Boyer re signed. Road proceedings next week. The " Pain-Killer." The foreign and domestic demand tor Terry Pa vis & Son's great medicine thf l'aln Killer was never before so large as It lias been of late; and w think the time has arrived when the declaration may be made, without the possibility of refutation, that the city of Providence, hi the State of Khod Island, of the United States of America, has fur nished the habitable globe with a medicine, whleh, In point of universality of demand, extent of use- ' fulness, complete efficiency for all the purposes for which it Is designed and wide spread, enduring popularity, has never been equalled by any medi cine In Europe or America. The universality f the demand for the Tain Killer, Is n novel, Interesting, and surprising fea ture In the history of thlsmcdiclne. Its "fainehas gone out," into every quarter of the habitable globe. The l'aln Killer is now regularly sold In large and steadily increasing quantities, not only to general agents hi every State and Territory of the Union, and every Frouinceof British America, but to Buenos Ayres, Brazil. Uraguay, Peru, Chill and other South American States to the Sandwich Islands; to England and Continental Europe; to Mozambique. Madagascar, Zanzibar and other African lands: to Australia and Calcutta, Kan goon i.nd other places in India. It has also been sent to China, and we doubt If there is any foreign port or Inland city in Africa or Asia, which is frequented by American and European missionaries, travellers or traders. Into which the l'aln Killer has not been introduced and been sought after. The extent of Us usefulness is another great fea ture of this remarkable medicine. It Is not only the best thing ever known, as everybody will con fess, for bruises, cuts, burns, &c, but for dysen tery or cholera, or any sort of bowel complaint it is a remedy unsurpassed for elliciency and rapidi ty of action. In the great cities of British India, and in the West India Islands and other hot cli mates it has become the standard medieine for all suoh complaints, as well as for dyspepsia, liver complaints and other kindred disoiders. lor coughs and colds, canker, asthma and rheumatic dilliculties, it has been proved by the most abund ant and convincing trials and testimony, to be ;iu invaluable medicine. The proprietors arc iu pos session of letters from persons of the hlghestchar acter and responsibility, testifying, in unequivocal terms, to tho cures effected and the satisfactory results produeed, in an almost endless variety of cases, by the use of tkis great medicine. l'rov. Advertiser. Soi.u BY Druggists and Dealers in Family Medicines, and Dr. Strickler, New Blooinlleld.I'a. July 26 lm Eight Per Ct. in Gold. FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS OF THE ISSUE OF $1,500,000, BY THE St. Joseph and Denver City RAILROAD COMPANY, In denominations of 1,000 and S500, coupon or registered, with interest at, Eight per cent, per annum, payable 15th February and August. In GOL.D free from United Stales taxes, in New York or Europe. The bonds have thirty vears to run. payable in New York in ;011. Trustees, Farmers' Loan aud Trust Company of New York. The mortgage which seeureti these bonds is at tho rate of Sin til per mile : covers a completed road for every bond issued, and is a first and ONJ,Y mortgage. This line, connecting St. Joseph with Fort Kearney, will make a short and through route to California. The Company have a Capital Stock of $10,000,000 And a grant of Land from Congress, of l.tKHMHK) Acres, valued at the low est estimate, at 4,000,000 First Mortgage Bonds l.SOU,GC0 Total, l,r),600,.)00 Total length of road, 871 miles; distance in cfuded In this Mortgage, 111 miles; price, 17 1-a and accrued interest, IN Cl ldlLAC'V. Can be obtained from the undersigned. Also, pam phlets, maps and information relating thereto. These bonds, being so well secured and yielding a large income, are desirable to parties seeking sale and lucrative investments. 'We recommend them with entire conlldeuce. W. P. CONVERSE & CO., COMMERCIAL AGENTS, No. 54 Pine Street, Kev York. TANNER & CO., FISCAL AGENTS, , No. 49 Mall Street, New York. 4 22 3m r. Notice in Bankruptcy. District Court of the United State for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. IN THE MATTER OF Edwin Shuman, Tank rupt Eastern District of Pennsylvania, SS : A warrant in Bankruptcy has been issued bv said Court against the eslate of Fdw n Shuman. (if the County of perry, and Stato of Pennsylvania, iu said District, who has been adjudged a Bank rupt upon petition of his creditors, and the pay ment of any debts and the delivery of any proper ty belonging to said Bankrupt to him or to his use, and the tianslor of any property bv blm are forbidden by law. A meeting of the Creditors of saia liaiiKrupi to prove uieir debts and choose one Court of Bankruptcy to be holden at New Bloom Held, in said District . on the Tenth day of August, A. 1)., 1870, at 10 o'clock A. M at tlie ollice of Ciiahi.es A. Baiinett, Esq., one of the Kegistera in Bankruptcy of said District. E. M. GRKOOltY. 2t U. SMarshal for aaid District. U. 8. Marshal's Sale. Y VIRTUE of an Order of Sale Issued out of ' the Dlsirict Court of the II. H.. In mul for ti,u Eastern District of Pennsylvania, will be gold at public sale to the highest bidder for Cash, On Thursday, August 18th, 1870, at the store lately occupied by Edwin Shuman in the town of Liverpool, Perry Cuunty, Fu., com mencing at 9 o'clock A. M., the stock of goods M In possession of Edwin Shuman, a Bankrupt, cou, aisting of a general assortment of Dry Qnods, Groceri, Hardware, Crockery, Btone and Olasi Ware, Boot ft Shoes In large variety. Also a large quantity of Bait, &o. E. M. GREGORY. 1 82 2t3 U. S. Marshal, Eaotera District of Pa,