The Bloomfield times. (New Bloomfield, Pa.) 1867-187?, May 07, 1872, Page 4, Image 4

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Stljc 6timc0, New Blornnfidb, Ja
fht fjloomfitlb f hnts.
NEW BLOOMF1EL1), PENN'A.
IHiemlay, May 7, 1872.
The U. 8. Senate on Tuesday last passed
a bill making Tea and Coflbe froo. It
provides that on nnd after tlio 1st of July,
next, tea and collec shall be placed on the
free lint, and no fnrtlior import duty sliall
be collected from the Hairic, and all tea and
eoflee which may lie in public stores or
bonded warehoused, on Naid 1st of July
sliall be subject to no duty upon the entry
thereof for consumption, and all ten and
coffee remaining in said stores, on said
1st of July, on which duties shall have
been paid, shall he entitled to a refund of
the duties paid.
The day following, the House under a
suspension of tho rules, concurred with tho
Senate and tho President at oncn signed
the bill. So free tea and eolTee is a fixed
fact after the 1st of July next. Tho pres
ent duty is three cents per pound on collec
and fifteen cents on tea.
The. Cincinnati Convention.
The attendance upon the convention held
by the Liberal Kepublicans at Cincinnati
on the 4th inst., was very large.
The convention was organized by tho
election of Hon. Carl Solium as permanent
president. Tho usual committee wcro ap
pointed, who proceeded to perforin tho du
ties assigned them. Tho committees on
resolutions reported a platform which can
not fail to commend itself to every one who
reads it, and which was adopted unanimous
ly. The convention then proceeded to bal
lot for a candidate for the ofllce of President
of the United States. The result of tho
tlrst ballot was as follows:
Adams 208 I Brown !i
Trumbull 108 Curtin 83
Davis 92i 1 Chase
Greeley 147 Sumner
Before the voto was announced, Gratz
llrown, by unanimous consent, took the
stand and tbauked his friends for their sup
port of him, but withdrew his name and
asked his friends to support Ilorace Greeley.
Five more ballots were then had. On the
sixth ballot, Horace Greeley was decided
the nominee.
The convention then proceeded to ballot
for a candidate for Vice President, and se
lected fortius position Hon. 11. Gratz Brown.
The ticket therefore which this party pre
sent to the country is as follows:
For President Horace Greeley of Now
York. .
For Vice President, 11. Gratz Brown of
souri.
The following are the resolutions adopted
us
Tilt PLAT OHM OF Tllli l'AKTV.
First. Wo recognize tho equality of all
men before the lavi , and hold that it is the
duty of government in its dealings with the
people to meet out equal and exact justice
to all, whatever nativity, race, color or pei'
suasion, religious or political.
2d. We pledge ourselves to maintain the
union of the States, and not t reopen any
of the questions settled by the l:)th, 14th,
and loth amendments.
3d. We recommend the, immediate and
absolute removal ot all obstacles which re
sult from tho rebellion, and general amnesty
for all.
4th. Local self-government, with impar
tial suffrage, ficcdom of person, with the
habeas corpus, and tho subordination of
military to the civil authority.
5th. Tho civil service of the Government
has become an instrument of party ambition
and we regard a thorough reform of tho
civil service as the duty oPtho hour. That
remand tho subject of protection and free
offices of tho government should cease to
be objects of personal and party favor,
and to this end no President should be a
candidate for re-election.
0th. AVo demand a system of taxation
which will not lxi burdensomo on
t he Industry of the people, but shall be
sufllcieut to pay the expenses of an econom
ical administration of the Government. AVe
trade to the poople of the Congressional
districts, wholly free from executive influ
ence. 7th. The public credit must be sacredly
maintained, and we denounce repudiation
in overy form.
8th. A speedy return to specie pay men Is
is demanded by every consideration of na
tional honor.
IKh. We remember with gratitude the
soldiers who fought for the country,
10th. Wo .ire opposed to overy grant of
land to railroad or other corporation, and
prefer preserving the same for actual net
Ueii.
11th. Wo hold that the Geverunieut
should endeavor to cultivate friendly for
eign relation by a just policy. ,
12Ui. To promote these principles and
uive success to, the nominees upon thisplat-
lorm, we wish and welcome the co-opera
tion or all citizens without regard to jii'e-
jious pohtio;;l prcfeience.
The Polar Expedition.
Letters have been received from the
Polar expedition, which give a flattering
account of the progress so far. The letter
ays: On 'Christmas day the ship Polaris
was hemmed in by heavy Held ice, but the
weather was as pleasant as an Italian
spring day. The Ksqulmaux and the dogs
which Captain Hall procured at St. John's
were brought into requisit ion,and a seal hunt
was proposed as the objoct of tho day. The
dogs were lowered to the ice in a boat from
the davits, and were tackled to low sledges
by the Ksquimaux. . Captain Hall says that
the sagacity and tractableness of these ani
mals was remarkable. After half an hour's
sharp gallop over the heavy Ico, the pant
ing dogs suddenly drew up and yelled and
pawed tho surface. Ono of tho Ksquimaux
the oldest of the lot at once interpreted
the warning of tho dogs, and as quick as
lightning he bounded from his seat and
turned the dog's heads toward tho ship.
In half the time it took to reach the dis
tance they had traveled from tho Polaris,
the eager dogs pulled up beside the hull.
Arouud the horizon then there were murky
clouds assembling, and the atmosphere felt
misty and bleak. Within an hour after
tho warning of the sagacious animals the
ico had been broken up and the Polaris was
separated from it by a stormy channel
nearly half a mile in width. Had tlie seal-
hunting party fulfilled their intention of
urging on tho dogs and keeping up the
sport until moonlight, few of them would
have survived tho excursion. Upon an
other occasion these valuable dogs acted as
setters in scenting out a largo number seals
which would have probably passed tho
notice of Indians themselves. On that dav
they shot over forty seals and brought back
to tho shin the "flippers" or paws of
several old harps, which were given to the
cook's charge, and proved to be a rare anil
palatable relish.
The most important clue to the cxisteiico
of a Polar passage is tho fact of the crew of
the Polaris having seen, followed and killed
a whalo having in one of its fins a harpoon
similar to those used in the South Pacific;
and this happened in a region where, as
Captain Hall says, "tho sail of an Ameri
can or European vessel had never bcem
given to the wind before." In May Captain
Hall hopes to mako a clear passage to the
undiscovered Polo, and to learn all the
necessary information concerning that
region, about which so much has been con.
jectured, and for which so many noblo
lives has been sacriliced.
A Town Held by Robbers.
Early on the afternoon of the iJOth nil.,
fivo mounted men rode into tho towu of
Columbia, Adair county, Ky., and having
dismouted at the Deposit Bank, t wo of
them with pistols iu their hand 4 held tho
horses while tho other three with drawn
revolvers entered the bank. One of the in
truders demanded the keys of the safo
Another attempted to shoot James Garnctt,
a bank employee, but he struck up tho
robber's weapon, although his hand was
burned by the explosion. All tho bank
ofliccrs escaped from the building except
tho cashier, who, although under fearful
threats, refused to unlock tho safe. He
was shot dead, and the marauding party
pillaged all tho valuables outside the safe,
which they wore not able to unlock.
While this was proceeding the parly out
sido fired their pistols in all. diiections,
driving every body off tho street. Tho
town soemod panic stricken, until the rob
bers mounted their horses and ' dashed oil'.
The citizen organized and started in pur
suit, and at the last accounts were gaining
rapidly on the fugitives. The amount
stolen was not large. If captured, the
robbers will probably bo lynched.
. .
A Brave Iteed.
On the 0th ult., a little child was seated
upou the T. and C. railroad track, near
Enterprise, unconsciously playing with the
jvcbbles between tho ties, when an upward
bound freight train came round a curve closo
upon tho child, which did not realize its
danger, and continued to play in the face
of a horrible death. The engineer sounded
his whistle, but with no effect; tho train
was too near thu infant to be slopped be
foro reaching it, and its death seemed in.
evitablo. A moment more and tho laugh
ing innocent would be a crushed mangled
mass of inanimate clay I John M'Farland,
the conductor, comprehended tho fearful
situation, and with a heroic disregard of
his own life risked it by running over the
engine and down upon the pilot, whero ho
clung with one hand and reached forward
with the other to save the child. The mo
ment came and with a quick motion he
clutched the babe and threw it from the
path of the locomotive, safe but brusied
Its weight had been more tliuu ho extiected,
and taxed his strength to such a degree
that he almost lost his hold of the pilot !
lf"A Mr. Hart, living near Clmst worth.
111., set lire to some prairie grass on last
Wednesday, but tho Haines soon got be
yond his control and burned his hay stacks
and stable and seven horses. To add to
his affliction, his little child, five years old,
ran out of the house in search of its father
and perished in tho flames.
IWA fanner living two a-half mile
from Bloomington, 111., took a load of po
tatoes to that city on Sunday, rot knowing
the day of the week.
A Curious Statement.
Judge Ball, who is collecting facts for a
history of Hooslck Falls, furnishes the fol
lowing: "In the year 170!) several cases of
small-pox occurred in tho town, nnd a
dwelling near the village of Hooslck Falls
was used as a post-house. Seventy years af
terwards the houso (having been occupied
all that timo as a dwelling, with no ease of
small-pox or other unusual sickness,) was
repaired. One of tho workmen employed
on the repairs was taken down with a dis
easo which proved to bo malignant small
pox, to which ho had been not otherwise
exposed than by working on this old pest-
house." If small-pox virus can bo retained
for seventy years In tho walls, floors, ceil
ing or furniture of a dwelling house, great
er care and more stringent measures will
bo necessary to insure protection from this
loathsomo disease. Trot Preen.
- m. . .
Vaccination a Cure for Small-Poi.
Mr. R. C. Furley, licentiate of tho Lon
don Royal Collego of Surgeons, in a letter
to the Scotiman, says he is able to prove
that vaccination is not only a preventive of
disease but a cure. He says ho can show
from cases under his caro at tho present
timo that "if you vaccinate during tlio feb-
rilo stage the fever is slightly increased,
but the eruption does not make its appear
ance, and if you vaccinate during the crup
tivo stage tho eruption is immediately
arrested. The mature lymph overtakes the
immature poison,and the disease terminates.
If the eruption has gono the length of hav
ing white tops, there is danger of infection:
if not, it dies away as pimples." Mr. Furley
" invites members of the medical profes
sion to accompany him through the patients
he has under hi care," and thus, ho says,
possibly stamp out the epidemic in a few
weeks.
Bitten by a Mud nog.
On Sunday last week, Mrs. Enily Smith,
in Graham avenue. Brooklin, N. Y. while
playing with a pet black and tan dog, was
surprised to see the little animal suddenly
cease his gambols, and begin growling and
snarling in a very vicious manner. At the
same time froth began to oozo from his
mouth, and she opened the door and ordered
him out. Instead of olcying, the dog
turned nnd sprang on her bi-eastjind bit her
twice severely, in the face, after which he
ran into the street, and half nil hour later
was shot by a policeman. Physicians were
at once summoned, but despite their efforts
the unfortunate woman was seized with
spasms, and this morning is in a dying
condition.
- .
Probable War with Spain.
Tho Washington Itrpublican, makes tho
following speciiio statement:
That the adoption by the House of Rep
resentatives of a resolution demanding tho
unconditional release of Dr. Emilo Hounrd
and tho restoration of his confiscated prop
erty is const rued as requiring the Presi
dent to exercise his authority iu presenting
tho demand without delay.
That Minister Sickles is, therefore, in.
structed, on his arrival at Madrid, to de
mand his passports and to notify the Span
ish Government that until it is prepared
strictly to rullfll all its obligations, friendly
relations between the United States and
Spain must cease.
- - -
Speedy Justice.
W. S. Johnson, treasurer of a building
association in Philadelphia, on the night
of the 10th ult., attended a meeting of that
association. When ho left he carried with
him two thousand dollars. Near his home
ho was attacked, knocked down, mid an at
tentat mado to rob him, but his cries saved
him. A policeman came to his rescue, and
captured his assailant, Frank McFalls, who
was afterwards recognized as a notorious
character. McFalls was taken into court
the next afternoon, tried, couvicled, and
sentenced by Judge Allison to seventeen
years' imprisonment in tho Eastern Pen),
tentiary.
A Mystery.
In Pittsburg, Penn., Peter Weiss was
recently arrested on u charge of having
murdered his wife at East Liberty. When
the woman was first discovered, with he
throat cut, she wrote her husband' nanio
us the person who had committed the deed,
but afterward, being sworn, she mado a
statement that sho had attempted suicide,'
and she persisted iu tearing the bandage
from her throat, which caused her death.
It is believed that her first statement was
correct, and that her husband by threats
caused her to say she attempted suicide.
IW A serious diMicully has occurred
between New Jersey and Delaware fisher
men. A tug with armed men arrested
eleven Jearsymen on Thursday, near the
Jearsy shore, opposite Penngrov,e and took
them to Wilmington, Delaware, and lined
them $21 each for fishing and Invading
their rights. Tho Jerscyuien have tele
graphed to Governor Parker, who sum
moned his Attorney-General to meet him
at Trenton to arrange some plan to protect
the Jersy fishermen, Bcriout fights are ex
pected at Pennsgroro aud other fishing
points, unless the outboritics of the two
States settle the - matter by prompt inter
ference. RTA man was picked up near Jlns
catine, Iowa, one day last week, floating
down the Mississippi on. a trunk. His
kkirl'hiid sunk, but his trunk Mtved hiui.
Miscellaneous News Items.
tSF" An unknown man was killed In Ber
gen Tunnel on Saturday night a week. A
handkerchief found in his pocket was mark
ed '"C. W. Taylor."
fW On the 20th ult., a lire broke out in
a stable attached to the German! a Hotel in
Warren, Pa., and spread so rapidly that
nearly $30,000 worth of property was de
stroyed before the fire was extinguished.
t3JA well in Dccorah, Iowa, was 32 feet
below the surfaco, the last seven feet
through solid rock, when a body of
water was struck that npparcntly has no
bottom.
tOn tho night of 30lh ult., the house
of John Jennings in Brooklyn was burned,
and his wife nnd threo children escaped
by tying tho sheets together aud lowering
themselves from tho third story window.
IW At Columbia Pa., on tho night of
Tuesday hist, the large woolen mill of
William G. Case was entirely destroyed by
fire. Loss about $30,000; insured for
$12,000. Tho origin of tho fire is supposed
to have been accidental.
t2T Three men drove up to John M.
Steam's silk factory, on east Forty-second
street, on last Tuesday at an early hour,
knocked down the porter, and robbed tho
building of $"$,000 worth of silks. Tho
robbers escaped with their booty.
tW In Massachusetts, recently, was a
wedding in which tho bridegroom, a wid
ower of nearly seventy, married lady
whom he aud his former wife had brought
up from infancy, and who had lived in his
family as a daughter for forty years.
13T" At Davenport, Iowa, tho wife of J.
H. Malokan drowned her baby, fourteen
mouths old, in a barrel of water, and then
drowned herself. It is supposed that she
was insane. The husband, on recovering
the bodies, was seized with spasms and
lies very low.
CUT At Titusville Geo. W. X. Yost, con
victed of perjury last week, was sentenced
to a fine of $"5,000 and costs of prosec ution,
and confinement two years, at hard labor,
in thoWestern penitentiary. His perjury
consisted in false affidavits in a patent suit.
CSP The entire town of M'Clure in Sny
der county was recently destroyed by
fire. Tho statement is not very alarming
when we state that the only building in
the place was a saw mill used for a station
by the railroad from Lcwistown to Sclins
grove. tW At Buffalo, on the 1st inst., a daring
attempt was mado by a gang of burglars to
blow open tho safo of the New York ond
Erio freight house, in which several thou
sand dollars in currency were deposited.
The burglars entered tho building and
gagged the private watchman. They were
in the net ef blowing open the safo when
they were disturbed by the police, but
mado good their escape.
t" The notorious Jack Shipinau, itliut
Gilbert Norton, a professional burglar,
manufactured an instrument to pick locks
from a tin cup, picked tho locks of the
Carbon county jail, and escaped with two
of his cronies last week. They wcro well
provided with funds, and it is thought they
have put many a league bet ween themselves
and the sheriff.
tST A remarkablo fleshy woman, Mrs.
Daniel Bolich,died in East Brunswick twp.,
Schuylkill county, on tho 20th ult. In life
and health Mrs. Bolich weighed about four
bundled and liftcon pounds. Notwith
standing the fact sho was sick for soma
time, and fell away considerably, a coflin
eight feet in circumference was required to
contain her body.
tl7David M. Book, a young man,
whose father and family still reside in
May town, Lancaster county, committed
suicide iu Chicago recently. IIo blew his
brains out with a pistol, at the hotel where
ho was staying. He was at one time a
clerk iu tho Columbia Hank, afterwards
resided in Pittsburg, where he leaves a wife
and two children.
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