Huniata Sentinel. C3 MIFFLINTOWN Wednesday Morniiig, July 30, 1873. IS. F. SCIIWEIER, EDITOR PROPRIETOR. G E0. P. ROWELL & CO, 40 Park Row, New York AND S. . PETTENGILL & CO., 37 Park Row, N. Y, Are our iolt agents in that city, and are au thorized to contract for advertising at our lowest rates. Advertisers in that city are re quested to leave their favors with either of the above boiues. COMMITTEE MEETING. The Republican Standing Committee of Juniata ccunty will meet at Will' Hotel, in Mittfintown. oa SATURDAY, AUGUST 9, 1873, at 1 o'clock P. M., for the purpose of fixing the time of holding the Primary Election, and for the transaction of other important bui-iue.ss. A full attendance is requested. The following gentlemen compose the Com' to it tee : MiSintown Tl. D. Weller. S S. Wilson. Fermanagh S. W. Henderson, John Stoner. Fayette Michael Hoffman, J. B. McAIister. Monroe S. 0. Shellenberger, S. 8. Baaom. Greenwood Andrew Zeiders, Millard Wood ward. r-uquehanna flcnry Frymoyer, E. Long. TVaware J. M. Stutts. G. W. Smith Thotnrrontown J. M. Parker, J. Y. Shelley, Walker Jacob 8. Kickenbach. Sim'l Sieber, Ptteron P. 0. Rundio, O. W. Wilson. Milfotd B. S. Mumper, John Balsbach. Perrjaville J. H. Irwin, - Turbett S. B. Kitzman, W. W. tandis. Sr-rnee Hill H. P. Stewart, Shem Eah. Brale J. J. Patterson. Tuscarora Thos. Marrow, James Irwin. Lack J. M. Morrison. M. Stump. Black Log J. E. Mclntyre, J. H. Lane. JOHN BALSBACH, Chairman. Perrysville. July 20, 1S73. Accidcuts - The Beale Case." Accidents have exercised such a con ti oiling influence in determining definite roles in the administration of affairs among men, in governments, politics, science, religion and law, that lite thinker is almost compelled to ignore tbem as ac - ridents and accept them as part of the r law of the great Intelligence that gov - erns the universe. We do not hero tra verse the long historic vista for illustra tions in sunnnrt nf this nosition W - i r i w take a case familiar to all Juniata county people, and which, by a decision of the - Supreme Court of this Commonwealth, t has become a law to govern the traveling public at railroad crossings. i Oa a morning in the mouth of Septan 1871, Thomas Beale by accident , killed by a train cf cars at the lower crossing at Fatterson Station. Through the distress of this sad case no one even pupected that the traveling public would definitely learn its proper relationship to its own members. The widow of Mr. Beale instituted! legal proceedings for the recovery of damages for the loss of ber husband . D. Parker became her counsel in the Court of Common Pleas of this county. Last September the case was up for trial. L. W. Hall wes counsel for the K. R. Co., and rained the point that Beale had not (topped before driving on the track, and looked for danger, and therefore there could be no recovery. It was left to the jury to determine from the evidence whether the approach of the train could have been seen. . The jury found for the plaintiff in the sum of $1,000. The case went np to the Supreme Court with the following result, as delivered by Mr. Justice Sharswood. And thus through a paiuful accident in our midst, the whole Commonwealth has received a law to govern the traveling public at railroad crossings : ' The evidence of the plaintiffs below rliowed a clear case of contributory neg ligence in ihs deceased. The crossing at which he met with the injury which resulted in his death was a dangerous one, aud as he was well acquainted with it there was the greater reason that he thould exercise the ntmopt care and caution, by stopping at the railroad be fore undertaking to pass over. It is very clear that if he had done so bat a few minutes the accident would not have happened. "This evidence,"' said the learned judge in h'u chargp, "is uucon trodictcd, that there was a level piece of ground, about ten feet wide, between the hill or bluff and the fin t track or siding on the approach of the track from the valley, upon which the deceased was travelling " It was bin plain duty to Lave stopped at that place, and so the learned judge instructed the jury, but he qualified this instructiou by adding "if yoa find from the evidence that the ap proach of the trttin might have been seen or heard from there.,,"This in fact left the question of his negligence to the jury, upon a point not material. Indeed the duty of stopping is more manifest when an approaching train cannot be (teen or heard than where it can. If the view of track is unobstructed and no train is near or heard approaching it might perhaps be asked, why stop t In iuch a case there is no danger of colii- eion none take place and the sooner the traveler in a crocs the track the better. But the fact of collision shows the ne cessity there was of stopping . and there fore iu every case of collision the rale must be an unbending one. If the traveler cannot see the track by looking out, whether from fog or otber cause, he should get out, and if necessary lead his Lor atid wagon. A prudwit aud care ful man would always do this at such a place. In the Hanover Railroad Co. vs Coyle. 5 P. F. Smith, S96, the plaintiff, a peddler, in the depth of winter, was driving inside of his covered wagon with his head muffled up in a thick overcoat, and it appeared that a traveler passing in the direction he was going could not see np and down the track nntil within six teen feet of it. Yet these circumstances were not allowed to form any excuse for bis negligence iu omitting to stop. There never was a more important principle settled than that the fact of the failure to stop immediately before crossing a rail road track is not merely evidence of neg ligence for the jury but negligence per te and a question for the court. North Pennsylvania Railroad Co. vs. Heilman, 13 Wright. 60. It was important not so much to railroad companies as to the traveling public. Collisions of this char acter have often resulted in the loss of hundreds of valuable livea of passen gers on trains and they will do so again, if travelers crossing railroads are not taught their simple duty not to themselves only but tu others. The error' of sub mitting the question to the jury whether if the deceasod bad stopped he could have seen or heard the approaching train runs through the entire charge and an swers of the learned judge, below. He should upon the uncontradicted evidence have directed a verdict for the defen dants Judgment reversed. Prospects for Fall Trade. A few dnys ago we gave the latest approximate estimates ot the crop ot wheat now secured in California, and in conjunction with the prospects for a large crop in the Northwest estimated that the exportable surplus from this year's crops of that grain in the i-Miited States would be larger than ever before known There seems ecarce'y any doubt that this will prove to be the case. The great ques tion is : Will there be a rairkct for it ? On this point the New York Bulletin has apparently made a tolerably appre hensive investigation of the probable de mands of the great consumer, England, and of the probable supply from other sources than the United States, and arri ves at the following conclusions, printed in an editorial in its issue df the 12th in stant : Holland appears to be the only coun try iu Europe from which the crop ac counts are unexceptionable favorably. All the crops are doing well, and the wheat is described as magnificeut. In Germany the wheat crop had im proved, under the influence of the fine weather in June. It is not expected, however, that the crops at best can be more than a fair average. The stocks throughout Germany are extremely back ward, so much so that it was necessary to ship wheal from Danzig to West phalia, via Diet Jen and Bremen. At the same time, wheat shipments to Warsaw, a most unusual thiug, show that the stocks in the interior of Poland are utterly ex hausted . The condition of the crops in Russia is still serious, if not alarming. Dis patches from Taganrog report that bar ley, rye and hay are regarded as lost Improved weather was necessary to se cure even a partial wheat crop. All kinds of crops suffer iu Russia from a want of rain, while in Great Britain and on the Continent they are injured by an excees of moisture and cold Serious complaints are heard from Bessarabia and the Danubiau provinces. In the southern provinces of Russia the wheat prospects . are all that could be desired. The Bulletin says all reports of crops iu Hungary are unsatisfactory. In con firmation of this Mr. Bayard Taylor, in his last letter from Vienna to the New York Tribune says that to cap the climax of disasters in that part of Europe, be ginning with the Vienna panic, the rust has got into the Hungarian wheat crop, and it bids fair to be almost a total fail ure. The Bulletin sums up its survey of the European sources of supply by the conclusion that : The surplus of several grain produc ing countries will be so far reduced as to seriously diminish the quantity available for general consumption, a fact which is the more ominous in view of the increas ed requirements of England consequent on the certainty that the harvest in that country will fall before last year's defi cient product. It is even probable that England may find more than one Euro pean food exporting country in competi tion, with, her for a portion of the world's availabls supply of breadstuff. If this view of the case should prove correst, it promises an aera of prosperity for the United States in the probability ftbat there will be no falling off in the foreign demand for the large surplus of breadstuff in the United States. Every thing now promises a large crop of cot ton. In the market for the surplus of this crop the United States has fewer competitors than in the sale of breadsuffa and the probabilities are in favor of a fair foreign demand. As far, therefore, as the future can be forecast now, every thing indicates a favorable condition ot foreign trade this fall, with its concomi tants of a comparatively 'easy money market, active internal trade, and a lower average price for gold. Chicago Tri bunt. A despatch from Salt Lake City under date of the 2Cth announces the arrest of Katie Bender one of the Kansas gang. The arrest was made near Provo, by the sheriff of Utah county. There are more than in Jerusalem. Jews in New York Bum Hundred Miles Feet, BY riOF. i. D. BCTI.EB. Nils Nysten is a Swede and was born where his forefathers had been con tent with "only this and nothing more" To draw nutrition, propagate and rot" He aspired higher, but so low was his birth, and so strong the barriers around him. that be was three score years old before he could work Vis pas sage to America. Three years, ago he reached Iowa, with his wile, ana pen niless, stopping first in Mount Pleasant. While work ice there at his trade of - a wagoBmaking, be became convinced that his best means of further advancement was to secure a Nebraska Homestead His mode of making this boon hit own, is worth telling to encourage others HOW HB DID IT ? He walked from his home th Lincolu, 307 miles alone the track of the Bur lington & Missouri River Railroad This iouruev he accomplished in about fifteen days. . At Lincoln he found she! ter in the Immigrant' Rest, a building provided by the B. & M railroad where land hunters may lodge and live without charge while seeking farms. Looking at. the maps of public lands in the Uuited States Land Office there, be judged York county to afford the most desirable homesteads. He there fore walked on thither seventy miles further. Having picked out the farm which luittd him best of all those still vacant he returned to the land office and filed his claim to it, September 2d, 1871, paying $14 in fees. His homestead con sists of 80 acres, in the 34:h section of the 11th township in the 3 i rango west. of the 6th principal meridian. WIIAT. TtjKN ! Repairing again to the farm of bis choice he made sundry improvements for a month. He finished him a dug-out and stacked twelve tons of wild hay. His purse was now empty, save one dollar aud a half, but he walked to Lin coln, and thence home as he walked hither, daily laying behind hira abont twenty miles. Soon after reaching home, at the end of a nine hundred mile walk, he learned that his hay stacks had been burned by a prairie fire having no plow, he had been unable to make a fire-break around them But throughout all, he seems to have lost nothing of heart or hope, and to have remained as jolly as Mark Tap ley in Dhuzzlewit. Through the winter he worked at his trade sometimes beginning his toils at two o'clock in the morning. Thus he finished three good wagons. Two he traded off each for a mule and harness Then putting on board his wife, a barrel of pork, a barrow, all of wood, made by himself, and some other needments, be drove westward, by the same route which he-bad the last fall traveled on foot. He took with him three other Scan dinavian Homestead hunters, each with a wagon aud his family in it. lie arrived at Lincoln in dun time ; rested a little among the old familiar hos pitalities for strangers, afforded gratuit ously by the B. & M. railroad, through the whole sonled keeper John Frost, and on the 21st of March 1S72, in spite of an equiuoctial wind, set his face towards his homestead. His journey thither can hardly require more than three days, but, as he must needs be there before the first day of April, or be egregiously April-fooled, by forfeiting his furm, he resolved to make assurance doubly sure. Hence he took time by the forelock. Nils Nysten is sixty-two years old, though he declares himself only forty when just shaved. His example shows what others can do. It shames many faint hearts that are weeping like woman for lack of a farm, which they have the privilege of seizing, like men, had they only Tflanly pluck. Nils Nysten's homestead was one of 12 304 which had been entered in the Lincoln United States Land office, before last New Year's. Up to the same date the Burlington and Missouri River rail road, along which Nysten walked, had sold along their track 47S 988 acres, to 4,525 purchasers, on ten years credit, six per cent interest, and on sales made since 1872 nothing of the priucipal falls due until the end of the fourth year, with twenty per cent, thrown off for prompt improvement. He who cannot on these terms make a farm pay for itself, does not deserve one. An Act of Cruelty. Chapped hands and face are the most serious annoyances that farmers, and people who labor much out of doors, ex perience from exposure. Exposed per sons, especially children, repeated suffer intensely from the great cracks upon the hands, that often bleed. It is cruel to allow one's self or others to suffer in this way, when the means of positive pre vention are so easy to be had, and so cheaply, as to pay ten cents for a cake of Hand Sapolio. Hand Sapolio is not oaly better than the cosliest soap for re moving dirt, but it prevents chapping, and renders the skin soft and pliable. Sold everywhere. A duel was fought near Augusta, Ga last Friday evening. The pistols were loaded only with powder, which fact was unknown to the challenging party. After an exchange of shots, honor was satisfied and the party returned home. SlNCB our last issue Baltimore has been afflicted with a great fire that de stroyed one million dollars worth of property. It is stated as a faet that there are more youths in the south receiving a mil itary education at this time thin there are in the north. Marfan for Matey. In one of our telegraphic dispatches yesterday morning brief reference was made to the murder of Isabella M'Bride, an aged lady, several miles from Wil- liamsporVand the terrible beating of her husband. Since then we hare obtained the following particulars of the horrible butchery and the object which impelled its perpetration : In a firm house near -Linden, about four miles and a half from Williamspcrt, equi distant from the Phil adelphia and Erie railroad and a public road, resided a couple aged about seven ty-five years. The building is located about 300 yards from the railroad and can be plainly seen by passengers on the various trains which pass that point. The house is. reached from the public road by a lane, and no habitation is with in 300 or 400 yards of the place. The couple were known as quiet and unab trusive people and possessed no social qualities. They had few visitors and abataiued from calling on others unless absolutely necessary. They had lived at the spot for many years and were the owners of two large farms in the neigh borhood. Beside it was generally be Iiuved that they had secreted in the house a large quantity of gold some placing the figure as high as $25,000. It was known that two wealthy bach elor brothers of the wife had died, at the place and bequeathed their possessions to the aged couple which added to their frugalityand other circumstances caused mem to De regarded as among the most affluent residents of the countrv. The knowledge that the house contained but two occupants, aud they old and fecbla. and that thousands of dollars of cold were supposed to be in their possession was communicated to a brakeman on the Philadelphia and Erie Railroad named Nelson Wade years ago, and on Tuesday evening he carried into execution the diabolical design which he had doubtless nourisnea tor a long period, t he man and wife were just making preparations to eat their supper, the edibles having already been placed on the table ; when a visitor suddenly made his appearance. Mrs. M'Bride had gone toward the cellar on the outside with a crock of milk, and the door leading to the base ment being closed she placed the earthen vessel on the doorstep. As she proceed ed to open the cellar door she was vio lently assaulted with a club by the stranger, and although pleading for mercy the monster continued his brutal aud cowardly attacks ou the unprotected women nntil she lay weltering in her blood and death ensued. This fiendish t accomplished Wade took the club with which he had murdered Mrs. M Bride and with the blood dripping from it rush ed into the house and applied it to the head of the husband until he had sup posed he had killed hira. He was now master of tbo Jerrible situation and com menced a search for the gold which he thought was in the house. He succeed ed in obtaining, it is said, about $9,000, when he quit the scene of his terrible work. THE SITUATION DISCOVBEED. Although the murder was committed on Tuesday evening, it was not known by any person but the assassin and rob ber nntil near noon on Wednesday when some one had occasion to go to the house and found Mrs. M'Bride covered with gore, her skull fractured, her features generally distorted and her inanimate form lying where she had been. stricken down by the murd erer. The crock of milk which she had placed ou the door step seemed to have been untouched. The startled and horrified discoverer of the woman's fate then entered the house, where he found Mr. M'Bride still breath ing but perfectly unconscious His bead bore abundant evidence of having been violently beaten, and his face, hands and clothing were Btained with blood, while the floor contained" considerable quanti ties of coagulated gore. THE TERRIBLE .BWS SPREADING. Soon after the nearer neighbors were informed of the tragedy, and by afternoon hundreds of people on foot and in car risges were hurrying to the scene. The most intense excitement prevailed, and those who witnessed the bloody corps of Mrs.McBride and her almost dead hus band were filled with indignation against the murderer and threats of lynching were freely made. The country for miles was scoured by parties in search of the assassin. THE TELL-TALB OOLD THB MUBDEBEB CAUOUT IN A BROTHEL. On Wednesday night a man apparently intoxicated and with a swaggering air entered a house of prostitution in Wil liamsport and was very extravagant in the expenditure of his money. He ex hibited more gold coin than is ordinarily possessed by individual, and the mistress of the house, having been informed of the murder near Linden and of the sup posed robbery of gold, began to suspect the visitor as the guilty party and slipp ed to the outside and communicated her suspicions to the police authorities of Williamsport. Tbey soon made their appearance at the house and took the man into custody. He was examined, and in his pockets were found about $9,000 in gold. He offered no resistance to the officers, and after a brief interval confessed that he had committed the murder and stolen the gold after the per petration of the crime, besides making revelations as to how he had proceeded about the bloody business. The fiend is now in irons in the Lycoming county prison, from which he will not emerge until he is brought out for trial. THE CONDITION OF MB. M'BRIDE. ... Yesterday morning the condition of Mr M'Bride, who received the brutal treatment at the hands of Wade, teemed to be somewhat improved, but he had not yet been restored to sensibility. .The severe injuries complicated his enfeebled constitution are almost certain to lead to his death Harriibung Patriot, July 25th. Jt PULL CONVBSBION or NEL80 E.'WADE, THB MURDERER. We have given the particular of the nnrder of Mrs. Isabella McBride. and the probable fatal wounding of her hus band, John McBride, near Linden, Ly coming county, on Tuesday last week. We now present the confession of Wade the murderer, which is as follows : "I am American born and have rehv tives living near hye ; I was born out on the Blooming Grove road, beyond the Poor House ; the afternoon I committed the murder, I walked up the tow path from the city ; went to McBride's house and calculated that it was about the time they had done their milking ; last win ter when I was at Glosser's near by Mrs. Glosser told me of the trunk np stairs ; and while I was there last win ter I made it my business to find out bow much money these old folks had. On reaching the house on Tuesday after noon, I was met in the yard by one of the dogs which barked at me. I soon made np with him and walked into the house, when M'Bride wanted to know what I wanted there : I told him I wanted a drink of milk, when he told me to go to the cellar where the old lady was ; she asked me if I had money to pay for the milk ; from the cellar I re-, turned to ask the old man for somelfread but found he had bolted the door ; when he uubolted it I shoved my foot in and the old man struck at me ; I then knock ed him down with my fist ; the dog then made at nut and I knocked him down. I then struck the old man with the stick three times, when be cried murder ; I then hit him another rap with the club ; I then went to the cellar and struck the old woman ; but. as I have told you sev eral times, I did not eboot her, as I had no pistol, but bought one at Trout's yes terday. When I came out of the .cellar after killing the old woman, the old man was up and the dog was licking the blood ofl his hands ; I then hit him again I then procurrcd an axe went up stairs and broke open a chest and found the trunk I had heard Mrs. Glosser talk about ; it was too heavy and I made two trips that night carrying away the mon ey. The club I used was cut in the woods near by with a small j ick kuife. If they will look in the coi nfield they will find where the grass is ttatnplcd down, that is where I looked over the money. I got between sixty and seventy thousand dollars. I will not tell where it is. When I come to die, I will tell some poor man where it is ; but uo rich roan shall have it- There are two bags buri ed in the city two above, and two oe- low. "I have bad fifty names in my life time, but kelson h. Wade is my right name ; where 1 to Uo tnis over agsin 1 would exchange all the silver for paper money ; that's what bothered me, it was so heavy." Sheriff Piatt then remarked to him, 'you must have nerve to do this deed,'" when he replied : Yes, sir, I am harden ed. When a child I dreaded the word murder, but after going through the re bellion, and on the frontier with Kit Car son and others, I shrink not at any crime : They may take me out and hang me to morrow ; I have only once to die ; I have killed several women before this one ; in regard to tbe money 1 got ex changed otic hundred and eighty dollars in twenty dollar gold pieces at one of tbe banks in the city, aud got fifteen per cent, for it. They asked me where I got it. I told them I was a cattle specu lator from Canada. Terrible Visitation of the Cholera at Mt. Vernon, Indiana. Mt. Vernon (July 18) Correspondence of (be x.vnsvuie journal. j To give yon some idea of the ruin that has followed close upon the heels of this "demon of the Ganges," I will cite a few cases. In a family named Bell two are left alive out of seven persons : in one named Hovey, relations of General Hovey, two died ; in that of Sheldens, four deaths. In that of the Woodeys, proprietors of the foundry, the utmost havoc was made. One of the proprietors died. In his brother's family a wife and two children were buried, and so great was the excitement and fright that, I am told, the husband had to prepare the bodies for the tomb. In their father's family all but two were buried. These are individual cases. But I failed to find a single person who has not had cholera symptoms, more or less violent in their effects. Every house is pervsded with the odors of disinfectants , every person smells ot assatcetida and cam phor ; everything possible has been done to stay tbe disease. Rosin, pine, tar, and coal were burned by orders of the Board of Health, so that one could feel the heat all over the place. From my room at midnight I could hear the noises of fu nerals. They were compelled to bury the black corpses at these hours in the hope of partly concealing the havoe and preventing contagion from the stench. You cannot understand to what extrem ities the citizens and families have been driven. Medical aid was insufficient. Yet the physicians have all acted- hero ically with a, single exception, whose leaving with his family has excited a storm of iudignation ; but up till to-day he had worked bard. Scarcely a business house waa open today; the streets were deserted, the banks closed, and the depot thronged :.. .;;aia fl;n I think at least wimb n 700 persons have left to-day alone. Peo ple living in the lower land, or flats'; and who Cave been unable to leave, have re moved to storerooms and warehouses, hoping to escape. No place of the di mensions of this in the west has ever had sucban experience, and the loss of life, ereat as it has been, is enhanced by the loss of trade and decay of business. Every one will mark the July of 1873 as tbe most calamitous in the town s bis tory, and .the tombstones will tell of the ravages long after those who survived the plague shall have been forgotten. Tbe town has had the reputation of being as healthy as EvansviIIe, and one of the most healthy of Southern Indiana Tbe adioing tracts are not swampy, and tbe bluff on which a part of the city is built is the highest between bvansville and Cairo. Some attribute it to .the use of well-water; but every house has a cistern, from which the water for cooking and drinking is obtained, and the water of wells was probably used here' less even than in other places. It is certain, however, that it came in spite of cleauli- ness and the application of scientific truths. SHOBTiTEMS. Vanderbilt is nearly eighty, and never drank liquor. More thau 4,000 people were married in San Francisco last year. A ton of hay 'sells in Buffalo for twice as much as a ton of corn. Ice two feet thick was discovered in one of the Hartford sewers a few days ago. The Shah has resisted all invitations thus far to leave Lis $1,000,000 overcoat on a bat-rack. It is said that Plymouth Church has SI7.0GC on deposit' in the Brooalyn Tru?t Company. A number of saloon keepers in Altoo na have been held to answer for infrac tions of the Local Option law. The Beaver Falls Cotton Works em ploy six hundred hands and produce twenty thousand yards per day. The Hon. Asa Packer, of Pennsylva nia, has given $1,000 000 and fifty six acres of land to the Lahigh University. The territory occur, ied by coke barn- era in Westmoreland county is five miles wide and fifteen long. Tbe number of ovens aggregate 3,550. A Massachusetts woman went before a justice the other day and swore that a neighbor woman had bewitched her into having cramps and spasms. Some Nevada miners, who were drill ing at a depth of fourteen hundred feet. recently tapped a vein of water so hot that they boiled eggs in it. Tbe people of Lebanon, Ind , tore down a house of ill repute, recently, and are determined to do the same with others, unless the inmates leave the town. A dispatch from St. Joseph, Mo., says that the Iowa train robbers are believed to have been traced into Nodoway coun ty, Missouri, and it is thought they will be captured. A Green Bay man, named Chester, has requested tbe President to let bim have the hanging of the Modocs. He will furnish ropes and bear his own trav eling expenses.' The Courier-Journal vouches for the fact that a Kentucky widow was hauled to her husband's funeral the other day by the same mule that kicked the breath out of his body. An Iowa girl has been arrested and held for trial on a charge of twice at tempting to poison her father. She says her father attempted to ruin her since the death of her mother. A St. Louis man advertises that, his wife having left him without provocation after two weeks of married life, "he shall consider himself parted should the same not return within three days." Tbe first white woman hanged in Geor gia was named Eberhart, and she was executed in 17S5. The last one also bore the same name, and the Eberharts talk of emigrating from that State. A little boy was caught in the gearing of a patent churn, at Clinton, Wisconsin, the otber day, and though bis scream was first rate, he failed to make good bntter. At Mount Sidney, Va , recently, a' blind horse stumbled against a hive of bees and knocked it over. Tbe bees at once attacked the poor animal and stung him so severely that he died in a few hours. When a wife in Turkey forgets to keep the suspender buttons sewed on her hus band's trowers she is patted on the back for half an hour with a pine board an inch thick. Gov. Brown, of Tennessee, has com muted the sentence of Sturgeon, sen tenced to death for the murder of John ny Murphy, to imprisonment for life at hard labor. One of H. A. Meloy & Co.'s . powder mills, near Tamaqua, Pa , was blown np on Monday morning a week, and Sam uel Miller, of Tamaqua, killed. The ohock was felt for several miles. Francis Gustave Colberg. a natural son of the late King of Sweden and half brother to King Oscar, has been arrested in New York and held on a charge of smuggling kid gloves. A mongage for $799, upon which 18 months' interest had accumulated, was declared null and void at Lyons, N. Y recently, on tbe ground that $25 paid for services in procuring the money for which the mortgage was given constituted usury. griv fMvtttismtvts. Hotioe to Settle Tp. THE books and accounts of John C. Doyle from the 20th of April, 1872, to April 20tb, 183, have been placed in my haada for collection All persons interested are re quested to coma forward immediately aai make settlement. -. J GEORGE GOSHEN. - July 25, 1873-ai Caution. ALL persona are Lerebj cau'toced agaiaat hunting or in any other way trespaaatag on th lands of the undersigned la Walker and Fermanagh lovcahip. All perroa a offending wilt be dealt with to th full ex tent of tbe law. Daniel StouCer. Amos Slouffer. Jonas Kauffman. David Diven. Daniel Auker. John Gingrich. Jamoj Adama. Joseph Dysiager. Alton Adams. David Kurtz. William Adam. Joseph Rothroek. Daniel Sieber. ilinbael Sieber. July SO, 1878. w ILMIN-QTON AND ft B A D 1 9 Q ' RAILROAD - 7 PER CEST. BONDS, FREE OF TAXES. WE ARE OFFERING SECOND MORTGAGE BONDS or THIS COMPAJtY AT 83 ulSD ACCRUED INTEREST. Interest payable January and July. THE BO?DS ARK IN lj)00, 50CU AND 100s, . ' ADD CAN BE REGISTERED FREE - OF EXPENSE. THE COAL, MISCELLANEOUS FREIGHT AND PASSENGER BUSINESS it! , CONSTANTLY INCREASING. Th increas for y ear ending No vember I. 11 2, over year end ins November 1, 1871 S7I.295.37 The increase for year ending No vember I, 1871, over year end ing November 1, 187,0 ... 79.773.52 Increase in two years $161,074.60 Increase for firet six (8) month. laid, over hret aia (b) months, 1872 $22,710.76 Bonds, pamphlets, maps and fall ir forma tion can be obtained of DE HA VEX & BRO , 40 SOUTH THIRD STREET, JulySG PHILADELPHIA. Trial List for September Term, 1873. 1 State Bank vs. Neal McCoy. 2 Joaeph Rothroek, Ez'r of R C Gallahtr. deo'd, vs. Noah A Elder. 8 Jacob Droleabaugb v John Peck. 4 Joseph L Rarner v Daniel Mingle. 6 John W Stonebreaker vs Sam'l Lauvor. Same vs same. 7 Jonas Alexander vs Samuel Alexander. 8 Joseph Rothroek, Ex'r of R C Gallaher, dee'd, vs Cornelius McClellan. 9 R E Parker, endorsee of John H Clay, tit ff Do'y, Adm'r of John Robiaon. deed. 10 West ey Tocmy vs 8 B Carenv at al. 11 B G Powell vs Simon B. Albright. 12 Mary A Tyson v Joaeph Blanchard'.- 13 John Varner vs Isaac Pile. 1 1 John S Lukene, Adm'r of T W Lnkena. dee'd, vs Irvia D Wallis, Ex'r of Jemima J Lukens, dee'd. IS Jacob Drolcsbaugh vs Anthony Hock enbury. IS Joseph Bell, foraia, vs Administrator of L Uoughawout, dee'd. 17 John Wilson vs .Mich ail Bare. 18 Samuel Dimm vs William Cox. 19 Jacob King v-Stephen Winters. 20 John S Lukens va DaviJ Shnman. 21 Joseph Blanchard Christian Lanver. 22 William Pry vs John Pry et al 23 George T Frev vs Jacob Sbelloy. et al. 24 J M A- E M Hibba v Jacob Shelley et al. 25 Jeremiah Brnner vs Jacob Shelley et al. 20 -Catharine Fiey et al vs Jacob Shelley, et al. 27 C W Flemminz, for nse, va Jacob Bel dler. 23 William Carl vs Jacob Watt. 29 George M Graham va Overseers of Tar bett township. 30 Joseph L Barner vs Am Milter. 81 Margaret M Hunter vs H R Shearer. 32 William Given vs Wilber MoCahan. , 31 David Sechriet v Amos Snyder. 34 J English West vs J M Lane. S5 Nieodemus Brocius. for use, va Absa lom Barner, Adm'r of Nicholas Brocius, da ceased. 3t William M Allison vs Absalom Baroerv Aim'r of Nicholas Brocius. dee'd. IRTIX D. WALLIS, ProlA'y. Prothonotary' Office. Mifflin-1 town, July SO, 1873. J ' To Contractors and Builders. SEALED PROPOSALS will be received by tbe Commissionera of the oounty of Ju niata, at their office in Mifllintown. nntil on o'clock P. M. on MONDAY, AUGUST 11th, 1873, for the erection and enlargement cf a Court House in said town. Proposaia moat state :he sum in gross for furnishing all the materials, except the brick, and doing all the work according to th plan and specifica tions of tbe same. , The Commissioners reserve th right to reject all or any of tbe bid which they shall consider incompatible with the interests of tbe county. Plan and specifications can be seen at the Commissioners' office on and after th 28th, day of July, 1873. WILLIAM ULSIT. WM. VAN SWERINGEN, DAVID B. DIMM. Attest : Commit tioiurt. James Dkak, Clerk. N. B Bidders will hold themselves lev readiness to enter into a bond with security on the day or the letting, for the faithful performance of the oontraot, if the same is awarded to them. July 16, 1873. Administratrix's Notice. Ettate of Jacob M. Click, dectmi. Ml HE undersigned, to whom Letters of Ad- 1. ministration on the estate of Jacob M. Cleck, late of Walker township dee'd., have been duly granted aecurdiog 10 law, hereby give notice to all persons indebted to said estate to come forward and make payment. and thos having claims against it. to pre sent them properlv authenticate! for settle ment. SUSANNAH CLECK. Adm'r. July 23, 1873-fit - Caution. ALL-person are hereby cautioned against hunting or gathering berries, or in ires passing in any way on tbe lands f the un dersigned in Fermanagh township. All per sons so offending will be dealt with to the full extent of tho law. EMANUEL MOVER DAVID RENNO. MICHAEL STONER. JOHN RENNO. ABRAHAM STOSER. JOHN BYLEK. July 23, 1873. CAUTION. ALL persons are hereby cautioned against trespassing by hunting, or in any ohr way, on th farm on which I reside in Fer managh tnwnahin. All nersons offending will be dealt with the full extent of the law. WILSON BOBiaua. ..Caution. ALL persons are hereby eauttoned against Hunting, Fishing, or in any way tres passing oa the farm occupied by th under unrnnt tnwnahin. All nerson so effendlaB will He dealt with te th fall extent of tb lw. jvofirn u