THE TIMES, NEW BLOOMFIELD, PA, JANUAIIY 23, 1877. TiHE TIMES. NOTICB TO AHVKRTIHKllS. Ho Cnt or StiTo"lvp will tv Inn.rud 111 thla irr nlmn llffht ftw aud on nirtal rwTwmty por ""' "i " of wil" in'". will ba ohanrcd for advurttapmpnt ask In Dimhlu Column. NOTICE to nunHt'immiM. t,mh at tlii- flirinvn on ttii lt1 nf rrtur rmpr, ThnKi- iu-iiri ti ll inn ttie Hme f vliloh your mib arfiptlnil la ItAld. V ttliln i vn'kr attir money i eul, II the dale la ihi)Kicl. Nu other rxit ta DPOPHHary. enAtoii CitA-VFORD,WrllipIense nc , cept awr thanks, for public documents. IIon.(ko.'F. IIoau, hnsheen elected United States Senator from Massachuctts to -succeed Mr. Boutwell. St. Paul, Minn., January 10. Hon. W. "Windoiu -was to-day re-olected to the United States senate. The Philadelphia Timet says a gener oueiniknowH person dropped an envel ope containing $500 into the collection basket at the Eleventh street "Methodist Episcopal-church on Sunday 'morning. At Pottsville hist week the jury In the caee-of. Jack Kehoe, county dele gate and a prominent leader In the Mol ly Magulresin the Bchuylklll region, on trial there for the murder of F. W. 8. Lnngdon, at Audenrled, in 1802, brought In a verdict of murder in the -.first de gree. Six Tons of Gold. Baltimore and Ohio Railroad coach 277, which arrived In Jersey City recent ly, contained $3,000,000 in twenty-dollar gold pieces, the whole weighing six tons. The gold Wcs contained In fourteen iron safes, and was accompanied by eight clerks of the Treasury Department and Capt,, George F. Trice, of thel'ifth Cav alry, and eight selected men. Extensive Counterfeiting. A St. Louis dispatch snys,: .Several counterfeit $1000 bills have been ifjoating about in St. Louis lately. A few days ago a strangor'ik'poslted two of them at the Valley National Dank, where they were received -without suspicion. This bank subsequently paid out one of them to the Mechanics' Bunk and the other to the German Havings Bank, the " queer" money passing over the coun ters of each without exciting the Coast distrust. The latter-named bank paid out the one received by It to a lady cus tomer In Illinois. It seems that Treas ury detectives were In trace of these Identical bills and -through their efforts the revelation has been brought about that both of the bills are spurious. Zt subsequently transpired that the stran ger who matle the deposit hail previous ly endeavored to have the money ehang od at various other banks, and had even been bo bold as to offer them at the Sub Treasury for the purpose. The bills are dated in 1862, and it in supposed were printed from the plates which gave so much trouble in that year, and which were thought to have been thrown into New York harbor about that time. The bills are ingeniously executed, and could not be detected except by an x pert. Counting the Electoral Vote The Plan of Arbitration. The Joint Committee on Compromise has finally agreed. The plan Adopted Is that of a count by tellers ; no rejection of a Btate except by the vote of both houses, and a board of arbitration to settle questions when the houses cannot agree. The votes are to be compiled by the tellers and the tally reported by them to the President of the Senate, who is to announce the result. When the votes from any State are unquestioned they are to be counted exactly as received. If the vote from any State is objected to by a member of either house, the two houses are to separate, and, after a brief discussion, are to pass upon the recep tion of the votes. No vote Is to be re jected without the concurrence of both houses in all cases. When two or more sets of returns have been received from any State they are all to be opened by the President of the Senate, and the houses, voting sepa rately, are to determine which of them, if either, shall be counted. If both houses decide to count any one of these votes, then they shall be compiled by the tellers. If both bouses agree to re ject all, then no vote from the State shall be compiled by the tellers. But If the houses disagree in their selection of the return to be received, then all questions of law connected with the returns from that Btate are to be submitted to a board of arbitration consisting of fifteen mem hers and constituted as follows : Five Senators, to be appointed by the President of the Senate, five Representa tives appointed by the Speaker of the House, and four Judges, two of whom are supposed to sympathize with the Republicans and two whose bearing is supposed to be toward the Democracy. They will be named in the bill. The Judges are to select a fifth justice, whose appointment will complete the board of arbitration. " The four associate Justices who will constitute part of the commission, and who are designated by the circuit over which they preside, are Nathan ClUIbrd, of Maine; Samuel F. Miller, of Iowa; Stephen J. Field, of California, and William Strong, of. Pennsylvania. The other four associate Justices, one of whom will be selected to complete the commission, are Noah II. Swaync, of Ohio; David Davis, of Illinois; Joseph P. Bradley, of New Jersey, and Ward Hunt, of New York." The Ice Break at Pittsburgh. The damage caused to property by the breaking of the Ice gorge in the Monon gahela on Saturday night a week is enor mous. The flood bearing the huge fields of Ice reached Pittsburgh about six o'clock on Suntlay morning and bells were rung and steam whistles sounded giving the alarm and rousing the citizens from their beds. In a few moments the banks of the river were crowded with thousands of spectators watching the irreslstable rush of the waters and the powers of the crushing masses of ice. Everything gave way before the advancing volume and the mighty crest surmounting it, except the bridge piers, and the tug-boats which happened to bo securely fastened to the shore. Securely held In the em brace of these vast fields of Ice were to be seen coal barges, houses, wooden docks, and the cabins of two boats and steamers all moving on to inevitable de struction. The sight, as described by the Pittsburgh papers, must have been a grand and at the sume time an awfully impressive one. Fortunately the loss of life whs small, but one man having been lost so fur as known. The tele graph apprised the river-men at difler ent points below of the breaking of the gorge above, nntl this prevented a great calamity, as they were enabled to bo on the look-out for the approaching flood. The pecuniary losses, however, are very heavy, hundreds of barges loaded with coal having been swept away from their moorings ami sunk, while a number of tow-boats, steamers, empty barges and other river craft were either wholly de stroyed or badly damngod. Roughly es timated, the losses to river-men are put down nt $2,500,000 while the conl inter ests arc believed to have suffered to the extent of $10,000,000. From every town almost on the Ohio, from Pittsburgh to its mouth, the news shows an immense destruction of property, and the total amount of damage done by this terrible ice-flood will not be fully known for some time to come. A Case For Investigation. Miltox, Mass., January 10. A most terrible cuse of parental cruelty, disclos ing the imprisonment and neglect for seventeen years of an idiotic son and the probable murder of another, has set this usually quiet borough into an intense fever of excitement. As the story goes, .about seventeen years ago a quarrel oc curred in the family of Joslah Fields, by occupation a laborer.in which the father, mother and several sons participated. In the course of the dispute Joslah, Jr., hardly of age, offended his father by his continued obstinacy, and the latter,as is supposed, struck the boy a severe blow, inflicting upon him some permanent in jury. In order to prevent the discovery of the deed the wounded lad.it isalleged, was locked In a chamber. The sudden disappearance; of the lad was accounted for in various ways by the people of the neighborhood, the family giving out that the boy had run away. Last Satur day one of the sons died and the privacy of the family was invaded. One lady going to a room, from which an almost over-powering stench emanated, hud the curiosity to unlock the door and peer In. Her testimony is to the effect that a strange man n All fours, naked, with long hair and bcatd, ran at her uttering gutteral sounds, and being apparently unable to speak distinctly. A' general alarm followed. The matter was noised about town and the creature wallowing in his own filth was readily associated with the long-missing son, Joslah, Jr. So much excitement was occasioned that the select men of the town thought it their duty to investigate tlie affair. On Saturday they called in a body, but were fequested to postpone tbeirlnvestigatlon until Monday. On the morning named Colonel Henry W. Russell waited on the family and found a poor, half-witted fellow, sallow in complexion from his long confinement, with a nicely shaven face and ciopped head. It turned out upon further investiga tion that during the Interval between Saturday and Monday the inhuman pa rents had their son shaved and put in presentable shape. His appearance now is of an ordinary man, who stoops slight ly, and bas a very sallow complexion and, what Is peculiar, be Is quite stout. Of late be has been seen at the windows of houses with blankets wrapped around him, and this gave rise to the story of a " wild man" roving about the woods. The family assign no reason for having kept him concealed all these years and will not allow him to be seen by any one at the present time. . What Bdds to the1 terror of the forego ing story is the fnct that anotherson has Also been missing for upward of sixteen years, and at the time of his disappear ance an old well near the house was sud denly filled up. The wildest excitement prevails here, and pending the digging out of the well the Fields family are un der survelllanoe. . a.... A Drunken Man Shot Dead. David Mundell, residing near Bryn Mawr, a shoemaker by trade, was shot dead last week whilst resisting arrest for drunkenness and disorderly conduct. Mundell had been drinking to cxccss,and on Sunday went to the house of Mr. Sayen, with whom his daughter lived as child's nurse, and demanded that she should go home. Mr. Sayen deemed it unwise to let the daughter comply. Mun dell made some very serious threats against the life of Mr. Sayen. A war rant was Issued and officer Lltzenberg, securing the services of three other offi cers, proceeded to arrest Mundell, who placed himself on the stairway of his house and defended himself with acorn cuttcr. After using every effort to secure him, without avail, the officers fired sev eral shots, aiming at his legs, with the intention of crippling him. Mundell finally received a bullet in the forehead, killing him Instantly. It Is not known which of the officers fired the fatal shot. A Trotting Team of Oxen. The Cheyenne Leader says : Dexter the tamer of boviues created a great sensation on the streets yestertlay by ap pearing in a carriage drawn by four milk white oxen, all In harness and driven tandem. The gay and festive looking beasts pranced ulong in fine style " heads up and tails a risln'," us our John would say. Governor Thayer wus invited to take a ride, and was driven about for some time by Dexter. Other gentlemen also enjoyed the novelty. Dexter snys that either of his oxen can trot a mile in 3:47. He offers to bet any amount of money that he can load a wagon with 4,500 pounds of freight, attach his four oxen, and make better time to Deadwood than any four-horse or mule team with the same loud can possibly do. Had to Back Out. A curious incident occurred in Woods town, N. J., lust Thursday. Two butch ers were driving a wild steer up Muln street, and at Riley's building the ani mal darted Into the doorway leading up to Slape's law office and the lodge rooms, and actually climbed the stairs and halted on the second story lunding. Some one had to get in at a back window, open one of the doors and back the steer down stnlrs. He got out without doing any damage. C"A Montreal dispatch says the Dclisle Village municipal election on Wednesday terminated in a brutal free fight, In which some forty men were engaged. The town hall was complete ly sacked and the polling booth wrecked. The French-Canadian roughs would not allow the English to vote, and conse quently all the French candidates are elected. Auotjsta, Me., January 16. Hon. James U. Blaine has been elected United States Senator by the legislature for the short term ending March 4, and for the long term ending in 1883. The vote in the Senate stood : Blaine, 20 ; Halnes,2; absent, 2. In the House: Blaine, 113; Haines, 86 ; absent, 0. New York, January 16. J. Milton Turner, colored, United States minister to Liberia, has commenced a suit for damagesunder thecivil rights bill against the proprietors of the Astor house, for refusing to let him have rooms in their hotel. KiT Berks county calathumplans are not appreciated by young married men, and eighteen members of one of - these " Gideon bands" have been indicted for disturbing the slumbers of a Benedict and his bride. , Philadelphia, Jan. 16. An exami nation of the accounts of the late Gener al Bankson, who recently committed su. icide, shows a defalcation amounting to $150,000. OUR WASHINGTON LETTER. Washington, D. C, Jan. 18tb, 1877. The Woman Suffrage convention ' has been held in tbis city during the last two days and your lady readers, at least, will be interested in some account of prom inent women whose names have become familiar to ua all through the newspapers and through the books they have written. I must begin, of course, with Elisabeth Cady Stanton, President and oldest mem, her of the association, a sweet, motherly looking old lady, very like the clotures wo see of ber but much more lovely and charming !n her appearance because of ber color which cannot be represented by an engraving, and which is as smooth and pink, and fresh almost as a baby's. I think she ought to be called "Mother Stanton." One cannot look at her with Out thinking of the word. Bbe Is quits portly, (moving with majesty lather thau clumsiness. Her hair is white as wool and she wears it in a high coil at the back, puffed In front and ornamented only with a black lace barbe. She Is evidently the leading spirit among the Huffrsglits, though Busan B. Anthony might seem to rival ber In this. The lust named lady in as nearly the reverse of " Mother Btaoton" as can well be Imacluod. Tttll, gaunt.bony.angu larand awkward, stooping a little and wearing enormous shining spectacles, her appearance is enough to intimidate any one man who dare oppose lior when she Is In earnest. She Is a strong thinking, In telligent woman, however, evidently well, rond and acquainted with the world. Miss Anthony insisted upon voting Inst fall in New York, for which ofTbiice she was ar rested and fined a hundred dollars. The paytneut of this fins bas never been ex acted but is filed against ber. Mrs. BwIbs holm, from Pennsylvania, for many years editress and proprietress of a Pittsburgh newspaper, and by whose means the bill, giving married women the right to bold property in their own names, was passed some years ago In that State, spoke very ably on the first day of the convention, rather reproving the harangues that h ad previously been made about and against the men, saying "God bless the men I They've always pi need their strong breasts between ns and life's rudest, roughest burdens 1 And they'll always have it to do. They're willing to! I can't scold thorn muoh I" Mrs. Matilda Josslyn Gage is another of the veterans in the city this week. She and Mrs. Slautnn and Miss Anthony are the only ones of the original movers in the cause who Bre now left. Mrs. Htiinton re marked this yesterday, and said she hoped they should not have to enter the kiugciom of Heaven disfranchised, but If it must be so and she feared it would be her own case nt least they could but hope for good fruit from the seed they had sown and are sow ing. Mrs. Lockwood, Att'y at Law, and Dr. Mary Walker, both of Washington, spoke on the second day. Mrs. Lockwood bas her own Individual grlevanoe as do most of these good ladles, iu fact in that she was lately refused admittance to the bar of the United States Supreme Court. She introduced a petition in Congress this week for the removal of legal disabilities of women, which was roBd In the House, referred to tho judiciary Committee, and ordered printed. Dr. Mary Walker was the only one of the suffragists who appear ed in anything like a lieform Costume." Blie wore her usual dress, boots and panta loons o la masculine gender and outer gar ment a sort of half-fitting frock reaching hardly to the knee. This lady is quit a determined character in her way. Last evening, the Inst session held by the associ ation, she attempted to submit a resolution nt n time when it was out of ordor and so insisted upon it that President Stanton sent for a policeman to remove her. Congressional matters are dully increas ing in interest. Southern, and other com mittees are beginning to report and thore is a general bustle nt the Capital indicative of importaut business. Barnes, the tele graph operator from New Orleans who bas been imptisotied for a week punt on account of his refusal to produce telegrams de manded of him by the investigating com mittee, bas now consented to do so, aud starts for Louisiana to-day under the sur veillance of a Sergeant-at-arma, to procure the papers, ordered to be back and report here within ten days. Mr. Orton bas also been allowed to leave tho city to consult bis physician In New York. M. M. W. Miscellaneous News Items. tW B. N. Hawes, the defaulting City Treasurer of Coviugton, Ky., who absoond ed recently, bas been arrested at London, Canada, and will soon be extradited. tW On a single Hue between New York and the west more than sixty miles of freight are piled up on side tracks, and cannot be moved until the rails are cleared of the snow. k tW Advices from several States in the west show that the storm is very general, and that from one to three feet of suow is on the ground. The weather is moder ately cold in that section. , fW Tuesday night three barns, owned by Thomas Lynam. two miles from Wil mington, Del., were destroyed by fire, together with a quantity of grain, twenty, bead of cattle and six horses. Loss. $10,000. tW At Edenburg, Clarion county, Pa., on Saturday night a week, twenty-five frame buildings, occupied as stores, offices, etc., together with the Edenburg Hotel, were destroyed by five. Loss about 1(30,000. tW During a heavy rain storm on Mon day of last week, a fall of small live snakes was observed in the southern part of Memphis, where thousands of them could be seen on Tuesday. The snakes are from one foot to eighteen inches in length. tW A West Chester thief fell off a stool in jail and broke bis left arm. Not long after he fell out of bed and broke bis other arm. The jailor, who does the nursing of this unfortunate bird is in bope the next ran win cause a Dislocation or tbe neck. tSTA. United States mail-bag was on Sunday a week discovered In the express office at Montreal, by the agent, and sent baok to Hew York, it Had been stolen while in transit from that city to Boston, and contained drafts and checks to the amount of $44,301. HP A man named Hickman was killed on Bunday a week near M'Keeaport, on the Connellsville railroad, by being run over by the ctrs. He was thrown upon the track in the endeavor to bold a span of frig btened horses which he bad been driv ing. tW An Iron bridge spanning French Creek at Franklin, fell on Saturday night a week while a sleighing party of four from Oil City were crossing. One horse was killed but the other animal and the ladies and gentlemen escaped unhurt. Pieces of iron fell all about the party. 1 tar John Kermer, of Philadelphia, had a raffle in bis lager beer saloon on Saturday night a week, and while he was ra filing, a thief was rifling bis bureau In an upper story. ' The scamp succeeded in getting away with cash aud bonds worth $2,(300 and has not since been arrested. Cincinnati, January 10. Last night, at Dayton, Ky., Mrs. Minnie Bloson arose from ber bed. after the famllv had retired. and without arousing the husband took her Infant and proceeded to ths river and threw herself and the babe Into the stream. The bodies were recovered this morn Ing. The woman was probably deranged. MS" At Trn' ta v ttf-.l t. 1 tons of powder, stored In the ginning build-, of the Bobagbtlcoks Powder Mills, explod ed. Three buildings were demolished. Loss $20,000. No loss of life la renortad. The shock was felt for a distance of twenty miles. The firm had a large stock of pow der on hand, manufactured for the Russian- government. tW The truoks of the express oar on the Atlantic express going east on the Erie road broke near Laokawaxen, last week, throwing the cars from the track to the loft, striking a passenger car on tbe way train going west, by which Maggie Burton bad her skull fractured and two passengers and one train man were slightly Injured. Maggie Burton's Injuries will prove fatal. tW While Mary Jane Aslam's corpse was laid out for a wake in Liverpool, and while all tbe inmates of the house had ad journed to a tavern to gain strength for me vigii, a Canute npset near tbe body, which soon set the house on fire, burned tbe oorpse, and caused intense alarm in the neighborhood. HTMr Brush, of Tarport, M'Kean county, being somewhat new to tbe business of handling petroleum took bis lighted oandleand unoovered a SGO-barrel tank to make an interior observation. The force of the explosion that followed landed Mr. Brush far enough from the tank to save his life though burned severely. The oil and tank were entirely consumed. tWA. Heading clerk recently visited his lady love, the daughter of a farmer, and sitting down in the kitchen to chat with her, he hoisted IiIb feet on the table-top and upset the concern by the huge weight of his extremities, emptying some five gallons of milk from the pots into his lap aud over his Sunday clothes. Moral: When you go to see a lady, keep your feet on the floor, or stick them in your Ulster pockets, or leave them at the door, tW The advocates of the enactment of the local option law repealed by tbe Legislature in 1875, have made preliminary arrangements for the delivery of temper ance sermons in all parts of the State, and will distribute thousands of circulars the next few weeks, setting forth the work ac complished under the operations of the old law, and circulate petitions for singers, asking for its re-passage, or at least in a mod tiled form. tST" After thirty years an inventor has succeeded in producing an apparatus con sisting of a table with pedals, an orgtn bellows, and a keyboard, lu the centre is an elaborate arrangement, representing tbe human lungs, larynx, glottis, and tongue. At the conclusion of the exhibi tion, in the Grand Hotel at Paris, it spoke 'a piece" as follows . "1 was born in America. I can speak all languages, and am very much pleased to see you. I thank you for your visit." t"On Chrixtmas day Miss Louisa Marcellus, aged 80, of New Street, New Brunswick, while eating some canned peaches, swallowed a pit. It lodged in tho throat, and Dr. Williamson being sum moned, an effort was made to extract it. Finding it impossible, be forced the pit down into the stomach. Medicines were prescribed, but on Friday last Miss Mar coll us grew worse, and died suddenly. A post-mortem was held, which resulted in finding tbe pit in tbe intestines, which were ruptured. tW Tbe following are the estimated damages suffered by coal dealers through the movement of the ioe in the Ohio, on the night of the 13th and 14th inst : At Walter's landing $0, 000 ; at Stewart's landing $5000 ; at Crail & Wells' landing $22,000 ; at Walmer's landing $3000; at Cochenower's landing $2600 ; at Pickle beimer's landing $6000; at Samuel Brown's landing $14,000 at the Queen City elevator $20,000 ; at Collier & Budd's landing $3000; at Zimmerman's landing $6000; at Salt f Barges' landing $8000 ; at Licking -river $T0OO ; two produce boats $3000. CLOUD BANNERS OF THE ALPS. Among the most exquisite soenes which delight the eye of the European traveler are those wonderful rosocolored cloud banners, floating from the Alpine cliffs. But it is only in tbe sunlight that Nature bangs ont these beautiful tokens. Bo it is only in the glow of health tbe sunlight of our inner being that nature reveals those physical cloud-banners, the "rosy cheek" and "cherry lip," to praise which every poet of tbe earth bas Invoked tbe Muse to aid him. But they are as rare as tbe cynical Hood conceived Christian charity to be. Woman, eager to retain this charm, resorts to French art and rouge. Tbe effect is similar to that which would be produced by substituting auctioneers' flags for tbe delicate glowing cloud-banners of tbe Alps. If woman would aid Nature instead of adopting art, would seek health instead of vainly trying to mask disease, she would not ouly win the greatest charm of womanhood health but she would avert muoh misery both from herself and others. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip tion has received the highest praise from thousands of pale, delicate, suffering women. One bottle often affords more re lief than months of treatment by caustics and other medicines. It is harmless in any condition of tbe system, and its nse often renders tbe modest invalid exempt from that most trying of ordeals per sonal oousultation with a physician. It is tbe duty of every woman to become familiar with tbe causes and symptoms of tbe many diseases to which ber peculiar organization renders her liable, and also to learn tbe proper means of preventing these maladies. The People's Medical Adviser contains an extensive treatise npon " Wo man and ber Diseases." Tbe Author also advises of domestic treatment, which will often render the services of a physician un necessary. - Every woman should read it. A oopy of the Adviser can be obtained by addressing the Author, Dr. R. V. Pierce, at Buffalo, N. Y. Price $1.60 (postage prepaid).- Favorite Prescription is sold by druggists. i