4 THE TIMES, NEW BLOOM FIELD, PA., JULY 9, 1878. THE TIMES. New JUmftM,Jvty 9, 1S7S- NOTICE 1M ADVERT1SBHS. Ito Cut or Btpreotype will b Inserted In this paper tialMfl ItKht face and on luelal base. IfTmntr per cent, in nni of reirnliir raee, will be ohaived rur ariverttflpineitui set In Double Column. NOTICE TO PVnsCRIBERH. I.nok at the nurtirm on the label of ronr prer. Those ttVnrea tell vnuthe dntein Tvhlch yowraub- rrlptlnn t pnlfl. Within 3 w?ek alter money Is ent, are If the data la changed. No other receipt ! neceesarv. Marine laeels becoming a fashiona ble amusement among the ladies. O, for the dollar of our dads to hire some body to patch up the well worn panta loons ! Benjamin Hunter, who has been on trial for the murder of Armstrong In Camden on January last, has been con victed of murder in tlie first degree. The murder was committed to secure the in surance which Hunter had on Arm strong. The case is a remarkable one and will rank agmon the most noted criminal cases on record. It is many years since this town was so quiet on the fourth of July or the night preceding it, and that Is the report from nearly every part of the country. It Is not an evidence of patriotism to make a great noise and we note the change in the manner the "Fourth" was celebrated this year as proof of progress in civilization. A Law This State Should Have. Virginia's new criminal code will be come operative on the 1st of July. Un der It one or more whipping-posts will be established in each city and county within the Commonwealth. In the future there will be no imprisonment for petty larceny, except for second of fences, and where, in the Judgment of the justice or judge, the condition of a female offender may render stripes un advisable. The Legislature determined on this change at the last session in view of the crowded condition of the prisons, the cost of maintaining convicts, and the impoverishment of the Common. ' wealth's financial resources. The right of an appeal from the judgment of a justice to trial by jury is, of course, re served. There issome division of opinion as to the necessity for the re-establish-nient of the whipping post, but the majority of the people undoubtedly ex pect great things from It as an economi cal and crime-preventing measure. Terrific Storm. . Pittsburgh, July 5. The storm yes terday afternoon raged with terrible ef fect on Sandy Creek. It was almost as disastrous to life as at Ross' grove, while the damage to property and the crops was very great. From the Information that has been received nearly the whole of the village of Sandy Creek was made a wreck, the flood which rushed down the valley being from six to seven feet deep at some places. A house occupied by Abner Conner and his wife was washed away. In it were Abner Con ner, his wife, Ira Long, a man named Boyd and a man whose name was not ascertained. They were all drowned. The bodies of Mr. Conner, Mrs. Connor and Mr. Long were recovered this morn ing. At the time of the storm there were a number of persons with buggies and other vehicles, visiting in the neighbor hood. Two men had taken the horse out of the vehicle and when the rain got pretty heavy they stepped into their carriage, expecting it to soon pass over. A stream of water came pouring down the hills, which increased in quantity and force very rapidly. Soon the car riage began to move, and then it was deemed prudent to crawl out and climb up the hill. In the midst of the most terrible flashes of lightning they started up, one of the men leading the horse. They had ascended about 150 feet when a tree fell, completely covering with its branches the horse and the gentleman who had charge of it. After a great ef fort the man and the horse were extri cated, when the horse suddenly lost its footing and rolled down a distance of 150 feet. The men supposed the animal had been killed or permanently maimed.and moved on up to a place of shelter. At the end of the storm, when they return ed to look for it, they were surprised to find it standing up, well and hearty, with apparently no injury at all, except & few scratches and bruises. The car riage was washed away and broken to pieces, but none of the gentlemen were injured. Fire on the Water. MEMrnis, July 2. About 2 o'clock this morning a fire broke out near the boiler hold of the Anchor line steamer Cipital City, from Vicksburg to St. Louis, while lying at the elevator, and in a few minutes the whole boat was wrapped in flames, the officers, crew and passengers barely escaping with their lives, leaving clothing and everything behind. As soon as the fire was discovered Cap- tain Crane ordered to cut loose In order to save the elevator, but the gate held the boat hard against It until pulled off by a tug, while the boat floated down a hundred yards, among some trading and wood boats, and was burned to the boiler leck after setting those boats on fire. The elevator was soon burned to the water's edge, and, with a large amount of valuable merchandise Is a total loss. There are numerous conjectures as to the number of lives lost, but up to this writing only one body has been found, which lies on the deck of the Capital City, only the trunk being left, and thus far it has not been identified. One pas senger was severely burned in trying to save his baggage. Capt. Crane thinks the fire was the work of an incendiary. The total loss will exceed $200,000, the greatest portion of which falls on the Anchor line company, of St. Louis. As the books and papers of the boat and elevator are lost, it is Impossible to ob tain a reliable list of either losses or insurance. Another body supposed to be that of the lame deck passenger for St. Louis from Point Lookout was found in the wreck of the Capital City this afternoon with a leg and arm burned off. The body was burned to a crisp. Some twenty bags of government mail was destroyed and the remainder more or less damaged. The boat had 20 bales of cotton and 200 sacks of cotton seed and a lot of miscellaneous freight for St. Louis, all of which was lost. There were in the elevator 2,000 pieces of bag gage, 1,000 barrels of oil, 1 ,000 barrels of meal, 400 barrels of flour, 200 bales of hay and a large amount of miscellane ous freight, little of which was covered by insurance. It is estimated that the total loss by the fire will reach $250,000. Farmers' Troubles. The destruction of reaping machines by tramping Communists In Ohio and Indiana is getting to be of such frequent occurrence as to thoroughly alarm the farmers, who fear that it is the begin ning of an organized crusade against ag ricultural machinery. Notices are nightly posted about the rural districts, warning farmers who are in the midst of har vest against the use of patent reap ers. In return the farmers are posting notices warning the tramps that any man who is caught burning their barns or stacks or reapers will be promptly shot. The number of reapers already report ed destroyed is not less than twenty or thirty. A few of the more timid farm ers are discarding marchines and cut ting their grain by hand. Most of them, however, will not heed the incendiary notices, and will protect their property at all hazards. Any man who desires work can -readily secure it now in the harvest field. In some places hands are scarce at $1.25 per day and board. Farm ers think the bread or blood plea of barn burners is not well-founded. Fond of Wine. "Ion," in Social Notes, writes as fol lows : " I chanced not long ago to be taking refreshment at a confectioner's near the Strand. A well-dressed lady entered and took a bun and a glass of sherry. The sherry she drank, the bun she put into her reticule as a thing not wanted. I had time to spare; when she left the shop I followed her ; saw her enter another and do the same. A little further on she entered a third, with the same result. She then called a cabriolet and drove home. It Is not unlikely that she had taken six glasses of sherry at six different confectioners' counters." Again: " A gentleman was examining the tradesmen's monthly accounts with a view to payment. On going through that of the grocer he was startled by the amount charged for tea six pounds in four weeks and said there must be some mistake. The grocer at first gave confused answers, but when directly charged with fraud confessed the truth. Four of the items should have been not tea but sherry. Since that occurence the husband and wife have lived sepa rate; she is ' under restraint.' " A Singular Case. A man with strange ideas resides in St.ouis. He believes that direct con tact with another human being results in a loss of a portion of the electricity and magnetism that is absolutely essen tial to sustain and prolong existence. He also believes that such a loss may be produced in a greater or less degree by objects which have been touched by other human beings. Consequently, the gen tleman in question, by always wearing, day and night, one pair of Parisian kid gloves, and sometimes two, has never allowed himself to touch the hand of his fellow man. At meal time he takes the precaution of wearing two pairs of gloves and of also having the handle of the knife and fork which he uses thoroughly enwrapped in twine. In riding on the Olive street cars, which he takes every afternoon at five o'clock in order to reach home, he re frains from handing his ticket to the conductor with his fingers, and instead picks out the ticket from a little book fastened to his coat, and with his teeth allows the conductor to take the ticket from the end of his tongue. The gen tleman is said to be worth $80,000. A Strange Cause for Lock-law. The Seneca Falls Courier of the 20th ult., tells the following singular story In connection with the announcement that John E. Laugdon, long a resident of that city, died on Tuesday of lock-jaw : " On Saturday, the 8th inst., Mr. Lang don shaved off his beard and the next day felt a stiffness about his Jaw. On Monday, the symptoms being worse,Dr. Lester was called, and concluded that it was a case of trismus.' On the follow ing day spasms developed in the muscles of the jaw, neck and back, and then the doctor pronounced it to be lockjaw. The spasms continued, with occasional re laxations, until the hour of his death, at noon on Tuesday. No efforts of medi cal skill were spared, but It was impos sible to afford him relief. The muscles of the neck and limbs stood out promi nent and were tense and rigid." A New Dodge of Burglars. Two men the other day drove up to the door of Henry Hanschell, 111., and requested the privilege of depositing a box they had with them In the house for the night, which was refused, but they were allowed to place it In the store. The next morning the men called for the box, but the storekeeper had missed a piece of cloth from his counter, and on further examination he found that he had been robbed of $500, and consequently refused to let them have the box. The storekeeper obtained assistance, secured two men and opened the box, when lo! out jumped a man, and In the box were found the money, goods, etc., which had been stolen. A Queer Court Room. On Saturday, at the court ground In Blackankle, Oa., the magistrate took his seat on a wagon, which was standing in the shade of a tree, and commanded the bailiff to open the court. The command was obeyed, the first case on the docket was called, the witnesses examined, and the case ready for discussion by the lawyers, Col. M. and Hon. D., who mounted the wagon, one on the tongue and the other on the coupling pole. The bailiff took his stand at the breast chain to move the wagon in the shade as the sun passed around. Express Messenger Robbed. Painesville, Ohio, July 1. At 1:30 this afternoon an express messenger bag containing $21,000 was stolen, and as yet no clue to money or thieves has been found. The bag was delivered to the messenger at the city office, who, with the agent of the American Express Company and driver, all rode together on the wagon to the Painesville and Youngstown depot, a distance of half-a-mile. On their arrival there neither the bag nor its contents could be found. Terrible Disaster. A storm of wind and rain passed over Sharpsburg, Allegheny county on the 4th Inst., which played sad havoc with a picnic party. The Sunday school of tho Lutheran church were gathered in sugar grove as the storm began and for lack of other shelter got under the trees and into the wagons. The whirlwind blew over a number of the trees, crushing to death seven persons and seriously wounding twenty others. Death by Sunstroke. Thomas L. Mull died from sunstroke on Wednesday afternoon while working in a hay field for George Hess, In Derry township, Mifflin county. The deceased was 32 years of age and in excellent health. He fell dead Instantly while following the wagon conveying a load of hay from the field. C5 The brutal husband has been given a chance in an English police court with astonishing results. Mrs. Wilson, of Preston, had her husband arrested for knocking her down, kicking her about the body and on the forehead in a fear ful manner with his heavy clogs, etc She came to court all done up in ban dages and faint from loss of blood, and the magistrates were about to give the brutal assailant six months when it oc curred to them to ask the mal-used woman to remove the bandages and let them see for themselves her fearful inju ries. She consented with much reluc tance, and they found she didn't have a scratch, scar or bruise on her. The brutal husband, however, had been engaged in some sort of disturbance in the house, so they fined him five shillings on general principles. Miscellaneous News Items. C3f The cruelty of which a Wisconsin wife complains in her suit for divoroe is that her husband tied her securely and shaved ber bead. The defouce is that she bleached her black linlr to lemon color by the use of acid. Trot, N. Y., July 1. This morning two men carroted Thomas Buckley, treas urer of the Albla knitting mill company, on the Albla horse car, securing 3,000, which he was taking to the mill to pay off the bands. The robbers escaped. The police are scouring the country in pursuit of the robbers. tW The body of Mrs. Henrietta Wer thelmer who mynterlously disappeared from the West End Hotel, Fort Washington, on Tuesday Inst, was found in the river at Yonknrs, Now York, recently. The fact that ber dress and jewels were undisturbed, and that no mark of violence was found upon the body, confirms the fact that the tally committed suicide. tW The Alpena county, Mich. Pioneer editor has been shown a string of eleven copper beads that wag taken from under a large pine stump when it was pulled. The skeleton of a man, so far decayed that it crumbled at the touch, with it were two hundred flint arrow heads and a tomahawk and about four pounds of these beads in four strings, were found directly under the stump. Probably the relics of some ancient Indian warrior. Albany, N. Y., June 80. At 9:30 o'clock last night an oil train was thrown from the track ten miles west of this city, on the N. Y. Central road. The oil took fire and Piatt Smith, a brakeman, of Crntesville, who bad been thrown under one of the cars met with a fiightful death. The accident was occasioned through the malicious removal of a rail. Nineteen cars were wrecked. The engineer and firemen were slightly injured. IBB1" Jim Younger, one of the famous Missouri outlaws, now in the Miunesota penitentiary, is failing, and likely to die. He was, when captured after the attempt to rob the Northfield bank, shot in the mouth, and the wound has never healed nor can it be healed. But three of his teeth remain, and the dentists are unable to put a plate in his mouth so as to enable him to eat with ease. t The discovery of another cave in Kentucky, not far distant from the great mammoth cave, but immensely exceeding it in extent and beauty, is another feather added to our national cap. This new sub terranean discovery will, doubtless, draw many visitors, as it has been explored for twenty-three miles, contains wide and beautiful avenues, broad and deep rivers, navigable for fourteen miles, and abounds lu wonders and beauties hitherto not dream ed of. The mammoth cave is a pigmy compared with it. Wilmington, Del., June 80. The acci dent which occurred to the Southern ex press train, near Claymont, Del., last night was caused by a railroad tie which had been placed across the track under one rail and over the other. The engine and the baggage, mail and two express cars were thrown from the track and wrecked, the three passenger cars remaining on the track. George Babe, engineer, and his son, N. O. Babe, fireman, both of Phila delphia, were killed, both being horribly mangled. Christian Krauch, a boy of Bal timore, Md., and a man supposed by pa pers found on his person to be William R. Hough, of Chicago, who was stealing a ride, were also killed. None of the pas sengers were injured. Henry Brown, for merly employed by the Philadelphia, Wil mington and Baltimore railroad at this place, was arrested last night at Claymont for placing a tie on the track. Later Brown has since confessed the fiendish act. He accompanied the coro ner's jury to the scone of the disaster, il lustrated to them the manner in which he arranged the ties so as to throw the train off. He was then remanded to the jail at New Castle. Indigestion. The main cause of nervousness is indi gestion, and that is caused by weakness of the stomach. No one can have sound nerves aud good health without using Hop Bitters to strengthen the stomach, purify the blood, and to keep the liver and kid neys active, to carry off all the poisonous and waste matter of the system. See other column. Removal. J. T. Messlmerhas remov. ed his Shoe Shop to the room adjoining F. B. Clouser's office, 4 doors west of the Post-Offlce, where he will make to order Boots and Shoes of all kinds. Repair ing promptly and neatly executed. He will also Keep on hand a good assort ment or Hoots ana isnoes, wnlcn he will sell at low prices. Give him a call. 17 Ladles, call and see our elegant stock of rarasois, ans, Ties, bnawls, Skirts, &c. See advertisement. - I. Schwartz. Clothing was never lower We have an elegant assortment. See advertisement. I. Schwartz. HEALTH AND HAPPINESS. Health and hannlnesl are priceless Wealth tn their possessors, and yet they are witUiu the reaea oi every one who win use WRIGHT'S LITER PILLS, The only sure CURE for Torpid Liver, Dvppla, Headache, Hour Stomach, Constipation, Debility, Nausea, and all Bllllous complaints and Blood disorders. None geuulne unless slimed " Win. WriKht. Phll'a." 11 your Druggist will not sup ply send 2f cents tor one box to Burrlck, Roller & January 1, 178, ly IRON FRONT! OPPOSITE 3L Mc G OTWALT HAS JUST OPENED The LARGEST QUANTITY and FINEST ASSORTMENT of Goods ever brought to BLOOMFIELD! READ HER PRICES, AND SEND FOR SAMPLES ! All Wool Black Cashmere, 75 cte. Black, Alpacca from 15 cts. to 75 cts. Twilled Debege, 20 cts. Hamilton Alpaccas, 15 cts. Florence Suitings, 4-4 10 cts. Knickerbocker Suitings, 8 cts. Organdy Lawns, 4-4 15 cts. Cambrics, 4-4 9 cts. Cretonnes, 4-4 lo cts. BANK BUILDING nes, 4-4 lo cts. 1 per yard, 0, 7, and 8 cts. le Trimming, per yard, 10 cts. V idery, from 4 to 65 cts. J lades, from 60 cts. to $2.75 s, from 6 to 11 cts. V Prints, per yard, 0, 7, and 8 cts. Chenille Embroidery, Sun Shades, Muslins, 0-4 Sheeting, 25 cts. 42 and 43 inch Muslin, 12 cts. Grenadine from 10 to 25 cts. Black Hernani, 35 cts. 2 Button Kid Glove $L00 Ladles Hosiery, from 8 to 35 cts. pr pair. Children's Hosiery, from 5 to 30 cts. " CLARK'S COTTON, 5 cts. Ladies Feb. But. Shoes Ladles Kid " " Laced Gaiters, Low But. Shoes $2.25 to $2.50 $2.75 $1.00 to $1.85 $1.60 to $2.00 Ladies', Misses', and Children's Shoes of every Size and Price. OF EVERY DESCRIPTION ! Linen and Florence Suits order ed at any time by giving Bust Measure. Butterick's Patterns ordered Uli all J H1I1C. Please give me a call or order by mail. lillwy (roods