THE TIMES NEW ltLOOMFIELl), l'A., MAY 17, 1881. THE TIMES. ITew Bloom field, May 17, 1SS1. NOTICE TO AOVKIIT18KIIS. No Cut or Mterntyim will ho Ininrtrd lotlili irr nleas llicbt fsc anil uu metal bans. WTwonty prr cult, in mn of rmn!r rtc, will b ehartrd for ailvortlaemeuta atlu iioubloOoUimu. Mr. J. H. IUtes, Newspaper AdverthlnR A;'t., 41 Park How, (Times BiiHdlnc). New York, in au thorized to contract for advertisements tor tills paper at our best rates. NOTICE TO Wl'USCRIBERH. IjOoIc at tho nffnrtn on Hie label or vrnir papor. ThuRctlKiirrnti)) you t ho rintetn which fourNiili aprlpttou Iff pnH. Wllblu 8 weoka after mniiy la aont, aea If tho data la changed. No other receipt la oooeaHarr. Stanley Matthews was confirmed to bean Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, on the 18th Inst., by a majority of one vote in the Senate. The President has withdrawn the nomination of V. A. M. Grler as third Asst. P. M. General, as Mr. Grler de clines the office. He seems to be look lug higher. A Senate Committee called on Pres ident Garfield a few days ago and asked him to withdraw the nomination of Senator Robertson as Collector of the Port of New York, and the most astounding reason for the request was not that he was unfit for the ofllce but such action would please Mr. Conkling. Such a request was not only an Insult to the President but to the people who had not elected Conkling to that ofllce. The President, we are glad to see took that view of the case too. It is no wonder that Chicago is an unhealthy place if they often have such sudden changes as on Monday last. At one o'clock P. M. the mercury register ed eighty-one, and was still rising, when a heavy thunder-storm broke over the city, which cleared away as the wind changed from south to northeast. It grew rapidly colder during the after noon, until at six P. M. the mercury stood at fifty, a fall of at least thirty degrees in. four hours. On Tuesday a man In the same city died from sun stroke, showing the great change again. A terrible storm passed over Blair county on Monday of last week. At Hollidaysburg the wires of the Court House were melted. The first peal of thunder was so sudden and terrific that several ladies dropped as if killed. Others - ran to their mirrors to ascertain if their hair bad been turned white, but so far as heard from no person was killed or permanently made gray. In other parts of that couuty the storm was terrific. Windows were broken and many per sons were badly scared. Colored Children at School. Meadville, Pa., May 10. A very importaut decision was delivered to-day by Judge Church in the Court of Com mon Pleas of Crawford county in the case of the Commonwealth of Pennsyl vania ex rel. Ellas H. Allen against the School Directors of the City of Mead ville. The plaintiff is a negro having children of proper age to be admitted to the public school of the city, but who were refused admission. The plaintiff applied for a writ of mandamus against the Directors to compel their admission. The Directors, the respondents, answer ed that plaintiff's children were negroes, and that by Section 21, Act of Assembly May 8, 1854 , the Board of Control hav ing established a separate school for negro and mulatto children in their district they were not compelled to ad mit them into the school where the white children were. The Court, Hon. Pearson Church, Presiding Judge, in a very elaborate and learned opinion held that the twenty-first section of the act of 1854 was violative of the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution, and hence unconstitutional and void. A peremp tory mandamus was ordered to be issued, requiring and commanding the respond ents to admit the minor children of . plaintiff Into the schools. This is the first case of the kind decided in the State having Involved the main issues. The case was ably argued by Thomas Roddy, Esq., for the plaintiff, and W. R. Bole, Esq., for respondents. An Army of Scandinavians Coming Across the Atlantic. A few days ago a cable dispatch was t received in New York city stating that ' the owners of a steamship line In Hull, England, had contracted with parties in Norway and Sweden to bring about 80, COO emigrants from those countries to the United States. Mr. Christian Bora, the Norwegian and Swedish consul, says such a contract has been made with the owners of the Wilson line of steam ers. The emigration from the countries he represents to the farming lands iu the west Is rapidly developing, and the applications for transportations during the winter months were so great that a contract with one company became necessary. The Wilson line offered the greatest advantages, havlnir a fleet of vessels running between Hull and the principal ports In Norway and Sweden, besides having a mutual agreement with all the transatlantic steamship compan ies. It proposes to carry the emigrants to Hull, and then send them by train to Liverpool, where they will be trans re red to steamers for New York. Mr. Sander son the agent of the Wilson line, Bald that the emigrants from Norway and Sweden during this summer and fall will probably excede the number con tracted for, as a knowledge of the vast ness and wealth of this country has be come familiar to them during the past few years. What a Narrow Foot DM. A young lady took a car which brought her to the foot of California Street and there took a seat on the dum my car, which bore her to the vicinity of her home oh Octavla Street. As she left the car and was crossing the track upon the southern side her foot slipped and turned and was caught fast In the track where the wire-cable passes. Some imperfection in the roadbed had caused the narrow aperture to expand and the girl's narrow foot was entrapped. The engineer of the east-bound dummy saw the obstacle on the read In season to check his swift approaching car and alighted with the conductor and several passengers of Investigating mind, who endeavored to release the slender foot, but their efforts were vain. Another car and another brought up iu funeral row, and constant reinforcements in the way of pressing pedestrians cheered and enlivened the scene. An attempt was made to pry the iron rails forming the cable channel further apart, but they firmly resisted all efforts. Every body had a suggestion. l' Push your foot for ward;" " Pull It back ; " Tip it side ways ;" ' Lift you heel higher." The unhappy girl was almost fainting, but she persevered in her efforts to extricate the oflending member. By this time travel on the road had virtually ceased. The last car had long ago passed, and was steadily approaching to fall into the line at the rear of the singular pro session. Down-town passengers fretted and fumed or slowly climbed the hill in disgust. On every street corner groups of waiting people berated the laxity of street-car management. Reporters from ail the down-town dailies were proceed ing westward to learn, the meaning of the large crowd reported to have assem bled in the western addition. From the scene of the accident envoys had been dispatched to the railroad shops to bring appliances for taking up a section of .the road. At this Juncture a tall, brawney Englishman, in thedrss of a mechan ic, forced his way through the throng, and in a cheery voice, marked by the Derbyshire dialect, aBked: " Ha' ye tried onfastenin' the young leddy's shoe ?" Ten buttons flew from as many button-holes; in the twinkling of an eye the foot was free. San Francisco Her ald. Lebanon County Fools. A singular story of the faith some times placed in dreams, even in the en lightened days of the nineteenth centu ry, comes from Lebanon county. Sev eral months ago a charcoal burner, liv ing near Indiantown Gap, dreamed that silver ore could be found at a certain spot in the mountain. He claims the dream was repeated for five consecutive nights, when he started out to find a place to correspond with that seen In his dreams. The place was found, and a clairvoyant, famous in that region for being possessed of wonderful supernat ural powers, was consulted. A seance was held on the mountain, and the re sult was that a wild excitement was cre ated among the ignorant natives. A company was formed of ten of the superstitious backwoodsmen, each of whom contributed $100 to the working capital, and a force of men were put to work to develop the rich find. Fifty feet was the depth fixed by the seer at which the precious metal would be found, but when that depth was reached another calculation was made, which added ten feet more to the original num ber. This was afterward Increased to eighty feet, then to ninety, and still the poor dupes worked on, and regardless of the gloomy outlook and the repeated failures of the prophecies of the "fortune teller," they willingly pay up the neces. sary assessments on the stock, and the work goes on. They have secured the services of an experienced miner to superintend the work, and will continue until the stockholders are bankrupt, although a number of scientific men In the region have assured thera that there is no silver ore In that part of the country. A Wife Trade. The case of the two Indianapolis hus bands who agreed to swap wives, by means of divorce, is curious. Tho coup les were intimate friends, and the trade has been amicably carried out. Dr. Baumuller went to St. Louis on his honeymoon tour. "Mr. Rltchter and I," he said to a Republican reporter, "are like brothers. Not very long ago I discovered that I loved Mrs. Itlchter better than I did my own wife, and that she preferred me to her husband. I also discovered that Mr. Rlchter and my wife stood in exactly the same relation to each other. What were we to do ? Quarrel V It was useless. It was so, and could not be helped. I had tried to sup press my feelings, and I would have done so if I had not found that Lena, my wife, loved Rlchter, and that Rlch ter loved Lena. We did not quarrel; we arranged everything. We met, all four, Rlchter, Mrs. Rlchter, my wife, and myself, at Richter's house, and there we talked the matter over until we concluded that the best thing to be done was to seek divorce. " Dr. Baumuller is a reputable physician with a large prac tice. Rlchter has been. a Street Com missioner and is wealthy. In one re spect he seems to get the best of the bar gain, for his new wife Is 0, while his old wife Is 60, and he Is 00. Baumuller is 39. Death Among the Horses. Last week three valuable horses be longing to Adam Focht, who resides near Water street, Huntingdon county, were attacked by a singular disease which in one instance terminated In the death of the stricken animal, while our informant did not regard the others as entirely out of danger when he saw the in. The auimuls were suddenly taken with choking, palpitation of the heart and other violent symptoms. We learn that some horses belonging to a gentleman named Hlleman, residing on the farm adjoining Mr. Focht had previ ously been attacked with the same disease, though we did not hear that any of them died. The animal lost by Mr. Focht was valued by him at $225. AUoona Tribune.. Startling Deathbed Confession. A Crlsfleld, Md., special says the peo ple of Princess Anne, Crlsfleld and other parts of Somerset county are greatly excited over the reported confession of Mrs. Patty Ward, who is now on her deathbed, of having murdered Azariah Dougherty, who was found dead in his store eighteen years ago. Two negroes were executed for the crime In 1803. She said her son, now dead, was an accom plice in the murder. Smothering a Slok Son. The death of a boy at Decker, Indiana, who was suffering from rheumatism, was not caused by the Intelligent drug clerk. His parents had no faith in the doctor's prescriptions, and gave the patient a home-made sulphur bath. They seated him in a chair, plied feather beds over him, and burned a lot of brimstone underneath. When they thought the disease was smoked out the covering was removed, but it was too late; the poor fellow had been smother ed to death. Imprisonment for Life. New York, May 12. William O'Donnell, who was indicted for mur In the first degree in having kicked his wife, Bridget, to death on February 13, was convicted to-day in the court of general sessions of murder in the second degree. The recorder sent him to the state prison for the term of his natural life. O'Donnell took his sentence very coolly. . United States Map Free. All persons sending their address on a postal card to General Passenger Agent, C, B. & Q. R. It., Chicago, 111., will re ceive,; of all charge, an elegant folder andlcomplete County Map of the Uni ted States. We advise readers to send in their applications at once, and secure a valuable and handsome document. It is the most complete map now out. A Jewish Town Destroyed by Fire. Vienna, May 12. The Press says a telegram was received from Kleff to-day stating that the whole Jewish quarter known as Podol, has been burned. The damage is estimated at 30,000,000 roubles. Crowds of refugee Jews are crossing the' Austrian frontier at Podauloczyska. Miscellaneous News Items. Apiarists through the state are com plaining that they have lost about ninety per cent, of their stock of bees. t3T Fifteen children in sixteen years, all of whom are living aud well, is the record of a miried couple, residing iu Ban- twp., Cambria county. t3T Brush bad a hard time to borrow five dollars when be was working at his electiio light, now bis income is $1,000 per day. tjjarues Gordon Beunety it is aunouub ed by the Whitehall Review, is engaged to marry the daughter of the Prince da Furstenburg. MT A little daughter of T. Sotzen, of Shelby, Ohio, lately died, and tl-.e nllllcted parents are having constructed over her grave a building, In which will be stored her playthings. tW The spirit of mortal may not be very proud, but we notice it waxes overly profane in some cases where rheumatism is the moving cause. We use St. Jacobs Oil for ours and we are happy. Milwau kee Evening Wisconsin. Pottsville, May 10. This morning the Jury in tho case of Samuel Garrett, senior commissioner of Schuylkill county, charg ed with embezzlement of the funds of the county, returned a verdict of not guilty, the county to pay the costs. MT A miscreant gave a little girl in Dennlson, Ohio, two railroad torpedoes, telling her they contained candies and that she must open them with a stone. The child tried one of them, and the torpedo burst and destroyed her sight. tW The Elmira Advertiser asserts that a boy, carrying a basket of eggs, jumped from a freight train in that city one day last week, that was running at least twenty miles an hour, and that while the boy was considerably shaken up, not one of the eggs was broken. . tV The divorce case of Purcell vs. Pur cell, last week occupying the Circuit Court at Ottowa, 111. They are au old couple, aud the old man swore that his wife bit him in the lip once aud be jerked away aud pulled one of her teeth out. He said : "Her teeth are no goad, anyhow." tST There is a teamster in Philadelphia who during the last fifteen years has taken ten driuks at the same store daily. This makes a low average of three thousand a year, and the proprietor of the store vouch es for the truth of the statement. At five cents a drink, wholesale, he has consumed 12,239 worth of whisky in that time. t3T Mis. L. S. Hi IT, the owner of the largest cattle range in the world, has sold one half of her herd of 25,000 cattle to her managers, and sailed for Europe on the 28th of May. Her range extends from Greeley to Julesburg, Colorado, embracing a country about 100 miles wide. She has made a round million since the death of herr husband, "the Cattle King," three years ago. IW On a recent Sunday some Hollidays burg boys who were iu the neighborhood of Manning & Lewis' stone quarry, near Loop station, went to the bottom of the quarry to get a drink of water. They had hardly quenched their thirst and moved a little distance away until there came a heavy fall of earth and slate, covering the spot where they had stood but a moment be fore. to the depth of three or four feet. S3T A remarkable case of the "ruling passion" was lately witnessed in the United States Court-room at Cincinnati. Mr. Ilaskeil, who has been the court crier for a quarter ef a century, fell at the noon ses sion stricken with paralysis. Tbey picked him up, placed bim unconscious in a chair, wbeu the bailiff opened the Court and the trial of a case proceeded. Suddenly the old man revived, and noticiug the Judge on the bench begau to shout, iu a feeble tone of voice, "Oyez, oyez, the district," etc. Immediately he was strick en a second time and carried home. OUR WASHINGTON LETTER. Wasuinoton, D. C, May 11, 1881. The Republicans have been holding caucuses every day this week upon the contested nom ination of Judge Robertson, bat so far have arrived at no definite conclusion .as to the course to be pursued. Senator Conkling has made several long speeches before the caucus endeavoring to enlist Senators on his sido in his light against the President and Robertson. In spite of the frantic struggles of Benator Coakllng it is becoming plainer every day that the administration carries too much weight for him, and that the chances of Robertson's nom ination are growing higher every day. It is known that within tho last three days some of the prominent stalwart Republicans of New York, warm and true friends of ConUllng, have advised him to abandon his contemplated fight to prevent Robertson's nomination to bo re ported from the Commerce Committee without recommendation, and let the Senato dispose of it without argument. That If Rabertson should be confirmed for Conkling to say notbiug unless attacked by a friend of the administra tion tbon be could talk as the cause of creat ing a disturbance would be upon the adminis tration side and should the Senate reject Robertson, still Conkling should say nothing, but iu either case to let the quarrel die out. Mr. Cockling did not reject this advice nor did he give any sign of accepting It but It came from men who are accounted devoted friends of his, and whose object Is ascribed to be to save Conkling from what they believe will be a crushing defeat if he makes a light against Robertson. Tho Stanley Matthews case was not taken up yesterday but will probably be considered to-day. The Judiciary Committee yesterday morning agreed to recommend the confirma tion of Don A. Parnee as United States Circuit Judge for the fifth Judicial Circuit, and subse quently reported the nomination favorably to the Beuate. The nomination of Michael J. Cramer now charge d affaires to Denmark to be charge d' affaires to Switzerland was report ed favorably from the Committee on Foreign Relations during the Executive Session yester day afternoon. Tha Judiciary Committee reached the nomination of Wm. E. Chandler us Solicitor General at their meeting jesterday but laid It aside for consideration at another special meeting to be held, probably to-day. Olivs. tWBtft blood always causes tronbte. It may be a family fight or bolls, pimples, Itch, tetter, Act but no matter, "Dr. htndney's Blood Searcher" Is the cure-all. I9d4t Third Trip. We have Just returned from the city for the third time this spring, and, again, are able to offer our customers some bargains. In Lawns, we have a fine assortment. Prices are 7 cents, 10 cents, 124 cents, and IS cents, and It costs nothing to look at 'em. Our Summer Prints, are pretty, and we think the styles are hard to beat. Prices 6i to 8 cents. Scone Ginghams, and other styles of dress Ginghams, we have from 0 cents to 16 cents per yard. Lace for trimming we have in great variety, and for the wool and part wool goods we have a full line of silks, satins and novelties for trimming. Ladies wanting Dress Goods or No tions of any kind will find it to their advantage to give us a call. Those who cannot call, can get samples of Dress Goods by mail, and mail orders will, be promptly filled. We have many other lines of goods we would like to mention, but have not the space. We extend you an Invita tion to call and look at our stock of Ties, Gloves, Hosiery, White Goods, Buttons, etc., etc. Questions for Men. Do you want Cottonades or Casslmers foryourselfortheboysasult? If you do come and see what we can show you. Do you want a Hat for the boy or your self ? We have them at various prices. Do you want Shoes for yourself, wife or child? We have a good assortment of a quality we can recommend. Do you want Paints, Oils, or" anything in that line? If you do come and see what we can do for you. Do you want Iron or Hardware of any description ? If so we can supply your wants. Suppose you let us try it. If you want any kind of goods, you stand a good chance to find the article you want in my stock. F. Mortimer, New Bloomfield, Pa. n Church Notices. Presbyterian Church Preaching nest Sunday at 11 A. M., and 7i P. M. Sun day School at half past 9 A. M. Prayer meeting on Wednesday evening. M. E. Church Preaching next Sun day at 8 P. M., Sunday School at 9:15 A. M.,and prayermeeting on Wednesday evening. ATTENTION! For choice material, for beauty of styles and latest fashions, for everything in the millinery line, at especially mod erate prices, call at M. L; BELL'S. Ladies' Hats and Bonnets, Fancy Braids, Chips, Tuscans, and fine Straws, Children's Hats and Caps. Elegant new width ribbons. Silks and Satins in beautiful shades. A line of Embroideries and Laces unsurpassed in quantity aud quality; Beautiful Swiss Embroideries and In sertings, Gloves in Lisle, Silk and Kid, also Lace Mitts, Children's Collars, &c. Veiling In all shades. Hosiery in great variety. M. L. BELL, Old Stand, Centre Square, 19 lm NEWPORT, PA. a. oaiii. A new enterprise has been started in Mechanlcsburg, Cumberland county, by J. W. Rlngrose & Co., and that is the making of a new style of Leather Fly Nets. These nets are said to be a great) improvement over any style yet made, while the price they will be sold at, is no greater than is asked for the poorer article. Store keepers, before supplying themselves should see these nets and learn prices, and farmers should ask the merchant with whom. they deal to get at least a sample to show them. . For price list, etc., address J. W. Ringrosk fc Co., Mechanlcsburg, Pa., or Kenne dy, Willing & Co., 100 and 102 North 3rd Street, Philadelphia. 6tf. Still Alive I I am still alive and ready to cut aud lit suits In good, style. If wanting any work In my line, give me a call. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Samuel Bentzel, TAILOR, April 6, '80. If New Bloom field, Ta.