y J. CT I 'H J or 'II "tIIED 131 1846. Ftplisiikd Et "KWl!nivn T BnlgeStreepethc0JJFeU """TOWNPA. Tub Ji-siAT.vit rETtXXL is Tiiil.l;l,,l - Wp.lnesdaY niori;, . . vance; or f -.00 VI se9 if hKAnV in All r" ' V , ' ft0 subscriptions dig "-nrearagesare paid. Unless ai iob jujbUaher. i.nx. k. mToc attou:ev at law, Hi SOUTII6UTU SIKEET, PI1IIAUF.LPIIU. oct-7 tf JOBE lit MdZET ATTOIiXiY AT LAW, MIFFLSTOWX, TA. Office on Bridge sreet. in the room formerly occupied by Ezra Ii I'art cr, Lsq. s B. LOCltEX, miitli:town. pa.. Offers Ins servicesto the citizens of Juni ata county as Auo-eer and Vendue Crier fharees, liom twe'U ten dollars. Satisfac warranted. . . nov:-'Jm. Thomas AliHiiTjr MIFFUMoiYN, TA. Office hours 0 A. M.to 8 P. M. Office in lielford's building. tw doors above tbe.W Uuel oflice, KriJ-e ctrst. aug j S tf DR. 1 C. RUXDIO, PATTEUSOr.PENX'A. August 18, 1 800-1 f. IIOM.EOPHATIC lIi YS.CI AN 4 SURGEON Having iprninTinl v r in tUa ?.rrn..l. of MitHiutnwn. offers hUvufLsiacal ervirp ! to ihe citizens of this pice and surrounding country Othcc on Main street, wer Beidler's Drug Ptore. g lt 1 W.'-tf G. W. McPCJRHAN, gittorncn it 001 SA XSO J.: STKEKT, rnLAKELrniA. aug 18 QE.NTKAL CLAIM AG1XCV, JAMES M. SELLERS, 144 SOUTH SIXTI STREET, PIllLADr LPIIA. Bounties. I'ensiotis, ttack Pay. Horse Claims, State Claims, &e., pmptly collected. No pS.r f,ir infnrmii.. i.,p hiii mnti.v 1 no cjarce Mr miormatiou, vr w nen money , is not collected. " -if 1!1S1!USS ltrtjs. mi. rrtEDiiHCK's " THE MEDICAL VOXDEH! ron r.tis a ad aches. Depot, Philadelphia. . JOHNSTON, II0LL0WAT4 COWDEN. oct'27-4m SIEVES WIRE CLOTH, MANUFACTUKKIi SY MCI.M St ItflOTIIEKK, CZ3 Market .Street, riilada. - sept2-J-3m :. 1SG9. PHILADELPHIA, 18tj'.t. WALL PAPERS, UOWICI.L & UOt-liKE, HANTFACTl HERS III' Paper Hangings and Winrljw Shades Sales Iiooms Cor. 4th aud ?rket Ms. PHILADELPHIA.; Factory, Cor. Twenty-third anlfansom Sts. trtc Styles fi'try Day, of our a. a 1ike. sept29-T,m. 1 E. B. ART MAN. C H. MLIIMJKE. tl. A. J10T.T. AB.TMAN, DILLIHGEa !& CO., No. 101XORTII THIRD STREET, PH1LA.. TVo doort above Arch, formerlf --', MANUFACTURERS &. JOBBERS IN Carp'tt, Cotton Yarns, Jiitting, Oil Clotht, Carjiet Clmim, Conl.iye, Oil Shades, Grain B'i'jn, Tit J'urn, Wick Yarn, Window I'apcr, CoocrUtt, A L S O t WOOD AND WILLOW VAKE, Brooms, Brushes, Mirrors, Trunis, &c. w- ii. saigi:r,' WITH ' SIlUMWAir.' CHANDLER & CO. ' Manufacturers and Wholesale DciJer8 'n 1 S BOOTS & SHQES, 221 Market aud 20 Cltunh S., .PIILLADLPHIA. ' : . apr 13.1S70 j J. M. KEPIIEABT BARNES BROTIlER&lIElKOxN WHOLESALE DEALERS III HATS AND CAPS, ' 603 Market Strett, Philadelphia" aug 18, 1809-lv- PRICES REDUCED?. . , Newport Planing Mill CcinW. MANUFACTURERS OF ooons, SASH, suwfe. SHUTTERS, MOULDING 3 I COBHICE, FLOORIKG. WEATEB- : BOARDIfliG, &C, ' M Have reduced their prices to suit the Give them a call, or addres ' ' ' ' ' KEwroBT pn-me hw; mr23-3m Newport, Perry Oo,, 1)LAIN and Fancy Job Printing neatly; cuted at this Office. . . . ES B. F. SCHWEIEB.i VOLUME XHW; NO. 21.-. ocal , SWdisrmrnts. Grocery and Provision Store, o Cherry Street, Mifflintown Pa. " to A v .. . n rTMIE undersigned, haTing purchased the A- Grocery aud 1'roTision Store of S. B. Loudoo, sit uate on Cherry street, East Toint, has now on hand a full aud well selected as sortment of Groceries and Xoiions. As follows; Syrups, Teas, Coffees, Flour and ced, Mackeral, Salt, Coal Oil, Buckets, Briioms, Fancy and Common Soaps, Spices, ToTiaeca," Cigars, Rice, ' ' Crackers. Vinegar, Coffee- Esscnce,Strch, Corn Starch. WashinfF Soda, Caking Soda, Lamp Fines, Lamp Wicks, iru.-nes, indigo, Comhs, Hair Oil, 1 er- fumery. Gloves and Hosiery, Sus penders. Thread. Bullous. Notions and Stationery, and in fact a good assortment of everything usuilly kept in a coun'ry Grocery ant Notion Store. BrS?" The highest rK-:lowed in exchange for Butter and Ezz.-?-ia 1'rouirt cavers. thirty days. Will also keep constanlly on hand a full supply of York county lime. marJO ,... C. BARTLY. The Tlacc for Good Grape-vines IS AT THE lunula iTallfii llbtnarbs, AM) CKArE-VIXE M'liSEKY. r'HE undersigned would respectfully in X. form the public thai he has started a Gripe-vine Norwrr about one mile liortheast of Alitllintowu, where he has heen testing a large number of the different varieties of Grapes ; and having been in the business for seven years, he is now prepared to tuuiu-u (Jr ALL THE LEADING VARIETIES, AND OC HIE 3IOST PROMISING KINDS, AT Is O V RATKS, by the single vine, dozen, hundred or thou sand. All persons wishing good and thrifty vines will do well to call and see for them selves. A r , , . JtjyCooJ aud responsible Agcuta wanicd. Address, J')NAS OBEUHOLTZER, Miflintown, Juniata Co., Pa. Feb- 14, 1870-ly COME THIS WAY!! Xew Flur and Feed Store ! i M'MIE undersigned having opened a Flour; -1- and the Tost Office, in the building formerly occu-1 . itiii' hr I'nlph Parkpr would rnoctfullv r - , ' -, gnnounce (o ,hc cit itns of Miftliniown and niiy, that he is now prepared to furnish ; ! r'll'iic with FLCUn AJJO TEED, I srcH as Corn HnJ, Corn, Oa't, CJnw, Mui,lun-jx, ' Aud everything usu illy kept in a First-class Feed iore. Also, POTATOES FOR SALE CHEAP. I will deliver all goods if ordered. I respectfully solieii a liberal share of public j patronage.i' - - ...... EKOS EEKGV Miflliutown, April 20, ISTU-Cm. CONFECTION E 11 Y AND FRUIT STORE. f THE undersigned, thankful for past pat- j Ki"S Arthur is represented as holding ronage. takes this method of iuforniing his his most Splendid court, and more Sub old customers and the public generally that ta,,tia moLs than he observed it as Lb kn J.tiui ati.illiA InviTA anil Wnll BitlftrM mil I stock of Oranpes, Lemon's, Potatoes. Tohac-! oo t-ipare, educes or an Kmus, ani ine wit;- countv; also, Fresh Bread, Rolls, Cakes, &c. Having purchased the .Mifflin Bakery, I am , prepared to Ornish Bread, Kails, Pies; Pret lels, Dutch ( :.ke. Eye Dread, Ginger Cake, Sugar 'ake. Spice Cake, Pound Cake, Fruit nani(,'n(lJI Ca'te"a ffill'lle ,0 order. lloll and or- 53U Having secured the services of a first class baker, 1 am prepared to. furnish the country trade with all kinds cf cakes at rca sonable rates. Nov. 10, 1869. WJL II. EOOLF. PIIE public are hereby informed that, the X unJur.-igacd .is kw manufacturing all kinds of ' ; v-' Cane Scat nnd Windsor Chairs, and j Koel.ing Chairs, of every description, and will endeavor to keep constantly on hani a . t , COMPLETE ASSORTMENT -j - of the same. Not wishing to- offer anything I '.uai ne would not be willing to buy, his p trons can rely opon getting the valu of their i monev. 1I l.ifM nut hoaitu,a ;n ,i., wurk .nuffurea. eitlier now or in time nau Wareroom on Main street, Shop on Water street, Milllintown. Pa. : , . - CS5uGood chair plaiik wanted, Xrom six teen inches and upward. Bcpt2a'un.tf WM..F. SNYDER. WELL! --WELL!! WELL!!! rpiI E un lersigned would respeclfull inform .1 , '1,e.c"UCn8 l'toa vicinity that he has opened a , DRY GOODS. GROCERY AND PROVISION , . STORE, S'ftn1 '? I'a,tcr8"'- ' ""ing been out of business for a number of years, he hopes to again receive a liberal share of pub lic patronage, feeling assured that he can sell 9ie4pl!,,S,"-n 0"lcr 8t0re in Je county. W, All kinds of county produce taken in exchange for goods at market prices - ' sept 22 1809- ly WHT. . CLARK & FRANK, r: . ; HAUDVVABE DEALERS, OPPOSITE THE COUET DOUSE' . .', ' M I FFLIXTOWN, PEN N 'A. Iron, Steel, Nails, Nail Rod, ITorse Shoes, Carpenters, Builders, Carriage Makers, Cab inet Makers and House furnishing HARDWARE. . Call before purchasing elsewhere, at CLARK & FRANKS, ang 18, 1869-tf Mifflintown, Pa. A Large assortment of Queensware, China ware, Glassware, Crockery waie, CeJar ware, for sale chtap by . . , 0 KAVU1JLL ft SHELLY. , , MFFLINTOWN, IJcti's ' Corner. r DREAMLAND. Down a silent, tidclesa river, Which we mortals have named Sleep, Floats my soul all wrapt in slumber Floats adown its waters deep ; O. and on it drifteth slowly With no sight, or shape around, Through the silence and the darkness, And the mystery profound. As the thistle-down, wind-wraftcd, Floateth without power or will. So my soul floats o'er that river O'er its depths so dark and still. Till like summer dawn there riseth O'er the dark, a golden light, And through shadowy-builded portals, She beholds that region bright. Oh ! the glory of the Dream-land ! Who the tale shall dare to tell, . Of the strange aud mystic beau'y That within it e'er doth dwell ? Of the sigh and sounds mysterious, Of the shapes that through it glid, With the old beloved faces, Vet so strangely glorified ? Of its treasures, weird yctlovely, Like the secret of the sea ; Mortal eye may never fathom All its beauteous mystery ! Far beyond our sunny Earthland, Spreads this country fair, serene, Through the clouds at sunset oft-times, And in "golden vietas" seen ; Through the clouds that, high and snow tipt, Hide its portals from our sight. Save when souls are tome beyond them On the thought-wings of the night, Mist enveloped and surrounded, Dim its valleys stretch away, Dewy silence on its bosom Kow a mystic veil doth lay. To le contimued. Miscellaneous ' Stalling. WHITSUNTIDE. Its Celebration by the Good People of Lan- culler. A Jewish festival was the Fentecost, held, as can be guessed from its name, fifty days after the feast of uuleaveued I,.-.? rVrt i 'I. i-i jM n a i InrnriKt .H'HM from the circumstance that was the day l ' I . lr l rl... J,1A...l,t onwuica me jiuiy uuust utvuuucu uu .... . . the Apostles, bringing to them the mar vtlIous irift or "tongues." Iu. nf.oLJ;vai.t..mES. i-'and even prior to them, it may be but : certainly iu media; val times the people of Western Europe celebrated the Pente cost, as a season of great festivity, re- t - -. i r i i . gaming it as a period ot tugner lraport- ance than can ue easuy cxpiaiaeu uy tuo incidents attached to it, the record of -1 1 II I. the Gospel, or Chiistian legends rather vague. ' ' i ' In the romances of .that time---deJight-ful iu their quaiutuess we( are told that it was one of the great festivals of kings aud chiefiaius. It was the day on which the grand festival of the year, looking j orju-d to it as the special season ot , chivalrous adveuturc of tut and toruncy. From these circumstauces we feeljusti- gej jn BU,,posiug that the CHRISTIAN PENTECOST had been identified with one of the great summer festivals of the pagan inhabi tants of Western Europe. This i3 ren dered more probable by the circumstance that our Whitsuntide always has been aud still is one of the most popularly i festive periods cf the year. It was com- imonly celebrated ; in mighty draughs of tL WliltBUt ale 'and in the nots of the l Morris dancers. England at one tune considered the festivities of such import ance that their expences were defrayed by, the parish. ' Games of all kinds were indulged in on each annual recurrence of the' day, sorao of them peculiar to the season, others more geueral, and archery especially was much; practiced. .' -j Iu this country, America,. ft never has risen to the dignity of a general holiday a season' of joy and festivity'--but then America has refused all the holidays of the Old World, aiid WLitsunide was but included in that weeping refusal. i Nev ertheless, in j articular places, and anning particular classes, of our people, the sea son is far from ' being supp6se"to come and go unobserved ' and ' uncelebrated. Among these places aud these people, perhaps Lancaster county, in this State, and the good PEOPLE OF LANCASTER are first in celebratuig tliia era. Ilere the people are, many of them, German, the descendants "of Germans. They speak the Hugo knowu as the "Lancaster county Dutch," and wear in face and firm mien undeniable marks of their or gin. They are of the Vaterland, "and any stranger can at once 'see it. , But let no stranger imagine that they are of that rude, uneducated, emigrant class that he encounters Jon; Abe dock, green' from' tie land of wooden shoes and meerchaums. Far from it. Take a gathering of our Lan caster yeomen, 'and take a gathering of your New England farmers, and the dif ference. If any, i regard ef Inteffince and self assertion, of pluck aud quickness ' is in favor of Lancaster. THE COSSTlTOTIOa TB DIIOX AND TH BroaOKHRaT: JUNIATA COUNTY, PNN'A.,.1JUNE 15, 170. Where land U dearef'.aa a coudequcube, rather as a cause ? Where if sericulture more thrifty and profitable ihan in Lan caster county ? Where cat ' yonr oyes behold better Btock, fatter cattle, horses of purer blood,' sheep of h'feer and sof-j ter wooii Were farms tetter managed and more fertile like the fat lands of Egypt ? Where houses more comforta ble and barns lanrer and warmer than in Lancaster county? The ; answer, "No where," pprings ready to the lip of any one who looks abroad upon the fair fields of waving grass ' and grain.' And "the men who have done all this are Germane, or the children of Gerraais-the men who have made Lancaster; county the garden of the State are GtrmanB- and they - are proud, in a country where all are from foreign stock, of tlifeir descent Aud they are proud, too, In their reten tion of the festivals and holidays in their fathers bequeathed them, j They are proud iu their celebration of . ( j , WHITSUNTIDE 15ut they are peculiar iu Jieir observ ance of it. How "times Live changed since fifty years ago,'. as tiif soug has it, and the peculiarities of iLo celebra tion of the season in Lauuster county have also suffered change iu half a cen tury. . If the memory , of the elders amorg the Germans there xn'.jpQ trusted, the custom was we speak f fifty years since for the surrouuding cuutiy, near and far, to flock to Lanciajter town on Whit-Mouday, and ir a grud jollifica tion a feast of good, ihii j. the cakes aud candies of the shops, .a marching Intlier aud thither through, the streets, linked arm in arm, eating, each couple or trio or quartette of the, same huge "gingerbread," an attendance the year ly fair, viewing aud purchniug the gay things, the ribbons - and the breastpins celebrate the day according'to their tra ditions, clear their consciences of duty in this respect by clearing their throats with ehout8 and songs, anl wash down friendly salutation from (the pewter bowl. ' i - This they used to do, andjnore. Tbey j were economical in those jiays. Lloie ' fl.an Ani anniimt if tiinm trill rtfm PITll fr i how they walk to town, a:i wa.I; bare ; jot waisea iiiruugu tuo ausi, aim UIUU I t . ii i .1 l. -V l fc l J men, women, and childim, together- aud only when on the edgef the place, within sight of the town balk, encased) their feet in the carried sLoes and stock- injrs. This is not their wont now. J hey would not uo eucu a tLnij low. Alter barefooted slow pedestriauicmcame quick pedstriatiistn. They still came to town. And they now come. They came yes terday. But'now they have grown rich, waxed fat, and disdained even the saddle. When they appeared yesterday. . . A GREAT THROSQ crowding the streets, filling this historic "Centre Square," swarming the hotels, the country taverns a great throug from the hills and the valleys, and the plains too ; yes, twenty miles away a multi tude that pressed iu. every shop door, and kept every happy shopkeeper busy. They appeared m carnrs carriages brought them buggies, and phaitoue, and rockaways. Not one fame on foot ; not one on horseback. A Vehicle it must be the mode ; of conveyances. "And what a multitude of thetn- Why, on every street of the town they stood In long lines, fairly blocking the highway, stretching three or. four LIscks from any particular "stopping place" standing there, packed pole under body, hard against each..;othjpr, Jha Iicrses-all taken out and taken away. Taken where f Where is stable-room in Lancaster city for all the horses of Lancaster county ? Where? Somewhere, for, you don't see them. , . Room . haa been found for tLcm somewhere. . .Walk into the vast stables of the tavern stables fho extent of which you , wonder at-bnilt ifor just such occasions hundred , after . hundred stalled and unstalled, the harness , unre moved, ready for a hasty start and each one numbered.- Yo- lai already no ticeJ that cach''wagon as numbered Yort know: now' the reason. 'Now out of the stable, again "r f ; " - ' ' : V- "'' t'POJJ THE flTBBET.' ' ' ;' What a sight enconnters the eye of the stranger j . The multitude, ' which the town kuows but once a year -we have already mentioned that. But its com position ! Donnie lassea, fresh and charm ing as roses, yet wet with 4e dews of the morning, dressed in their hist,- their ap pearance exciting in the bosotn an unex plained thrill, tripping like; deer over the hard pavements the unaccittomeid bricks hurt them-gaziag in the widows, leagu ing in tones as clear as the skylark's and sparkling on jou like a gttdden' flash! These are tic girls of Lanceter 'conn'ty come to the celebration of Yfliitsuntide m town. A4 theTlada thc.,r along Tall Btrong..stalv'art -bone tieref muscle there; nothmg weak. , lney can. Btnke as their horses kick.. Aj loot at them would, carry dismay .to any piyaiciau's soul. r for medicine they have, a supreme . contempt. They never, need it. When they die they die. without it just drop off, at a ripe old age, like ripe' fruit' from their own trees:' And the older folks are with them, to keep them" straight in that' TBI LAWS. dreadful place the town, we suppose. But the old ones come to do shopping too They combine everything, for they are wise in their years ; they combin e plea sure for themselves, pleasure for their children, care over thepe latter, and the purchase of coffees and sugars. And the little ones are there tender plants from Lancaster county fields. What more can be said ? Everybody is there and there upon the street. The city keeps the the season as a holiday, for, what ever employers desire employees are bent on a frolic. And they have it in fulness ere the sun goes down. By that time the crowds have vanished the horses have found their proper carriages these have rattled with tired Lancas ter county people over the stones and out of the gates and all is quiet. PKE-ADASITE REPTILES- While dip ing on the farm of Joseph Jessup, Esq., near Mullica If all. en the 11th hist., some men struck the remains of an animal, the study' of which hits long engage the attentiou of scientific men. .The only portion of this fossilil erous specimen yet discovered is the head, which measures six feet, aud from its construction indicated that it belonged to the Mosasaurus species of the Third Period, The body of this would be sixty feet iu length, and iu breath four to five feet. The collection taken shows two rows of teeth iu a perfect state of preservation, with extremely sharp edges measuring from an iuch to an itiiii and a half iu length. Not knowing the value of the skeleton, no care was taken at first iu removing it from the marl. The collec tion is therefore, incomplete, and it may be that the procuring of ihi remainder oi the bones is impossible, owing to causes of which we will not speak. It was found about six feet below the first strata of maiL Prof. Marsh, of Yale College dur ing a visit ou Saturday, obtained the pos session of these remains, to aid in com pleting the form of this animal, parts of which he had previously secured. Other curiosities, of geological formations, were found in the'neighborhood, indicating that the character ot all these animals were marine, and that they existed m i,. e .itions or years ago. This peculiar species found belongs to the snake tribe, somewhat re sembling the lizird in form, aud had two paddles, by which the motion of the body was directed. A bone was found in the pits by John W. Ilazleton, Esq., ; four inches in diameter, of consid- marl about erable weight, belonging to an animal forty feet high, which stood on its hind fee. Wonilhvry (Conn )Const!tution. A ClKIOl'S LEtiESD. When Adam was fur advanced in years and at the point of death, he sent his son to the angel Michael, who kept the gate of Paradise' to pray for the oil of mercy. so that hfi could be healed, lhe angel : answered that it could not be until fifty- fiive hundred years, but he gave Seth a branch of the tree of which Adam had eaten, bidding him plant it on Mount Lebanon, and that when it bare fruit his ! father should be healed. Seth planted the branch on his father's gave ; it took root aud grew, and from it were made Aaron's rod and Moses, staff with which he struck the rock aud sweeteued the wa ters of Marah. . If also formed the pole on' which the brazen serpent was raised up, and the ark of the testimony. At last it came into the hands of Solomen, who used it in building his palace ; but it continually resisted . the efforts of the builders to adjust it. Now. it was too long, and then again too Ehort. The builders, being angry, then threw it iuto a marsh, so tliat.it might serve as a bridge. The queen of fcheba would not walk upon but adored it, and told Solomon that npou it should be suspended the man by whose death the kingdom should be destroyed. Solomon then had it buried deep in tho ground, where afterward the pool of Beth- sada was dug, and from the .virtues of this tree healing properties were imparted to the waters. After it had been buried three" hundred years it rose to the surface of the water, and the Jews took it and made of it the cross of our Savior Lip- TtATS and Pippiss. Many people who have been told that the Chinese eat rats, do not believe the story j but it is true. ' In the northern part of China.' where meat is cheap, rats are never eaten ;' in the central provinces, they occasional ly add a flavor to a poor -'man's soup ; but i-tDe vicinity . of Canton, they are a staple article of food with, the lower classes ., A rat is prepared for the Chi nese market in a peculiar, way; it is skinned, opened, pressed Hut, salted and dried. . Bats are to be seen in the market place, piled up, iu the above shape, like codfish in our grocers' shops, r Of course when the , "coming man'' is represented by the thousand herr he will want his rats ;7and bo doubt there will be enter prise enough among our people to give them to ' him in the.- form' as above de scribed.' This will be" called "a new branch of industry and trade' very pro perly, ,1--iL ? lr... j Di. Hall, the Arctic explorer, ia in New' Loudon with si group of Esquimaux. EDITOK A5D PROPKIETOR. WHOLE NUMBER 1213 CABBIES PIGEONS AT SEA. When the probable loss of the Inman steamship City of Boston was first sug gested in the newspapers, on account of her non-arrival at Liverpool, some one in this country proposed the employment of carrier pigeons as . sea messengers of distress. A prominent London journal devotes a long article to this proposition, and nrges that a test of its practicability be made. If it is certain, or even only probable, that had there been suitably trained carrier pigeons on the City of Boston, we should now know the story of her fate, the fact is one of no slight interest and importance. There can be little doubt that the missing steamer is finally and forever lost. Whether she was destroyed by colliding with an iceberg when a few days ont from Halifax as Mr. In man, her owners, believes or whether she was consumed by fire caused by the over heating of her engines, as has bt en ru mored, we shall probably never know. And, if anything, it is this dreadful wa nt of knowledge that intensities the anguish of those whose de:ir ones formed a part of the precious human freight ou board the fated ship. In order to employ carrier pigoons for the conveyance of messages from vessels iu distress, it would be necess.iry to es tablish large dovecots as homes for them at one or two of our important seaports, from which they could be taken by outward-bound ship. In case of accident or peril, a slip of paper attached to one of the birds would be swiftly borne to the cot from which the pigeon came, provided the distance were not too great, and the bitd could be induced to fly from the ship. Five hundred miles is a long flight for the carrier pigeon, though sea birds can can doubtless traverse a longer distance without touching the water more than once ortwice. But the speed of the carrier pigeon is very great. At the annual pigeon race in Belgium last July, some l,ii00 birds weresentfrom Brussels to a place near Toulouse, 520 miles dis- taut. There they were let go, and the winning bird reached Brussels iu twenty . ... . hours from the time he was liberated. Ir Eneland, carriers have flown 300 miles in three hours and a half. Useful, however, as carrier pigeons might be in some case; as where a ship ! wiU short of Proviiiions' or her machinery KML they would avail nothing, prob - ably, on the occurrence of a suddsu dis aster. The outbreak of fire, or a colli sion with an iceberg, are accidents so U-rrihte n their nature that they leave no time for any thoughts but those ot how to escape. And it is probable that gome such sudden and unexpected fate- befell the City of Boston ; some disaster that would have rendered the writiu of a message and attactun; utterly impossible. But it to a bird j if she Went : dowu in a storm at sea, aud before she had half crossed the ocean, carrier pig- eons taken from this side might well have brought ns the last words of her passengers to those in the world they j had left. X. Y. Suit. WHAT IS DIET 1 Old Dr. Cooper, of South Carolina, n.ed 1 to say to his students : "Don't be afraid j : - . ., j- t9 i inwMig i acre was a savage Uo on tho of dirt, young gentlemen. W hat dirt .' ) . , , a . . ii r i i i premises, the lover took an eriua'Iy frro Why, nothing at all onensiv: when chemi-1 . J ,, . j r t. it l- .u i clous cur with him, aud set the two t cally viewed. Rub a little alkali upon the I ' dirty grease spot upon your coat, and is j hth W1,iIu lhe oU f"lkj wcre trJ" , undergoes a chemical change and becomes m "V tLe cbative beasts, tho , an- v, mh it with alittln wntpr ami it I S,rl '"VP""1 oltt tue 0;lc'- 00T. and wad :.r. ., ' UIonjJJl-Ara, a " uchuci gicivc, owj, ma ter, nor dirt. That is not very odorous pile of dirt you seo yonder; well scatter a little gypsum over it and it is no longer dirty. Everything like dirt is worthy your notice- as students of chemistry. Analyse it ! analyze it ! It will separate iuto very clean elements. Dirt mikes com, corn makes bread and meat, aud that makes a very sweet young Lidv that I saw one of you kissing list night. So after all, you were kissing dirt, particu larly if she whitened her skin with chalk of fuller's earth. There is up telling, young geutldmcn, what is earth ; though I may say that rubbing such tUuflf upon the beautiful skin of a young lady ; is a dirty practice. Pearl powder, I thiuk,is made of bismuth, nothing bat dirt." Lord Palmerston'sfine definition of dirt js, "Matter in the wrong ploce." Put it in , the "right place," and we cease to think of it as dirt. Herald of Health. : An unhappy father writes to a Louis ville papery "I am a miserable man. My only son is not quite eight years of age; and yet he not only swears and chews to bacco, biikc persists in partiughis hair in the middle, and in declaring that his mother has a better right to the ballot than I havo. Tell me, for Ileaven's sake what shall I do with him?" 'A" Western corner's jury returned a verdict that the deceased came to his death from exposure. "What do yon mean by that ?" asked a relative of . trie dead man ; "there are two bullet-holes in his skull." The comor replied with a wave of his magisterial baud : "Just so; he died from exposure to bullets." . . BATES OF ADVERTISING- f , - . ATI advertising for less. that) three, aontha for one square of eight lines or less, will be charged one insertion, 75 cents, three $1,50, and 50 cents for each subsequent insertion. Administrator's, Executor's and Auditor's Notice, $2,00. Professional and Business Cards, not exceeding one square, and inclu ding copy of paper, $8,00 per year. Notices in reading columns, ten cents per line. Merj chents advertising by the year at special rate. - 3 onthr 6 month: I yem One sqnare $ 4,50 $ 6.00- Two squares 6,00 9,00 Three square 8.00 '12.00 One-fourth col's. 14,00 ' 2,00 Halffolumn 18.00 i.00 510,00 15.00 20,00 S5.0O 45,00 80.00 One column 30,00 45,00 PEBS01AL HABITS OF WlSttLIBTOX. .Every American is eager to learn all he can about Washington, and is never weary of hearing anecdotes about him, or incidents o'f his private life. A letter, - jnst published, gives oma facts about him, in which our readers may be inter ested : While the Fed r tl City was building, the Legislature of Pennsylvania voted the President a house, hoping, perhaps, to keep the seat of government iu Phila delphia. The house formerly occupied as the University of Pennsylvania wa accordingly built for that purpose. But as soon as General Washingtqp. saw its. dimensions, and a good while before it was finished, he let it be know that he would not occupy it ; that he certainly should not go to the expeuse of purcbsa ing suitable furniture for such a dwelling- and hired instead a modest but comforta ble residence. The President ate Indian Ciikes for breakfast, after the Virginia fashion al though buckwheat cakes were general ly ou the table. Washington's dinner parties were entertained in a very hand some stvle. Ilisveekly dining day' for company. was Thursday, and his dining hour was always four o'clock in the afternoon. His rule was to allow five minutes for the variation of clocks and watches, and then go to the table, be present or absent whoever might. lie kept his. own clock iu the hall, just . within the outward door, and always ex actly regulated. When lagging members of Congress came in, as they often did after the guests had sat down to dinner, the I'resident's only apology was "Gentlemen, (or sir) we are too punc tual for you. I have a cook who never asks whether the company has come." He was always dressed iu a suit of black, his hair powdered, and tied in a black queiw behind, with a very tleganl dress sword which he wore with inimita ble grace. Mrs. Washington often but not always dined with the company, sat at the head j 01 tne wole' anrt " a3 was occasionally tuo j ease' t,1Pre were 0,fieir ,aJies present, they ' 8at pac" B"lc ot 1 ne 1 resnlent sat ! 1...H r. .t. , wiV l '" to ma iooi oi uio ! tilbIp' arul on tLu ei(Is Le woultI PIi,c0 I Mrs. Washinprton though distant from him, on his right hand. 1 or Dbatu. -That death aud !gieep are very much alike the sages all 1 tell w, but see how very attractively Leigh Iluut described the latter : "It isa delightful thing certainly, that of being nestled into bed aud feeling that vou will jrop gently to sleep. The good U L. j come not past. The limbs have been j jllst tire(j enough t0 reiult.r the remaining j in one portion delightful. The labor of the jay is done. A gentle failure of the j preccptions comes stealing over one ; tho spirit of consciousness disengages ilself .norM nnd mnro VL-ilTi blitw Ii.iIim... degrees, like a mother di-taching her hand from ,iat 0f jlt;r BleeMig child? the mind 8erm3 t0 h;ive a balmy lid c!osin ovci- ;t( ijke tue eye .;rt ci0;(;. t;3 closod. The mySterious spirit has gone to take ronliru They tell how a cruel father iu New ' ' ' , " " t!'.e arent ,over cf L" Stcr.- Alt , t..,i i -.. i married to her devoted John. Kkv. Peter CAimvainiiT, the veter an Methodist preacher, was in Indianapo lis, lud.,- last week. lie is eighty-six 1 years' of age, and has bi-en an itinerant preacher f r sixty-five years, and a pri siding eUer for fifty years. The reverend gentleman looks old and feebl.', and says hi: "can't prvacli any more : all bi can do is to talk.'' ' The manufacture of oil from the cot ton seed is m iking progress with every . prospect of ultimate success." It iasorav' what surprising that tho problem of thn t use of cotton seed should not have been -, solved l'ing siucc, especially when wi consider how many thousand tons of it ' have tx'en allowed to go to "waste in thu " United States. i Ef.ports from Central and Southern ". Frauce represented the appearance of the crops of wheat as not promising, while a fair averago crop is expected ia the Northern aud Easteru sections. A man in Charleston, whose son wa . killed recently by the explosion of a boil- t er, is suing the company that owned the : boiler for S30 000. - , , . Charleston and Savannah announce the first green corn aud tomatoes of tho season. "' A Chinese lawyer, who practises at . San Jose, Cal-, graduated at an English , law school. ,( . In the vicinity of St. Jospeh, Mis, . s-juri there are 400,049 fruit trees, cov- . ering 3710 acres. ' t .. , ! ' ' In Russia the prospects of the wheat crop are- mending, but prices at Odess.-v ' contiuud steady. " -: ' ' ' '-'