Juniata entiitd. M I F F L I N T O W X Wednesday Morning, April 5, 1S71. E. F. SCII WEIEIi, EDITOR k J'ROPrilF.TOftV wjasraa a - ------ CEO. P. R0WELL& CO, 40 Park Row, New York S. M. PETTENGILL i CO., 37 Park Row, N. Y, . , . Are our tele agents in thai city, and are au- therized to contract for advertising at our l.west rates. Advertisers in that city are ie- auekted to leave tlinir favors with either or ib, above houses, L Postponement of the Next State Confen- The time for the meeting ot th next tate Convntion bus been poslponed un til Wednesilay. the 17th ot May next.. Mahlon II. Dickinson. Kq.. of Thila - cMj bia, has been Appointed chairman of the State Central O'lninitrea. in place f the Hon John . ov.de. deceased Santo Domingo. The speech of Senator S Mimner on . Santo DomiiiF.0 is too long for our col nmns. We do not even attempt a reu lar synopnn of it, but but fly state that . J? 1 the Senator argues, to establish himself, .,.,,? ... , in his declarations, that 111 the proceed- ... , iocs camcd on Iet wren Imcz, the Oov-; 6 . , 1 emir of .vanto U.nmiizn. and our govern- i ..... . . . , ment at ashuigton, with a view of an- .. . , , , j e. . : Taxing tb.U IsUnd to the United States. ; the t onstitntiou of tins country has been violated, and that the onsiitution ot j Santa Domingo has been violated, and I -1 ...L. .1.: . : - I I xnawne p.nL rnMMo. ... """i tionHaw have been violated d I"1' aside. Tl.....or. to sustain htm.-lf ; 111 his declarations, qnores the husuiess re - 1 j.i. .1 . Cora o, ta navjr 0lx.ep u. . - ,, , 1 CI auuiurn oil unci nuiiooni iitw. , ii.ii- , . . 1 . ...j . ' . : . n . .... . 1 p . 0 , bimsell tvet ft tiids bitorn the tciile -wuuoui me liiiiu Ul ru.-uii:iu:i in imv.u r . . 0 eepuufceu iiji; mum; i itiiiirjk:iii;u w itu 1 any o'her 'li.ta t!ie purest ot motives. J . 1 . . Ibe people who -lecl:;r! Oeueial limit President btlicved him to be pure intentions. Tlmt npiuiun has not. ' . I been changed ; air! if he ha made mis tkes, they were, it is belie by bad couum-1 more than impure inten tions. Thtn-corl (d ciilu r l'le.-iuent or King during tiouMous liiues has yet to 1 ..,.. .1 u .1... .1. I ua Llltrcilicu III mc nuiiu iiiau unco in'. r . , , , bear the impress ct a nimtake here aud : there. As to the sent mt nt of tfc people on the question for or aaini-t the anuexa - tinn of Santo I'oniingo, it is iu these1 vallevg largely ag-iiiirt it. How greatlv this feeling will be iutei sifiej, or to what degree it will be removed bv the report of the Commission that visiied that Island fur the puepose'of investigating and re - portfng to Congress the condit on of its people, their sentiments in regard to an- nexation, its resources, &c, the counti y will soon know, .nce the lepnrt rf the 1 willing to give hi life for his people," Commission has been laid before Cou- j nom loTe'1 80 wel1 but somehow gress. If, af.er that, the people, are lie forgot to say a word about his effort gai:ist it, President Grant doubih-ts will ! t pscape u petticoats through the Yan reiterate the true American' sentiment kee li,le9 that were tIrawn "round his qnar that he so finely and forcibly expressed te one night. Davis would head an iu his inaugural address, that he has " no j ollier slaveholders' rebellion to-day if be policy to enforce against tLe will of the people," and thus will President Grant ud the people d sposc of Santo Do mingo. riiiladelpuia Enterprise. It it a gratification V Pennsylvanians to know that the "whole amount of the bond' for the establishment of an Amer ican Steamship Line from Philadelphia to Europe, have all been taken. P, nnsyl-! LeaJ of English Masonry, they have yet vanians receive a double pleasure from it j to cLow tbat thf are Letter lban 0,,r when thty realize that there is not an men- Iu fact- taki"S lhe wrage Parli American steamship line to Europe iu J amellte and the "vt'raSe Congresses, and existence. The Kltrth American says''0" wil1 fi,,d Uiat h U iu sound- not that there U not now one American j eme tbat ,he E"Slial1 Assembly is ateamer running to Europe, nor has there ""P"'0'- Lord Skifliiigdele sounds great haw. fr 1 All r..a.lJ'li Simon Grubb but dou't often plying to New York are foreign, and all owned and rnn by foreigners. If any of these ewner reside iu New York they are not citizens, but merely there to rep leaent and encourage their property. Sew York aud Boston, notwithstand ing their acknowledged wealth, intelli- gence and commercial enterprise, have j not ventured on eo bold an experiment j onrg' i The Border Bald Claims. The State Senate fome time ago ap fijintecl a special committee to consider what has been styled the " Border Kaid Claims." Las; Weduesday evening the committee held the first mee ting. Judge Jeremiah S. Black was present, and ad dressed the committee on behalf of the claimants, lie argued that the State should pay the claims, and then demand payment of the general government. Col. A. K. McClure followed in at speech on the lama side. The apportionment bill as reported to the bouse, groups in the Tiventy-tbird Senatorial District, the counties of Juni ata, Mifflin, Terry and Snyder, find en titles it to one Senator ; and makes a representative district of Juniata and Perry, wui one member. The committee for the investigation of the coal troubles has brought its labors to an end. It will report soon. The Pops in Want. . The people general! btlieve that his TJoliuess tbe Tope Jirei . Hi the enjoy ment of princely wealth and luinry, bul Archbishop Spaulding, 'of ; Baltimore, would bare the people, particularly the Catholic people, beliere that'tb" Pope w "reduced to the very verge of want and almost starvation." The Arclibii-hnp. in circular to the Catholics, relative to the 'staled annual collection for the rope," which is to be taken ou Sunday, June 4th, appeal for Aid f r the poor trving pontiff OU I poor Tio 'ouo. Here ia the appeal, or part of it : ; "But, meantime, the pontiff is a prisoner at the mercy of his unscrupulous enemies; j an(j j)e j4 rhbed, in consequence, of all hig T,.f()UTCCt for bia ,jeccnt maintenance ! and tJ f Iness of the church, of which he is tlie ' chief pastor and visible head. Lncler the3R cjrcun,gtaces it behooves all .1 j bis spiritual children to come promptly ! and generously to his relief. j tjow c0 Catholic ladies find it in their ' hearts to dance and and amuse themselves to wear supeifluous and expensive cloth ing, to rival one another in the extrava- f ganca and exptneiveuess ot llieir adorn rncnls, while the common father of the faithful, and their own beloved father in gt L;g VTefcirfor, is in chains and robbed of the very necesfla jries of life of wbat is essential to bis ! position as supn me doctor and pastor of Christians ? How can the children '. ..fa in mnat ATupnairA lllVnrlnA wllilf . 0 . , . . , , the father is reduced to the very verge ,. ... of vant and t'arration, and is wholly at - ... . , , the mercy of his enemies, w!it are also . . , .. .. . the enemies of Christ, and of all religion . , , . , all truth and all virtue I Twaddle, twaddle, rid. He, toddle, who en tell whjoh whether the ,., or ,be Archbishop for this lie. will firt go to hell! The Insurrection in Tarls. The insurrection in Paris still , lmt a1 eff)rts extend it to the rural districts tl(1 town, haVe thus far Th; B,k of -.France," in order . . - .,, . ... ... to save itself from pulajre by the msur 1 0 - jvHcd ,,,, five llun(Jred tbon. 1 sand francs. " o comts are open 111 1 Pans; all the judges have fled the city ... . , . . . n.i ! Kismark has informed the 1 biers gov ernment that if that portion of the money due by trance, under the late treaty, to i Prussia, is not paid bv the 15th mst. ... r, eictliv thousand German troops 1, . , 1. j 1 enter Pans, suppress the revolt, and re- : . . . ... - 11 : maiu in the citv until the money is all .. .. , " , , . ., ! paid. On the 1st and 2nd met consul erable fighting took place between the irnvprnmpnt troons and the Paris mobo . . . , crats. 1 he government troops carried j the day on all of the occasions. The 1 IU?? Ul IIIU 11 .CiilliairiA Kb DltlKIt llllll- ! dwl. The government shot the pris oners that were taken so dispatches ! say. The insurgent government has or 31.1 - r I derea the seizure or the property be ' longing t Thiers aud other leading men of the regular government ! Jefferson Davis. This rebel gentleman, who, instead of ' dying in the last ditch, as he oft declared he would, delivered a speech recently at ' Selina, Alabama, in which he declared . that the Southern caue had been defeat- . ed. but is not dead, but will ultimately : triumph, lie declared that he had never i pardon for whit he had done, aud tllilt te never would. "He waa always had the power. Why do 60 many papers seem to de light in asserting that our branch of the Joint High Commission is vastly inferior to the Kuglieh branch ? The English geutkmeu have never iu any instance :iven any evidence of great genius or unusual ability, aud though they have titles wild one of them a count is at the have the brain. Ex. The Washington Pa. R porter says : It is a noteworthy fact, over which Wash ington has a right to feel proud, thaj the two rival candidates for the Speakership of the National House of representa tives are both natives of this place. Mr Blaine and General Morgan were born ana educated here, and their, respective residences in this town were within a stone's throw of each other. It is a re i rnarkable illustrations of the mutations. as well as coincidences, of life that they appear in Congress together, one repre senting Maine aud the other Ohio, and as competitors for the honor of presiding over thai body. i The lite.-ary societies of Lafayette College, Eastn, Pa. have selected Col. Alexander K. Ji cClure, of Philadelphia. to deliver the usul annual address be fore them at the approaching commence ment in June next George Bergner, proprietor of the Harrisbnrg Ttl'grayh, has been sued by Jeremiah Black, for libel. ' The New Yoik World declares that the Democratic party is the party of free trade. Connecticut has gone Democratic by a nall majority. Seven ont of eight blast furnaces at Danville have blown oat. X SCESE IS THE I JiJTED STATES SEMTE. - v v - Senator DbtIs, of Kentucky, irhila making a PjMteli ia iploey f the Knklnx Klan, is disturbed aut terribly enraged at tbe preneiee of General Butler. ' A, correspondent 'of tbe Philadelphia In(juirer writes of thV eene as follows, under date of MarchOtrrt. ' A very extraordinary sVene took place ia the Senate to day between Mr. Gar rett Davis aud Gencal Butler, which, whiles it lasted, created profound sensa tion, especially iu the' galleries. Mr. Davis had been speaking- for some time upon Mr. Sherman's resolutions instruct inj the 'Judiciary. Committee to report a Kuklux bill, and bad worked himself in to considerable passion ut what be con sidered the unjust' charges of disorder made upon tbe South, when General Butler came into the-Senate. At this point Mr. Davis waa. facing bis Demo cratic colleagues, and was apparently e horting them. General Butler, observing whowasspeak ing, marched over in that direction and took a seat directly next to the Kentucky Senator. Then, ti etching his legsout.be wbet-L'd his chair , around, threw himself back and loc ked at Mr. Davis with an expression on his face of mingled insolence and contempt. The galleries, thinking it a mere piece of biav.ido, enjoyed the thing .hugely.-: Mr.' ifavis, whose back was still turned, had reached that point iu his speechVliere be was claimiug that the stories of Southern outrages were grossly exaggerated. 'They are more," said he, "they are vile inventions of unprincipled adven turers and hearllers scoundrels, made to cont'nne their ill-gotten hold on political powei ; they are ' and here, turning around in the warmth of his feeling, he beheld Geneal Butler almost at, his very elbow, looking straight at him with a face immovable as a stone. Mr. Davis immedi ately paused in his half-nuished sen tence, placed both hands on his desk, aud glared at Butler almost with the ferocity of a tiger. Butler returned the Ken tuckiau's look unflinchingly, only grow ing a trifle paler, f The tabltau continued for several mo ments without either changing bis atti tude a particle, while the galleries looked on in painful suspence, and the surround ing Senators held their breaths and af fected au uuconcern which no one fell, ri ually Mr. Davis drew himself up, thrust his clenched fist almost in Mr. Butler's face, and said "Here, is the man 1 'Ibis is this class of men who concoct stories of diabolical Southern outrages, and then ask for unlimited power to suppress them. Look at the scoundrel 1 Iiero he if," aud. his excitement becoming too great for him, he sank back into his seat, while the Chair promptly suppressed some threatening demonstrations which were attempted iu the galleries. It being one of those things where in terference was a very delicate matter, no I one had tempted anything ot the kind ! memorable occasion., wheu the Mtni thus far, aud those present breathed j mi4C baJ euut the Cumberland, the more freely when Mr. Lavis dropped into j Whilldin advanced right in the face of the his seat. Still, Mr. Bull er never budged enemy's fire, and passing over the deck nor altered the expression of his face, al-1 f tl,e guuken Cumberland, picked up though a thousand eyes were turned upon j nlore tijaa three-fourths of her drowning him. Mr. Davis was no sooner in his men. Captain Kiggins and engineer chair than he wheeled it around, and j Tom. Ford, who rendered this good ser commeuced to draw it op by short jerks j vjcei MjH command the Whilldin on her iu the diiection of Mr. Butler, uutil the i tri-weekly trips from Baltimore to Phil distance between them was almost im-! adelphia. You will find the name of perceptible, when be burst out again with "Oh you scoundrel!. You rascal!" with a few Btrong adjetives prefacing each epi thet. "Did you come here to insult met" Mr. Butler replied, "Go away from me What do you suppose 1 care about . you 7 Go away." Mr. Davis was just about to raise his arm to strike Mr. Butler when Senator Wilson left his own side, hurried over to the scene of the threatened con; flict, and, placing himself between the two men. stopped the disgraceful proceed- I g at once. Mr. Davis, upon being ap- pealed to in a calm, considerate way, cooled down at once and retired iuto ooe of the Senate ante-rooms. Mr. Butler however, stalked around ' the Senate chamber for several minutes' laughing and talking to this one and that as if nothing whatever had happened. When Mr. Davis was asked, later in the evening, why he gave way "to his prejudices in snch a conspicuous manner, he replied that it was very evident to him that Mr. Butler took his eat there for no other purpose than to insult him, and he would allow no man to do that.: Mr. Butler, ' however. Bays that he no more thought of Mr Davis wh"n he sat down thau he did of the man iu the moon, and never had the least idea of insulting him . ' ,. .. An Assault on a Temperance Man. While Colonel W. F. Canter, of Mo- quokct. Iowa, was standing in the post office of that town opening and reading letters, six men entered, locked the door inside, and commenced an assault on the Colonel with clubs. He was knocked down and beaten so badly that his life is despaired of- , The postmaster, who saw the attack from inside his office, cried murder. Citi zens rushed in, and the whole crowd of ruffians were arrested. CoL Carner has been outspoken against liquor-selling, and nearly all his assailants were ' saloon keepers. 0 the last day of March, the boiler in a distillery, in Brown county, Ohio, exploded, and greatly damaged ' tbe building, and killed six persons, and mangled nine others, two of whom have since died. .Thejoss onthe building is IS 000. The cause of the disaster - &as not been ascertained. One rumor has it that a number of the hands had baen in a drunken state two day. i t ;' Correspondence of tb 8ariaaE. Letter from Be'rC Du 3. Bealt. . ' St. Gioboi, 11 , March 28,, J87U .illt Editor: This month came .in like a lamb, but it is going - out like a lion. For fifty hours we have had al most Constant high wind, attended with cold rain. On Saturday night two sloops were lost off Turkey "point on the Cheasa peak. I saw a captain of a schooner to day who was in the same gale, and he assured me, that, although a waterman for twenty-severr years, it was the rong' est seas he was ever in. - He said "it was as much as a bargaiu that my schoo ner lived.' ' Almost one hundred vessels have passed through the canal to-day. Navigation is unusally good this spring The young druggist to whom refer ed in a former letter as being wounded in the head by the explosion of a retort, has since died. : A feeling 'of profound eor row prevails throughout our entire com munity on account of this .another terri ble accident - which has . recently occur red. Mr. Bingburst at the time of the sad casualily which resulted ia his death, was engaged in preparations for a scientific lecture on tbe properties and composition of water to be 'delivered in a few 'tlnys. before the Working Mens Association of New Castle county. Mr. B, was but thirty fonr years of age. '"In the midsij of life we are iu death." I have received wi h profound emotion the intelligence of the death of my ex cellent friend Joseph Barnard Esq., of Tuscarora township. lie was a man of more than ordinary mental force He will leave a great void in the community. As a father, friend, and citizen he will be greatly missed. "The Fathers, where are they ? and the Prophets, do they live forever?" Kev. Joseph II. Barn ard, of Wau Kashaw, Wisconsin, one of the most talented and eloquent young ministers iu the Presbyterian church, is a son of the deceased. -r . One of the Wilmington papers of last week has the following: "II. W. Hum perey. of Ex toil, West Whiteland, Ches ter county, in company with Alex. Mc Quins, same township, have purchased 1G5 acres of timber laud in Juniata county' Pa. fourty miles west of Harris burg. There is a large saw-mill on the property aud they intend to engage in the lumber business. They goto their new home about the first -of April." Having just returned from the city on the Whilldin. I would like to tell your readers a little about that boat She has a history ; and captain Biggins has an enviable immortality. She was the first steamer pressed into the government ser vice, when the war broke out. She did cxteusive service during the whole of the war and Mr. Anthony Reybold, the owner, realized a handsome income from her aud six or eight transports he had in the government employ. You remem ber the great naval battle at Newport ou March 8th, 1SG2. Well on that ever- tliis boat and that of its heroic captaiu in almost any of the histories of the was I saw it in Abbott's a few day ago. 1 understood captain 11 , to say that he had more than 1100 soldiers on his steamer at - once. As many as seventy-five wounded men have died on board the Whilldin in a few hours I forgot to say that just before the little Monitor came tip and engaged the attention of the M err i mac at Newport News, tbe latter fired iuto the Whilldin near the boiler. completely disabling her; but fortunately iUinp: no one. Engineer Ford told me be stood to his post, but it was "a pretty .irt nUcti to be iust then." . i Poor Paris seems to be in a more pita hie condition than ever, It would appear that a second reign of terror was about to take place. -Strange that such history as tlie terrible Massacre of 1793-4 should ever repeat itself. Passing strange that those maddened Frenchmen, scorpion like, should after attepting to destroy their neighbors, turn upon themselves Doubtless the verdict of Christendom to day is this : The French people are not sufficiently moral and intelligent for self government. ' : . ' Very truly yours, . . ,, ; .u : D. J. BE ALE. , - An Insane Man Shoots a Priest ' ' Chattanoga, April 2 Yesterday, at Ottawa, 111 . Father Tierney,' of the Catholic Church, was suddenly confront ed by an insane man named James Mor I risey,' who. without warning, commenced firing upon thu priest wnh a revolver who immediately turned aud ran 'from his road assailant.' Tierney had run but a few-steps when he fell upon his face, and Morrisey com ing tip! placed the revolver to the priest's person and fired five shots and then ran. None of the wounds are fatal. . .. . .. I Raid on a Jail. . . '.. A party of burglars some days ago broke into the j-u'l at Wheeling, West Virginia, and "stole some twelve or fif teen pairs of boots; meat, aud other mat ters, and - cleared themselves with the booty j' Entrance was effected by means f a ladder, which was placed against the wall, and which the bold -operators left standing as a monument to their daring and success."'. A ' i -. :n. vm: Cambria county's first colored 'juror wt ehalleaged every time. -- ' Just as We Found Them. r An inch of rain falling upon an acre of land weigh about 100 tons. ;: ' - About 300 rafts are lying along the river banks in the viqiuity of Marietta. A new railroad through Indiana, run ning through Cherrytree aud Indiana to Freeport, is talked of. . The amount of maple sugar sent daily from Brattleboro, Vt , of late, has been upwards of five tons. Law.is-Qike a seive ; you may see through it, but you most be considerably reduced before you can get through it. A little boy, fupon whom his mother was inflhlting personal chastisement,' said "co on bid woman, ' you havn't made me good yeU,'i i iii i 1 V r ; i rA Loudon correspondent of a New York paper states that Napoleon and ex EmpreSs Eugene intend to come and live in America. .7 The National Virginian, published at ' Kichnioud, Va., has atthe head of its columns' the name of Ulysses S. Grant lor President' iu 1872. ' ' i'l The "briarwood pipes'' are nearly all mjde from laurel roots, obtained in large quantities, at very low prices, ic the Iow er!counties of Maryland. . '-' A thief tlie other day stole the heavi est carpet bag he could find in the Kens ington depot, and after carrying it to West Philadelphia, opened it,and fonnd the contents to be half a hundred bibles Governor and Setmtor-elect Clayton, of Arkansas, Ua native of Chester coun ty. ' His parents still reside there and his old neighbors say be is a man of great en ergy, Ligh-miuded, aud above , board in all his transactions. ' ' ' Pierre Ernon, one of the wealthiest merchants of Malta, . is stated to have been a' banker in Mobile, ' Ala ,' many years sgo. Having failed there be went abroad in pursuit of a new fortune. lie is by birth a Louisiana Creole. ' Colonel Whitley's officers have arrested John D. Etzweiler, of- lens burg, for dealing in counterfeit monef. lie is charged with having bad bogus notes representing $500 ou his persou at cue time, and with having passed a numfk-r. The barn of J. G. Weaver, near Cen tre'ville, Cumberland county, Pa., was burned by an incendiary ou Tuesday evening two weeks a 'go.1' Loss 52,400. the insurance having terminated about ten days iefore. A Michigan boy who gave a compan ion a Cigar "loaded" with gunpowder, and as a result depiived him of about one half of Lis moustache, and an eye-brow, and a portion of his cheek, has paid $56 and costs for his little practical joke- . A niSrried gentleman, living, on North Tenth sreet, was out riding the other evening, and when be came home his his wife found a false curl atttched.td the I'lUton, on the side of his cap. lie couldn't conceive how it got there, but his wife gussed it tight the first time. It may surprise some readers to know that the oleander, 60 popular as a house aud garden plant, is extremly poi sonous. An Ohio doctor writes that be recently called to attend a child who had eaten some small fragments of an oleaitd bush tbat had been cut off. The symp toms were sudden aud viuleut, and the result nearly fatal. Josiah Thomas, of Riaring creek, Columbia county, recently built a new smoke bouse which doors eo constructed then when closed they could not be opened from the inside, with a view to entrapping thieves. Last week been tered himself and built a fire, but before he got out the wind blew-the door shot. Uuable to get out or attract attention he suffocated before relief came. His sou finally opened the door and found his father lifeless. ..Tbe Crown Prince of Saxony, is men: tioned as a very tall, spare, bashful, awk ward man, with milk and water eyes; and long, thin, struggling yellow hair in short, a mature Master Slendet. Tlie above, we beg leave to remark, although going the grand round of the press, is in correct. The gentleman referred to is not above the medium height, has rather a handsome figure, dark hair aud mous tache and rather a worn look, which is uot to be wondered at as be has been a great rone in his day. A day or two since, a twn rar old child of Lester Shelden, of Slurbiidge, Mass., while playing with a spool two or three inches long, holding it in her mouth, fell from the door-way, the fall forcing the spool down her throat far enough to bring tbe bead below the tonsils and roots of the tongue, and so completely wedging it into the mouth as to render it impossible to withdraw it direct without danger of taking the tongue with it Fortuuately the hole in the spool was large enough for the child to breath through until the arrival of a doctor, who", by spliting the spool, was able to take it ont iu pieces, thus saving the little one's life. " ' ' , CALIFORNIA. ( ' Oae llnndred and Twenty Buildings ' ' ' . - Burned. A fire at Truckee March the 30th, alt , destroyed almost the entire city, invol ving one hundred and twenty buildings, including all tbe bimnesa portion of the place and the Chinese quarter. An infant son of V. II.- H ill. proprietor of the Kennebeek Hotel per ebed in the flames; bnt it is not known that any other Ifvea were lost., The town was the depot of a great number of miners of the district of the Sierra Nevada, and will be quickly rebuilt, no doubt. The Central Pacific Railroad freight department was destroy 1. 50TICE.,- "Cbumbs Swept! Up" i the sugges tive and somewhat peculiar title of a very interesting and readable book, written by the Bev. T. DeWitt Talmage, of Brook lyn.'New York, and published by Evans, Stoddart & Co., 740 Hansom Street, Phil adelphia The author is well known by the public generally as a popular lecturer and preacher. We take the foUowing from the book : Cur Behind. Human nature, the same in aboy as in a man. All running to gain the vehicle of success. Some are spry, and gain that for which they strive. ' Others are slow; and tumble down ; they who fall crying out agaiust those who mount ''Gut be hind !" A political office rolls past. . A multi tude spring to their feet, and the race is in. Only one of all tbe numlier reaches that for which he runs. No t ooner does he gaiu tbe prize, and begin to wipe the sweat from hie brow, aud think bow grand a thing it is" to ride in popular pre ferment, than tbe disappointed candidates cry out : "Incompetency ! Stupidity ! Fraud ! Now let the newspapers and platforms of the country 'Ont behind !' " There 7s a golden chario: of wealth rolling down the street. A thousand people are trying to catch it. They Tun. They jostle. They tread on ea;h other. Posh, 'and pull, and tug ! Those talk most against riches who cannot g'et them. Clear the track for the racers ! One of the thousand reaches the gulden priz. and mounts. Forthwith the air is fu'l of cries : "Got it by fraud ! Shoddy ! Petroleum aristocracy ! His fatl er was a rag-picker I nis mother was a washer woman ! I knew him when be blacken ed Lis owu shoes ! Pitch him of the back of tbe golden chsriot ! . C'U-.leh-md .' Ctitb hindV In many eyes success is a crime. do not. like you,7Mid thesiiowflke.tojA-T;" '"' a JlB the Hnowbird. "Why ?" sail! the Bnow- tleorg Scarer. a-lm'r of Jacob Senref, bird. - "Because," caid the snowflake -Vr.m Shelly. No- 122 April rro IS i1. "you aie going up. ana I am going! down!" F rum Crumbs Unejit up. ii A boy iu Detroit has killed sixty seven of his neighbors' cats to get money to buy his mother a set of false teeth. He ha? made a quiet neighborhood -where once was a bowing wilderness. tfW drfrtisrmfutl Dissolution of Partnership. ""rOTlCE is hereby given il'at the partner-i-1 ship heretofore existing between the undersigned in I lit slioemakiiig business in the borough of Patterson, h8 been lis-o!ed. J. . i!L.l. & UtlU. April 4. 1871. ! Odd Fellows' Hall Stock. YT a meeting of the corporators named in an Act emiiled " A Mipplement t n Act to Incorporate the Od'J Fellnws' sit Association of the Borough of Mifflintown." it was required to issue 1'JcO shares of stock, at Kive Dollars per shire, the amount sub seribi.-d to be paid in instalments. In ac cordance with this resolution and I ho proTi sions of tne above-named aot, books will be open at tbe office of bonis fi. Alkinson, Ki in fheCnnrt House at Mifflintown, on THU U S DAT, ADUL 20th, inst., from 8 a. ji. iv 4 p u , for the purpose of receiving subscrip tions of stock. ' J. Ci. SNYDER. President of the Board of Corooratcni. April 5, 187I-td - WALL PAPER. Rally to ths Place where yon can buy your Wall Paper Cheap. rpiIB undersigned tike, .his method of in- 1 forming the public that he has just r-- Ai... i I.. f uiuivnu, aaia& ni3VI tuiciil VI WALL I'AI'Kll, of various sijles, which he offers for sale CHEAPER than enn be purchased elsewhere in the county. All persons in need of lhe above article, and wishing .0 save money, are invited to call and examine his stock and hear his prices betore going elsewhere. tfl. Large supply constantly on hand. MMON BASOM. Mifflintown, April S, 1871-tf FKESH BEEF, VEAL, THE undersigned wonM respectfully an nounce to the public that he has com. meneed the. Butchering Business, and hat bis warn will visit Mifflintown and Mexico on TUESDAY and SATCRDAT mornings of each week, when they can have an opportu nity of purchasing EXTRA BEEP. VEAL, MUTTON. LARD, &C. cheaper than from any other wagon. He only asks the citizens to give him a trial to satisfy them that he sells cheaper and belter meat than any other butcher in the countv. - - '- CYRUS S1EBER.'. April 5, 1871-tf Boot and Shoe Shop. THE undersigned, fashionable Boot WJ and Shoemaker, hereby respectful- K ly informs the public that he has loomed 0f in the borough of Patterson, where he is pre pared to accommodate the most fastidious in LADIKS' WKAIf, Gents1 Fine and Coarse Boots, CWLDREX'S WEAR, &CJbC. " Also, mendingr done in the neatest manner and upon the shortest notice. A libera! share of public patronage is respectfully solicited. Satisfaction gu'tranteed. 83k. Shop located in t'ae reservoir build ing, a short distance west of the wood sta tion. , ' ' 4. W.'DEAX. March 8. 1871-ly .i , , Administrator's Notice. ' Estate of Robert Quick, deceased. WHEREAS Letters of Administration on tbe estat'j of Robert Quick, late of Juniata county, deceased, have been granted to the undersigned, all persons indebted to said esttte are. requested to nake immediate psy ment. and those having claims or demands against tbe estate of said decedent will pre, sent them, properly authenticated, to - , . owes EVANS, March 22-6t Thompson-own. Administrator's Notice. ' ' ' Estate of Mary Ilertiter. deceased. WHEKEA3 Letters of Administrating on the estate of Mary Hertiler. late of Walker township, deo'd., have been granted to tbe undersigned, residing in Delaware township, all persons indebted to said estate are hirer.1 requested to make immediate nav. ment, and those having claims will present tuem properly authenticated for settlement. " " JACOB KURTZ, Adm'r. Msreh 22, 1871-3t TR(I L Jakis M. Grahav, President JaJge of the Court of Common l iens et tbe Mb. Indi cia! Pistr'ct, composed of the counties of Juniata, Perry anJ Cumberland, and tbe Hons. Thomas I. Mitnarn and Sahhh Watts, Judges of th Court of Common Pleas of Juniatu county. hae issued tbeir precept to me directed, bearing date the 10th day of Februarj, 1871, for holding a Court at Oyer and Terminer aud General Jail Delivery. w General Quarter Sessions of the Peace, at Mifflintown, on the fourth Muscat of April, 1871. being the 2ith day of the room a : M1TICK IS HEUEBY GIVE.S to t Coro ner, Justices of tbe Peace and Constable of ins county of Juniata, that they bt then and there in their proper persons. l 1 e-'elouk in tbe afiernuon vt iti(i.iiiy. ilB records, in quisition. eminatinn arl rher remem brances, to do those things llt to tbeir offi ces respectively appertain; and tiuvtetfcat are bound by reeogniiimco to prosecute against (he prisoner tbat are or ihen may be iu lb Jail of sard coutty of Juniata. Ke bn- nl there to prosecute giast liiem as shall be just. By an Act of AstembTy, parted the 8th day of May, A. V. Wii. it is made the dirty of tbe Justices of ta Peee of the tst1 coun tie of tiia Commonwealth to return to ike Clerk of the Ccurt of Quarter Sessions of lh Peace, of the rei,e:')Te eoualies, all tbe re. d-gnizances entered into before them by any person or persons charged with the uj mis sion of any crime, except snch ee as may be ended before a Justice of the Peace, under the existing laws, at least ten days before the commencement of tbe sedion cf tbe Court t which they are nuule r lurab!e respectively, and in all cases where any re?ogniaucs are entered into ies than ten das before the commencement of the session to which they are made returnable, the tai Justices are re quired to return tbe same in the same manner as if said act bud not been passed. limed at .Mitiiiotown, tbe 2i'ib day of Mar., in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and seventy-one. JOSEPH ARD, Shtrif. Sheriff's Office. Mifflintown, 1 Marcli li71. ) Trial List for April Term, 18 7L lewis A. Landis Tt Jeremiah Lyon and Henry Cross, assignees, Jtc. No. 9 February Term, 1871. I;ivid Smith yj. Ephraim and Wilber Mc Cahan. No di September Term 1808. James S. Vines vs. William Si roup. No. 142 September Term. 1859. Jamc Crousc i. Vm. M. Allison. No. 11 Aprii Terra. t70. Samuel Smith t.. Elder It. Gil'iford. Xo. 1 1 4i April Tero. lS7i .Inecb Zeiit'er t?. feim'n Cinal Co. Xo. ttC September Term 1870. JouuS. iukens is. Leach Fikc. So. 1? Deeentber Term 15'J. Fredrick Sebickle s. Henry Leiter & Co. Eliza Thompson vs. Jerome N. Thompson lieo. Ruubnugb Ex'rof Ma.tba N Tbomp sta. itc'i. ha. December Terra, 1(570. John Brant adin'r, So . fc- nse of the Ex'r of Martha A. Tkniapsos. decsased. vs. James II Tbsnip'ori. No. f"7 December Terra 1170. Juraes W. Alien. Ki'r of Samuel A Tien, de censed ts M'air Wilson. K oi 73 February Term, 1ST I. R. T M'ViEN. Fr?:b PETrHosfmr.i's UrrirE. Mitllintown. March -J0, i71. List of Jaiors, April Term, 1871. GRIND JUROR.. TTalker TMvid Antr. John ?J Meare. F;iyeit PetfT Bisfcoar, J. B. MeAIifter, S. C Miff), Oeo. Suively. Mi'ford Jolin i':bneb, Oliver Karri. Jacob Lauder. David l''rirer. Fermanagh Davi IS isLour, T'n. Giv.n. Delaware John l!nnt. Srxuce Hill Wai. F. Cruver, Samuel Gra l.eni. A.J Howell. I'err; svilie PhiSp Irber. Susigtieh tuna Kiuuimel Loii. lAik Eira Mow county, V:'::im Watson. 1 Jtfcn W'o't. MiSTiutown Frunk Sob!e, VTm. Wise-. Tuibvtt John VVeimer. PETIT JCKOllS. MilforJ J-M-oh Aughey, Wallis M Bratton. Lewis ISurcli 5eld, Samuel Dealing, James 1). Kelly, An irew Siiover. Tuscarora David Eeaie. Eliae Graxer. Thmups'in'own Eiibu lienner. Spruce HiL tiesrjre Uryaer. J. A. Fili- i gerald. ; Greenwood D. P. Cbx, Geo. . McEiwe, Millanl Woodward, Adam. Wilt. j Fayetle S. B. Caveny, James Caveny. j fhrisiian Ifuppte Samuel Leonard, Samuel Keob,;,, Re JdUc' Jobo l T,an"' I ' r?nle ?. Ewine. Thomas McCammon. WaJliCT Vim. Iletrick, Jtrome Hetrick, Nicbael Sisber. f- Delaware Jacob IToops. I crroac-igli Ekas Horning, Hurts Kauff- man. Monroe Elijah llerty. JlitTiiniown Win. J Jaclman Robert E. Parker. m. II. Rollman. John Yeailey. busquebanna Daniel Knouse, WiJliaai If. Knouse, Amos Miller. Perrysville Robt. Logaa, Jshn VT. Steven son. I'atierson E. J. Nangle. Joseph Rodders. J. B. M. Todd. Lack iiubr Rolison, Joseph Wallace, William D. Wa,ls. March 13, 1S71. HENRY - flARPER, Xo. Tti CIIEST.M'T &TKEET, (Formerly 5-0 Arch Street.) Opposite "OW Masonic Halt," FnrLaMi ratk. Has a Urg Stock af AMERICAN and SWISS GOLD svi SILVER WATCHES OPERA, 1.1'lXTltS AND VEST CHAINS. FRENCH CLOCKS, OPERA CLASSES ASI FASCY GOtJDS, FANCY antt PLAIN S015D SILVERWARK AND ROfiEP. ('ELKKKATEU SPOONS. FORKS. TEA SET5. ICE PITCHERS, CAS TORS, Ao., all of which are selliig al rea sonable prices. March -2. ISTMy Administrator's Notice. Xitate of Suuvtl B. Olcetnn. dirtasti. "I TfHEP.EAS Letters of Administration on V tbe estate of Samuel B. tiWeson. late of Ceale twp.. dre'd.. have been (rranied to tbe undersignej, residing in ipruce Hill township, all persons indebted to saiJ estate are requested to make immediate payment, and those having claims wilt present them properly autbentitated for settlement. JAMES B. OKESON, Adm'r. March 15. 1871-Ht Administrator's Notice. Ettate of Thomas B. Ilittit, deceased. "VTOTICE is hereby given that Letters of ll Administration on the estate of Thomas B. llittle.. late of the borouch. of Patterson. dee'd., have been granted to the a&dcrsigneit. residing in Fayette township. All persona indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate payment, and those having claims will present tbera properly authenticated for settlement. SAMUEL LEONAr.D, Adm'r. Feb. 22, 1871.-61. Administrator's Notice. Estate of Peter Tschopp, deceased. W HEREAS Letters of Administration o ti the estate of tbe above decedent hive been granted to the undersigned, residiag. in Greei-wood township, Juniata counts-, all I persons indebted to said estate are requested' to mane immediate payment, and those hav ing claims against said estate witl present tbe same for settlement. - ADAM TSCHOPP, Adm,'r. MarcW, 1871-61 JI TARTIV A WALTERS always keep op 11 tbeir stock of GROCERIES and wiil not be excelled either in thcrquality or price of their goode in this line. Give them a call before going e!sewher