RATES 0? AfiTK&TISING. ' AH advertuiac for torn than thro i for b sqaars of Bine Bass r loss, win kw barged oae insertion, 75 eeata, thro IM, aad 50 coat for eaoh subeeqnont insert) eev. Administrator'. Executor' aad AadUrs Notice, $2,00. Professional aad Busiaees Card, not exceeding en square, aad iaeh. ding copy of paper, $8,00 psryear. Kotieea ia raadiag eolncaa. wa eeata per line, kf er aaata advertising by th year at spatial tatse. ftsMssB Intt tiimut Hob aa, N4tMt. PPoriu tk 044 Pilewn JkaO, KirruirTOWV. a. BSBBJM , Tun InuT Itram it nttlM every B woafla- ll WsBBisaay arerniAg at $1,60 a year, U ed- 6 sqasrs f S.S0 Tw tqatratM, 6,00 Thro qare. 0,00 Oae-foartb eel's. 10.00 Half column 18.00 Oae eolumn. 80,00 faux) 8.0B lo.oe 17,00 41.00 Ss.08 11.00 Is, 00 26,00 AS 0B 0.00 vanes t sr 91,00 te ell mm sot paid vresBptly U edv ne. Ke MbteripUooi 4 eatkewed niil all rmr( are paid, ualea StttWetsiea of th pabliahtr. .f. CHWPJ, vaa NinimiH tbb aaioa a EDITOR AND PBOPRIETOB. VOLUME XIV, NO. 2$ M1FFLLNT0WN, JUNIATA COUNTf, PENN'A., JUNE 28, 1871. WHOLE NUMBER 1267 ; -fe rJ j justness Carbs. JOUIS B. ATKINSON. .Attorney at jLa.w, Mirri.DfT0W5. PA. 'lflrCoPttlaf sad Convaysaslag promptly Mm, second story f Court Hoom, sbov Prethoaotary' eSee. JOBEET McMEEN. MIPPLINTOWN, PA. OCe m Bridge afreet, ia tk room formerly spied by Sir D. Perrer, aq. jLIZ. K. McCLCRI, ATTOENEY AT LAW, 141 SOUTH SIXTH 8IRIBT, PBILAUSLPKIA.' ' Mtt7-tf g A. L00CKN, MIFFLINTOWN, pa.. Offers hi service to tk oititen f Jnnl ata soaaty as Auctioneer ud Vendue Crir. Charge, from tire te ta dollar. Setisfae ilm wrratd. nov3-Sm. DR. P. a BUNDIO, PATTERSON, PENN' A. Aagsct 18. 1889-tf. THUMAS A.U)KR,M. D., MIPPLIXTOWS, PA. Office koart 8 A. If. to S P. X. OSe la Bel'ord's building, two door above th Sen fanrf eSoe, Bridge street, aug 18-tf D c cnam d. HOIUSOPHATIC PHYSICIAN I SURGEON Having permanently looated ia the bcroagb of MiSialowB, offer bil professional services to tie oltiiea of this plaoo and (urrouodiog country. Ofioo B Main ilreet, Tr Beidler'e Drag Store. aug 18 1869-tf Dr. B. A. Simpson Treat all form of disease, and may be con slted a follow: At bil office in Liverpool Pa., every SATURDAY and MONDAf ap pointments can b -.ad for other day. At John U. Lipp'a residence. Mittliouwn, Juniata Co., Pa.. June 29Ui, 1871, till even ing Be punotual jflTCall ea or addrei IE. R. A. SIMPSON, dee 7 Liverpool, Perry Co., Pa. 6. W. KcPHE&KAN, glitomej at Jfow, 601 8ANSOM STREET, PHILADELPHIA, aug 18 1989-1 y ' QElfTRAL CLAIM AGENCY, JAMES M. SELLERS, 144 SOOTH SIXTH 8TRXST, PHILADELPHIA. 1 " . Bounties, Pensions. Baok Pay, Hon Claim, 6tte Claim. A., promptly oollected. We charge for information, nor when money S not oollected. octa7-tf LEBANON MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY, Of Jonestown, Pa- POLICIES Prpetoal, at low rate. No tea- rilk taken. Tbi i one of the beet cooduotod.and moat reliable Companies ia tk Stat. J. WILSON ALLEN, Walnut P. O., Juniata Co.. Pa.. Agent for Juniata, Huntingdon, Franklin. Fulton and Bedford onuntica. auylT-ly T IN PERRYSVILLE. n DR. J. J. APPLEBAUOII ha established B Drag and Preeoription Eter in the above-named place, and keep a general as sortment of DRUGS ASD MEDICINES, All all other articles neually kept in estab Uskments of this kind. Pare Wine and Liquor for medioinal pur poeea, Cigar. Tobacco, Stationery, Confec tloa (Srt-elae), Notions, etc., o. J0rrhe Uootor gives advice free NEW DRUG STORE. BANKS & HAMLIN, Main Street. Mffimtown, Pa. DB4.LERS IN Rtct m Kiewti, Ckemioala, Stuff, . oila, i Tamishe. poMy, Coal Oil, v Lamp, Burner. Chimney, Brashes, t lnfanu Bruehe. fioaps, Hair Brush, Tootk Brak Prfumry, Comb. Hair Oil, Tobaoco, Cigar. Ktin, and Stationary. LARGE VARIETY OF PATENT MEDICINES, elected with great care, and warranted from kick authority. . .... Pare.t of WISES ASD LIQUORS forMedi- eel Purposes. , . ... tr PRESCRIPTIONS eompounded with grSfoare. jmO- Key Tia ud Store Establishment, PerryniUe, Juniata County, Pa- THS nndereigned ha opened out a bow Tin aad Stove EtblirhmBtiB the. room on Railroad Street, next door to the Tuca rora Hotel, where be would be pleased to see all who are ia want of Tinware, 8tovo. . Ut will also give prompt attention to all or dor for Roofing. Spouting and Jobbing, au f which he guarantee to put up wiiB kMt of maUrlal aad ia a workmaB-liko maa Br. Haviag kad over lea year. PI ia tke butiness he flatter himself that a aa crv eatire aufaetioa to th Bekoepeoakaad tk celebrated Kimrod tek Btewa, whioh i th bet bakr, Btoat aomieal and fcavit plated tovoBOW ia aa: Ha will kep ob hand tke Onontal Heatn. aad a geaaral aMortBMBt af tka boat atmukJawWrwd. JOHN DUNBAR. Tht Grut Medical Dlsctury! Sr. WAXXZB'S OLI0fIA. YINEGA.R BITTERS, 1i Hundreds of Tltonundt T. v l 1ITIT TT 114 ' . tlfl ayl ) E- I" MM nnt intYYi f TSITaUVOTATU FANCY DRINK, M Had of Fear lea, TTkleker. Prewf Brlrlts aad Kefoee Llqaer ctr. spiced aednreeuaedu leue tbe teste, cll4 " Torn. Ice,'"' Appetisers,' Bsstorere," , that lead tka tippler oa to arenren end rata, kctar atne lledldae. made from tke Ksuvs Roots eat lerbsor Cellfttrnia, Ire trmm all Alcohell Stlaalaaio. Taeyare tneUREAT BL0O0 rORiriXKaai LIFKOlTINU PB.IN CIPLSa perfect BeaoTstor end Ilfortor of tae Iretea, carrrlac off all polsoaoes matter ea reetoilnc the bloodtoaaealtty eoadltloa, X enoa caa take thee Bitters eccordlaf to dlrao tlo. aad reaiala loaf na well. Pur laf aaaautorr aad Chroale Rhea aeailaaa aad Seat, Drtpoaeia er ladl aeetloa. Blllaas, KemltteaC and later salttoat Fever. Dleoaee of the Blood, Liver, Kldaere, and Bladeer. taeee Bit ter bare seea moet nccsuAtl. Bach Blt ease are earned br THIatod Blood, watch h geaarallr produced bj deraac eat of tbe Tlaativ Orsaaa. OYaPEPellA OB lHDIOCSTION. Beedacbe. rata la tbe Shoulders, Coo he, Tlfbt aen of tbe Cbett, Dimness. Boar Ersetatioaa of he Stomach. Bad taste la tbe Month. Billon. At tacks, Palpitation of tbe Been, laflammatloa of tke Leap. Psla la tbe rations of tbe aUdssrs, and ahaadred other pelafal ejaiptoms, are the os aprlafs( Drspepala. TbT Invigorate tbe Bteoacb and stiraalate the torpid liver aad bowels, which render them of aa oonalled efflcacv la cleanelnf tbe blood of all Imparities, and imparting aewllib aad vigor to the whole iritem. rOBSKlS DI8BA8ES,Krsptloae,Tetter, BaltBbenia.Blotchee, Spots. Punplee. PastalaS. BolU. Csrboaclee, Blag-Worms. Bcald-Bead, Sore Xres.Xrrslpelas,ltch, Scnrfh, Discoloration, of the Slcia. Humors and Diseases of the 8k!a, ef whatever nam. or natare, are Uterallr dng ap aad carried oat of the erstem In a Short time bf tbe nse of these Bitters. Ose bottle In enea caaat wl'.l coavlsce the most Incredaloss of tbelz eartUT. effect.. Cleanse Ue Vitiated Blood whenever too tad Its lmparltiee bursting through tbsskln In Pim ples, Brnptlons or 6oree j eleanet It wha yoa Cad It otxtrncted and .lugfUh la tbe veins t claaase It when It Is fool, aad roar feelings will tell yon when. Keep the blood pare aad the health of the aretem will follow. PI. TAPE and other WORMS, lurking la tbe system of eo many thousands, are effectually daitroy.d end removed. Tor fall directions, read carefully the circular around each bottle. J.WALKER, Proprietor. It H. IScDOSALD a CO, Drnmrlete and Oea. Agente. Ban Francises. Cal and S3 ssd M Commerce Street, Saw York. BOLD BT All. DBCOOISTB ASD DEALERS. J-JEST CIGARS IN TOWN nollobaugh's Saloon. Two for 6 oenu. Also, the Fre-be.t Lager, the Largest Oysters, the Sweetest Cider, the Finest Domestie Wine, and, ia snort, any. thing yoa msy wish in tbe EATING OR DRISKISO LINE. at the most reasonable price. He ha also refitted hi BILLIARD HALL, so that it will now compare favorably with anv Hall in the interior of the State. June 1, 1870-ly WALL PAPER. RaUj to the Place where yon can luy your v? au raper uaeap. THE undersigned tnkes this method of in forming the public that he has just re eeived at his residence on Third Street, klif flintowa, a Urge assortment of WALL PAPER, of variona styles,, which he offer for sale CHEAPER than can be purchased elsewhere in the eonnty. All pernons in need of the above article, and wishing .o save money, are invited to call and examine hi stock and hear his prices before going elsewhere. gmLarge supply constantly on hand. SIMON BASOM. Miffliotown, April 6, 1871-tf The Place for Good Grape-Tines IS AT THB aniafa alltg Hiiuprta, AND GRAPE-TINE NURSERY. THB undersigned would respectfully in form the publio that be has started a Orape-vin Nursery about one mile northeast of Mifflin town, where he baa been testing a large number of the different varietiee of Grapes ; and having been ia th business for seven year, he i bow prepared to furnish VINES OP ALL THE LEADING VARIETIES, AND OF TUB MOST PROMISING KINDS, AT LOW RATES, by th single vine, doten, hnndrel or thou sand. All person wiabing good and thrifty vine will do well to call and tee for them -elve. ggf Oood and responsible Agent wanted. Address, JON A 8 OBERHOLTZER, MifSiatown, Juniata Co., Pa. EMPLOYMENT BL'BEAU or TBB Young Ken's Christian Association, OSce. 123 South 7th St.. Philadelphia, Between Cheetnut ft Walnut. If yon wish to hir labor of any kind, write and tell n just th help yon want. The wage yoa will pay. The beat, and ... w.w tn math vonr el ace. and if far from Philadelphia, you had better eaeloee Railroad fare. W will do our best to serT you and give you all th information wa eea .i ...n. w a.nri. Onr deair i to U'iu. " . -. " assist th worthy, aad bo eharges to either party. Auare p 7 ALEX. 6 LOAN, 8np't Employmaat Bnraan, ISS Booth 7ih Street. Fbilada. 1F.T0U WANT NEAT gALE BILLS, POSTERS & BLANKS. CALL AT TBI E3KTINIL Of FIG3 IB" w -" w Bl V f!l bTSh OH Jcct'i Corner. DARBY AND JOAlf. Wbea Darby saw th tetting ma, He wnng bis scythe and bom h run, 8at down, drank off hi quart, and said, 'My work ia don, I'll go to bed.' 'My work i done 1' ' retorted Joan, 'My work ia don 1. your eonitaat to a ; Bat kelpie woman ne'er can say Her work to done, till Jadgmeat Day. Ton bbcb ean sleep all sight, but we MruU toil. 'Whose fault is that ?' quoth h. I know your meaning,' Joaa replied, But, air, my tonga shall aot b tied, I will g oa, and let yoa know What work poor women have to do : Pint, ia th morning, thongh we feel A sick as drunkard wken they reel,- Tea, feel sock pais ia back or head As weald confine yoa men to bed, We ply tbe brash, we wield th broom, W air th bed and right th room ; Tbe cows must next be milk'd and then We get the breakfast for th men. , Kre this is done, with whimpering cries And bristly hair th children rise ; These must be dreaxd aad doa'd with rue. And fed and all because of yoa. We next' here Darby acratchad hi head And stol off grumbling to his bd: And only said, a on the run, Zounds I woman's claok i never don.' At early dawn, ere Phcsbus rose, Old Joaa resumed her tale of woes ; Whea Darby thus 'I'll and the strife, Be yon th man and I th wif ; Take yoa the scythe and mow, while I Will all yonr boasted cares supply.' Content,' quoth Joan, 'give me my atint.' Tbi Darby did, and out she went. Old Darby rose and siexed the broom, -And whirl'd the dirt about the room ; Which having done, he scarce knew bow, H hied to ai ilk tbe brindled oow. The brindled eow whisk'd round ber tail In Darby's eyes, and kicked the pail; Tbe clown, perplexed with grief and pain, 8wore he'd ne'er tiy to milk again ; When turning round, in ad amate. He saw hi cottage in a blaze Por as he chanced to brush the room In careless baste, ke fired the broom. The fire at last subdu'd, he swore Tke broom and be should meet no more. Press' J by misfortune and perplexed, Darby prepared tor breakfatt next ; But what to get be scarcely know Tbe bread was spent, the butter, too. His hands bedaub'd with paste and flour. Old Darby labored full an bour ; Bnt, luckless wightl thou couldst not make The bread take form of loaf or oake. As every door wide open stood, In pushed tbe sow in quest of food ; And, stumbling onwards, with her snout O'erset the churn the cream ran out. As Darby turn'd, the sow to beat. The slippery cream betray'd his feet ; He caught the bread trough in hi fall. And down came Darby, trough and all. The children wakened by the clatter, Start up and cry. Oh I what's the matter!' Old Jowler barked, and Tabby mew'd, And hapless Darby bawl'd aloud, Ueturn, my Joan, as heretofore, I'll play the housewife's part no more ; Since now, by sad experience taught, Ccmpared to thine, my work is naught. Henceforth, as business call, I'll take, Content, tke plongb, the scythe, the rake, And never more transgress the line Onr fates have marked, while thou art mine Then, Joan, return, as heretofore, I'll vex your honest soul no more ; Let each our proper task attend Forgive the past, and strive to mend Stint j&orj. The Volunteer Counsel. A THRILLING STORY. John Taylor wa licensed when a youth of twenty-one, to practice at tbe bar He was poor, but well educated, and possessed extraordinary genius. lie married a beauty who afterward desert ed him for another. On tbe 9th of April, 1840, the court house in CI ksville, Texas, was crowd ed to overflowing. An exciting case was to be tried- George Hopkins, a wealthy planter, had offered a gross in sult to Mary Ellison, the youug and beautiful wife of his overseer. 'Ihe hus band threatened to chastise him for the outrage, when Hopkins went to Ellison's house and shot him in his own door. The murderer wag bailed to answer the charge. This occurrence produced great excitement, and Hopkins, in order to tarn the tide of popular indignation, had circulated reports agaiust her character, and aba had sued him for slander. Both suits were pending for murder and slander. The interest became deeper, when it was known that Ashley and Pike, of Arkansas, and S. S. Prentiss, of Miss., by enormous fees, had been retained to defetid Hopkins. Hopkins was acquitted. The Texas lawyers were overwhelmed by their op ponents, it was a fight of a dwarf agaiust giants. Ihe slander suit was for tbe 9tn, and the throng of spectators grew in num bers, as in excitement. Public opinion setting in for Hopkins ; his money had procured witnesses who served his pow erful advocates. When the slander ease was called. Mary Ellison was left with out aa attorney all had withdrawn. Have you a counsel V inquired Jndge Mills, looking kindly en the plaintiff. . "No, sir ; they have all deserted ma. and I am too poor to employ any man," replied the heaatlfnl Mary, bursting into tears. "In Me. 4 eanw. W feet SOM eUfal rous member of the profession volun teer I" said the jndge glancing around the bar. , . . The thirty lawyers were silent "I will your honor.'' said a voice from the thickest part of the crowd behind tbe bar. At the sound of the voice many atari ed it was so nnearthly, sweet and mournful. ' The first sensation was changed into laughter when a tall, gaunt, spectral fig ure elbowed his way through the crowd, and placed himself within tbe bar. His clothes looked so shabby that the court hesitated to let the case proceed under his management. "Has your name been entered on the rolls of tbe State 1" demanded the jndge. "It is immaterial," answered the stran ger, hi thin bloodless lips calling up with a sneer. ''Here is my license from the highest tribunal in America 1" and he handed the judge a broad parchment. Tbe trial went on. He suffered the witnesses to tell their own story, and he allowed the defense to lead off. Ashley spoke first, followed by Pike and Prentiss The latter brought the Louse down in cheers, in which the jury joined. It was now the stranger's turn. He rose before the bar, not behind it, and o near the wondering jury that he might touch the foreman with his long bony finger. He proceeded to tear to pieces tbe arguments of Asbley, which melted away at bis touch like frost before a sun beam. Every one looked surprised. Auon he came to the dazzling wit of the poet-lawyer. Pike. Then the curl on his lip grew sharper, his smooth face be gan to kindle np, and his eyes to open dim and dreary no longer, but vivid as lightning, red as fire globes, and glaring as twin meteors. The whole soul was in his eye ; thn full heart streamed out of his face. Then, without bestowing an allusion to Prentiss, be turned short around on the perjured witnesses of Hopkiop, and torn their testimony into threads, and hurled in tlieir faces such terrible invectives that all trembled like anpens, and two of them fled from the court house. The excitement of the crowd was becoming tremendous. Their united life and soul seemed to hang upon the burning tongue, of a stranger, and he inspired them with the power of his pas sions. He teemed to have stolen nature's long hidden secret of attraction. But his greatest triumph was to come. His eye began to glance at the assassin Hopkins, as his lean taper fingers as sumed the same direction. He hemmed the wretch within a wall of strong evi dence and impregnable argument, cutting off all bope of escape- He dng beneath the murder's feet ditches of dilemmas, and held up the slanderer to the scorn and contempt of the populace. Having thus girt him about with a circle of fire. he stripped himself to the work of massacre. Oh ! then it was a vision both glori ous and dreadful to behold tbe orator. His actions became as impetuous as the motion of an oak in a hurricane. His voice became a trumpet filled with wild whirlpools, deafening the ears with crashes of power, and yet intermi ngled all the while with a sweet undersong of the softest cadence. His forehead glowed like a heated furnace, his countenance was haggard, like that of a maniac, and ever and anon he flung his long bony arm on high, as if grasping after thun derbolts. He drew a picture of murder in such appalling colors that, in comparison, hell itself might seem beautiful ; he painted the slanderer so black that the sun seemed dark at noonday, when shining on such a monster. And then fixing both portraits on the shrinking Hopkins, fast ened them there forever. The agitation of the audience amounted almost to mad- as. All at once the speaker descended from the perilous height. His voice wailed out for the murdered dead, and living the beautiful Mary, every mo ment as her tears flowed faster aad faster, till men sobbed like children. He closed by a strong exhortation to tbe jury, and through them to the by standers; the panel, after they should bring in a verdict for the plaintiff, not to offer violence In the defendant, however richly he might deserved it in other words, "not to lynch the villain, but leave his punishment to God." This was the most artful trick of all, and cal culated to insure vengeance. The jury rendered a verdict of fifty thousand dollars and the night after wards Hopkins was taken out of his bed by the lynchers, and beaten almost to death. As tbe court adjourned, the stran ger said t . "John Taylor will preach this evening at early candle-light." He did preach, and the house was crowded. I have listened to Clay, Web ster aad Oalboun to Dwight. Baaeom, and Beecher but never heard anything in the form of sublime words even ap prox! mating to the eloquence of John Taylor massive aa a mountain, and wiamUa as a eetaeiot Ira. A HORRIBLE MYSTERY SOLVED. The Story ef the Stolen flarriat aad learn er ana tae aauiatea Body ia tke Birer. A Priace Street Harder Confessed la Australia. In October, 186 1, five different pack ages, containing ihe mutilated remains of a human body were found floating in the East rivt-r and tbe bay at different times. and in different places, the first having been found on the 3d of October, and the last on the 13th. AU these fragments were wrapped in heavy brown Manilla paper, enclosed if enamled cloth used in the constructiou of furniture and car riages, the whole having been tied to gether with a strong cord, technically known as a "cod-line." These discoveries created a great deal of excitement at the time, not only be cause of the horrible nature of the mur der, but also ou account of the story of the carriage stolen on Mercer street, on the night of the murder, and of lha cer taiuty in the public mind that the thieves were the murderers, and the mys tery which subsequently surrounded the case, defying the utmost exertions of the police to unravel it. Tbe dismembered limbs were carefully put together- by surgeons, and- were found to correspond in every particular, nothing being wantiug save the arms, which were never found. The murdered man bad evidently been healthy and vig orous, and abont thirty-five years old, but no clew whatever could be discover ed as to the idenity. That a horrible murder had been committed was certain, first because the body had been cut up by inexperienced hands, thus proving that a dismemberment was not a freak on the part of medical students, and sec ondly because two bullet wounds, evi dently inflicted by a Smith & Wesson revolver, were found in the skull. The police, both of this city and Brooklyn left no plau untried by which the perpe trators of this terrible crime might be detected ; but their labors were in vain. The head was photographed, and copies weie sent to all police stations, through out the country. On the night preceeding the finding of tbe first package Patrick Flood, a Brook lyn hackman, drove three soldiers to No. 97 Mercer Btreet. in this city, and entered with them to drink. Uhile he was in the house two men came up, leaped en the box of his carriage and drove away Several hours later, as a severe storm was abating, the carriage was diiven in to a livery stable on Fulton avenne, near Nary Btreet, in Brooklyn, by a man who was closely wrapped in a thick gray shawl, under which he wore a velvet coat, broadcloth pantaloons, patent lea ther boots, white linen, all new, and a large diamond pin. The horses were reeking with perspiration, and had evi dently been driven furiously, one of them having been lamed. The stranger left the carriage at the stable and went away, saying he would return. From that day he was not seen. After seven years this horrible mys tery has been apparently solved thus : According to a letter recently rec ived by a friend of the murdered man, in March last three men quarrelled at Syd ney, in Australia. A figlit ensued, in which one man was fatally (tabbed, the second shot and dangerously wounded, and the third terrible beaten. The ruf fians were arrested, and the third man in prison made a confession, implicating himself and his companions in many crimes, and among others in the murder of one Joseph Smith, a deserter from the twentieth Connecticut regiment, in this city, in October, 1864. From his story it appears that he, with his two companions and Smith, on tbe night of the 2d of October, were en gaged in a debauch, they having made a large sum of money by "bounty-jumping." Smith had BJ00 in his possession and his villainous companions, resolving to get this at all hazards, induced him to leave the saloon where they were drink ing, in Prince street, and enter a large carpenter's shop or carriage factory in Prince street, where Smith lay down on a bench and soon fell into a drunken sleep One of the men then shot him through the head, after which they eut tip the body with the tools in the place, and tied up the fragments in tbe manner described above. Two of the men then went out to look for a wsgon, leaving, it is sup posed, the third to clear away the traces of their crime Then followed the theft of Flood's carriage, in whieb the ghastly parcels were driven to a lonely wharf in Williamsburg, and then thrown into the river. The murderers immediately ship ped for Australia, and have since re mained in that country leading riotous and vicious lives, until their arrest in March. The photograph of the murdered man has been shown to the widow of Joeeph Smith, who is still living at Danbury, Ct., and hag been partly identified by her, although the features were terribly distorted. Other persons, however, who knew Smith intimately, are convinced of bis Idenity with the murdered man, and that this dark riddla has at last keen eelws . -. T. Smunf Jfcsf. Pleasant IaformaUoa far Tlpjlcn. Aa exchange says : The black ants ef Sweden are a formidable race of workers, much larger than any we have here. They make sad havoe with tbe grains, and a they travel in processions, each with a wheat grain or some other dainty for winter store, they present a formidable array a curious spectacle for the phil osopher. The sting of these animala is very sharp and somewhat poisonous The best policy to observe is, when meeting a procession of these workers, to turn aside and give theia the right of way, for they will grip their grain tight ly, and give sting after sting, losing very little time for revenge, and then on to their well-ordered, well-stored homes The Swedes have learned a way of utili zing these little animals, sting and all. They waylay them on these journeys, catch them by hand, in nets and sieve, any way to get ihttn, aid J It Bp they go into the seething bisndy distillery, and on them depend the pecu liar flavor of Swedish brandy. It is so smooth, so oily, so pungent ; has such a delicious flavor ; in short, is everything enchanting ; and then they have the loveliest little glasses, that hold a thim bleful, so thin, so fragile, and beauti fully artistic, that they would almost tempt an ascetio to drink end catch the divine afflatus, but it only takes one drink to intoxicate, aud then delirium tremeni soon follows We have seen a lady jump from the table and scream be cause a red ant ran across her piste, and she would sip this brandy from the little glass, and extol its flavor. In Newark, cockroaches are used very extensively in the manufacture of deli cious wines which are made there from cider, poor whisky, logwood and other abominations. Ex. THE MILK CCBB. Some years ago physicians had a habit of recommending every consumptive pa tient to take cod-liver oil. Tbe incredi ble nastincss of the dose must have con stituted its peculiar merit ; for, as a mat ter of fact, any result accomplished by cod-liver oil would have been attained by the patient, bad cream instea i of oil been prescribed. Suddenly this idea seems to have dawned upon the medical faculty. As a consequence we now have the -milk cure" annonnced as a specific for consumption. Patients who formerly put their trust in cod livers are now told that the cow is their only hpe. They are made to drink vast quantities of pnre milk instead of freqnent doses of tbe un speakable vile cod-liver oil. Tbe effect i all that can be desired. The patient who tries the milk cure finds himself rap- dly growing fat, and it is also said that he becomes gentle and child-like and bland in his demeanor. The advantages of the milk cure will doubtless make it extremely popular among those who have tried in vain to swallow cod-liver oil. Famine in Persia. People Dying of Hunger in the Streets. A correspondent writing to a Turkish journal from Tabreea says : "The details which reach as here of the destitution and misery which the drougth of last year has caused In the central and south ern Provinces of Persia is fearfully heart rending. That the people are dying of hunger, even in the streets of the capital, is a minor phase of the terrible calamity In Kboiassan the parents are selling their children in order to keep them alive. In Ispahan it is said men have been seized in the act of digging up corpses to serve j -a a .1 T as food lor tneir starving iaroiues in Shierox, Kermun and Yezd, the wretched sufferers endeavor to support life on the grass and roots which they may find in the neighborhood, and as might be ex pected, pestilence follows hard on tbe footsteps of famine, and the half of the Kingdom of Persia is becoming rapidly depopulated." To add to the mixed charaeter of the Ohio Democratic canvass, it is asserted that Jndge Geddes, who is the Demo cratic candidate for Supreme Judge, ia a protectionist. Everybody can be snited now between the platform and the candi dates. Tbe platform is a mixture ef new departure," repudiation, free trade and civil service reform. The candi dates are a mixture of the old guard who accept nothing, those who believe that to the victors belong the spoils, aad protec tionists. Jamib Be R as, of Moore county, N. C, hsd a tenant, Sack Peoples, who would not work. Mr. B took steps for his ejectment, and the sheriff, aecompa nied by Mr. Burras, went the other day to serve a process on the negro. During the progress of the affair, the negro rais ed a shot gun to shoot Mr. Burras. who also raised his gun, when both fired sim ultaneously, and botli feU dead la their track. M Grammar class, stand np and recite. Timms, parse 'girls.'" f 'Girls' is a pe culiar noun, of tbe lovely gender, lively person, and donble number, kissing mood, ia the Immediate tease, and in tbe ex pectation case to matrimony, according te general role.' t . , SHORT A gentleman caught cold by kissing a lady's snowy brow. There are 800 pictures in the regttee' gallery of the Chicago police bead quar ter, s ' The whole number of raffs run eut of Red Bank. Clarion eoanty, this year, reached 1,000 An Illinois man ia arranging a big hen farm near Genava, in that 8tare. oa which he etpects t9 keep eighteen tkoa and hens of the choicest breeds. "I hope this hand is not counterfeik,' said a lover, as he Was toying whh his sweetheart's finger. "The best wy to find oat is to riog it," was the neat ta ply. The Intermarriage of two famUiee ia Maine ia remarkable. One consists of four sons and one daughter, haa married all of a neighbor'a Children, four dangh' ten and a son I Archbishop Darboy's last wcrfos to hid executioners are said to have beeni "Do not profane the word liberty t it is to us it belongs, for we shall die for lib Ij and faith " A citizen of Connecticut recently in' troduced to a newly married man con gratulated him warmly, and said : "Ah. these Litchfield county girls make clever wives ; I've hsd three of 'em." Ool. Wm. Shirk, the oldest fireman ia Lebanon, was presented tbe other day with a handsome gold headed rosewood cane by the Hook and Ladder company of that place. A shopkeeper having advertised bit stock to be sold under prime cost, a neighbor observed that it was impossible for him to do so, as he had never paid anything fir it himself! A block of marble tbe largest ever quarried in this Country has just arrived in New York from San Francisco. It weighs seventy tone, and if to form the basin of a new fountain at Central Park. It cost SI 0,000. The mother of President Lincoln is buried near Gentry ville, Ind , and a new railroad is projected near the spot, the surveyors and engineers clubbed to- gather, recently, to erect a suitable mon ument over the remains. A German farmer attempted to stop some runaway horses attached to a mow ing machine on his farm in Palestine, 111.. on Friday afternoon, stumbled and foil, and the machine completely severed his head and right arm from his body. Advices of the 7th from Australia, via (lonnolulu, reports s terrific hurricane in the vicinity of the Fiji blands ia which the brig "Kentucky' from San Francisco wentdown with all cn board The captain of the Kentucky married just before he sailed and had his wife with him. A colored man who fonnd a pocket- hook in PeterBbnrg, Vs., a few days sgo, containing something over Sli0, returned it to its owner, the same afternoon. And a Richmond negro, who bought a pair of old trrrwsert of a lady for a dollar, found on taking them home, a S5 greenback in one of the pockets and took it to the lad at once. A Constantinople despatch dated Jane 7, says that a fire broke "ont that morn ing simultaneously at four places, and at one time two hundred houses were ia fUmes. Fortunately the wind was light. and there was prospect of getting the conflagration nnder control. The dam age done already was very heavy. The fires are supposed to be tbe work of in cendiaries. A divorce fraad Is before the Boston courts, in which it is alleged that Samuel C. Jaques, who recently obtained a di vorce from bis wife on the charge of adultery, achieved his object by inducing a woman to personate Mrs. Jaqnes, and allow herself to he served with the legal papers, while Mrs. Jaques was kept in ignorance of the whole matter. George H. Hoi den is nnder arrest as a party to the fraud, bnt Mr. Jaquea hss absconded. Brigbam Young celebrated bis seven tieth birthday on the S3 inst. by a royal repast, at which were eighty-seven men. women and children, all near relations or connections of his family. II is private sec retary read an address, which closed wiik the wish : "May yon live till the rulers of every nation on earth shall acknowl edge the wisdom of God in your admin istration, seek unto yoa for counsel, and recognize yoa, as you truly are. the fiend of God and man !' A shock of earthquake was felt short ly before ten o'clock on Tuesday mora, ing last, Jone 6, ia Quebec, and through out the neighboring country. The "Mer cury ,' of that city, says that it wm fclt much more severely in Stooeham and thereabouts, and the farmers of that plaee were considerably akrmed. Ia the city the vibration was slight, although the rambling, noise attracted the atten tion of many persona In the Upper Town the sound wss supposed to pro ceed from heavy carriages running down the street. Tae coarse sectasd from? east ta west