saTeMMw3nwMsw3MawWMs - 1 , Juniata Jlnttmel. M1FFLINTOWN WrwResdav Moral;, Nvvesaber li, 1871. B. F. SCIIWEIER, EDITOR 1 PROPRIETOR. GEO, P. ROWELl & CO, 40 Park Row, New York . axi S,M.PETTENGILL4CO.,37ParkRow,N.Y, Are our tolt agents in that city, and are an - thoriied to contract for advertising at our Invent rates. Advertiser in mat oily are te quested to leave their favors with either of tb above houses. READIES MATTER OS EVERY PAGE. ' TuK Di-mocratic parly has uo creed. Small pox is alarming all New York Yankke sawdust swindlers are doing tip ibe. greenies of London. A MSSTKITTIVK fin; raged in Geneva, Switzerland, on the 13ih inst Italian pictures recently purchased for Yale College cost S20.000. T" , Tr,""""" i ir j i Thb Londnu Chicago relief fund has ii r . i i , reached the rum of two huudred and thirty thousand dolWs. Thrkk large fires were reported from Newark. New Jersey, on the 13ih inst. Los SI. 5.000. A woman named Margaret Mullen voted at tbc polls in Greenwich street. New Yoik on election day. CL A K. JIcTm hu is strongly urg ed lor the vacancy in the Senate created by the death of Senator Connell. A foot of snow fell at Lewiston, Me., on the nicht of the lft insut The rleigb!ng there i grod. A Gut .man vessel arrived nt New Yu.1 a d.iy or two ago with fonrty cases of cholera on board. They were trans-; fern J to the hospital t-Lip. i FoRKliiV despatches declare that a Iton.ipai tift conspiracy for the arrest f : Thiers and the overthrow of the French i Republic has been discovered. Tiik Philadelphia Board of Health re pored for the week ending November 7th iuet., 567 cases of small pox, 95 of which casts resulted in death. At London, in Canada, a furniture factory was destroyed by fire. One bun dled mechanics were thrown out employ ment. Iikp.SO 000 ; insurance 43,000. A Voi .vg Wilmington lawyer commit ted suicide on the 8th hint., by shooting himself, because a young lady refused to marry him. Two inches of snow fell at Concord, the worst elements of the city. Corrup New Hampshire, on the lO.h inst, also a tiou had atuined euch a prominence that light snow storm in York State on the most people thought the days of a fair same day. Thk Molsou mills at Port Hope, Onta rio. Canada, were destroyed by fire on i the morn in r of tl.e lOlh in?t. Loss ! 35,000; insurance Si S.000. A SQIJAKK and a half of the business portion of Chattanooga, Tenn., was con sumed by fire on the morning of the 2 lb inst. Loss 75,000. Tweed, the chief of the Tammany ' wc"Pon' "nd " PTrinf? to leave the King, it is alleged, is selling his effects as J country. LxitChicf of Jammany. rapidly as possible' as a preliminary to Uallou's Monthly Mauazinb for his flight to some foreign laud. ! December. The December number of Thb Governor of Wyoming says the ' this PPu,ar magazine is out and for sale ladies make good jurors, and honest and at " the deP0t8 in the C0Un,rJ- 8 faithful office holders, and therefore he caPital 'mw' and hiW more "'"g of aeks the Legislature to continue the Fe 1 Vlne and interest ,hi,n n7 Pull'ca male Suffrage act. , ,ion of iu C':,8S lne nantry- No one -- can fail to be interested in "Ballou's An insurance journal lhe V'"'' j Magazine,'' for the simple reason that says that the Pennsylvania fire insur-1 llie publishers Mter to the taste of all, ancc companies have lost two millions ami ot t0 one c.8(l alon0i many BL.ri. and eighty-two thousaud dollars by fires fa qjj Ani M fid an)nge. i ns 3 ear. ment in Ballou's, and it is not of an ex- Martial law has been proclaimed in ' le"-ve kind either, for $1 50 secures it .Union county, South Carolina. "The for J"01"' and 11 on,7 15 ecnt ,,um" country will have peace if it takes i proclamation in every county in the rc bellious land." Colauako county, Texas, recently1 Bbooklin is fearfully excited over the added to her population two hundred and ,ate eke1'01 frauds of the ring. Mon fifty German emigrants The south's re- fUst indignation meetings have been held, generation lies in a hearty welcome to all The city seemes determined to arrest the bonafide settlers. ( tde of fraud aud corruption that seemed - about to engulf them. Vigilauce com. On Saturday tlin-e children wande-ed roiUeeSi and to fnu are ulked of jf into an aoananned coal mine at Miners ville, this State. A portion of the gang- ftlf on whirh. thov mrrp- rMwA in nnrl i thev were suffocated before beinr rescued o Tub late Fenians raiders, O'Neil and Curley, were released last week on the grounds that although the offence was will be happy to comply with the request clearly -stablishcd, no proof was adduced of his oleaginous constituents, some time that the expedition was organized in in the near future. Minnesota. , .., m j Thb election in Virginia resulted in A roi.Low'ER of Tammany named Jim 1 favor of the Conservatives, the Legisla Iryjng was arrested on the lSth on the 1 tore being about two thirds Conservative rfbarge of assaulting a United States ', about the same as last year. Deputy Marshal, and admitted to bail iu j Maryland has gone Democratic. New SlO.QOu. lilfi erreet caused considerable Jersey ha elected a Republican Legisla exciteroont aciou the roughs. ' tur. i Democratic Governor. The Georgia Senate professes to know TT is said that some prominent Derao iiotbing of thb Ka KUi organizations. . cralic leadersjiropose that uo nominations On the ih iust, it p.sed resolutions de- , for " Vice IVesident ehall be Pi ing the existence of Ku Klux org- Mde b tLe bot the Grant potion; suggesting to the judga. of Kcpublicans shall frame a ticket which snpwar courts as witness, and ofEV i Democrats will support. tag legislative aid to enable 4Le commit tee to rft ,il' frtrits if alleged dismT. The Elections. Tire) people again have rendered a ver dict in favor of Ute Republican, cause by sweeping majorities in . Jlaasachuetts, New York, Illinois, Wiseousin, Minnc tota Miesieippi. vXbese victories are new evidences of (lie confidence that is re- posed in the organization that saved our free institutions from overthrow and Finvpninn into (Irons' and deanotic nnlit- confidence the Republican organiaation ful lualif ntlinl rnr tfiia new nlMlfrA AT. will endeavor to work more faithfully j placed to the credit of the fund than ever for the general good, and the The society w now Mrn 00,000 per maintenace of free and just government, : one. The most pressing nee I for which which had will nigh been subverted iu 1 the committee has to provide is shelter both the South and New York city. j for the homeless thousands during the The Pittsburg Gazette says A great re-; coming winter. To this end the coin- spooibility now rests upon us, and we : trugt we hM wnliBM to 80 tnat 1 when the history of these times shall come t0 written, it will be recorded of us as of bim of oid, "well done, good and faithful servant.' In this way shall , we justify the faith placed in us, and by the contrast between our good works and ' the corruptions of our enemies where en I trusted with power, shall we prove to the world that the Republic has received no detriment at our hands. A glorious future awaits our couutry, let us do our share to hasten it forward. New York Election. The N. Y. Ttihvitc says : ' - As the election returns continue to come in, the magnitude of the RepuLli- ' can trinmph in the State becomes more r . apparent : our latest figures show even a i r . . . . more decided Itepublican majority in the Legislature. The Assembly now stands 06 Republicans to 32 Democrats, and he Senate 24 Republicans to 8 Democrats. This looks very much like the breaking P of lhe D"watic party in the State, for wbich lLey have Tammany re- gency to manK. i ne mjoruy lor ocno , ner for Secretary of State is yet unde- termined, but now stands at 17,057, though it is likely to be increased or di mished as further returns arrive. At any rate the victory is one of magnificent proportions, and is ample enough to en courage every friend of reform in the work yet remaining, as well as a compen sation for the arduous labors of the can vass just concluded. Taiiunanv bciu; Kicked Oat. " UGH ! THAT MUST BE THE PEO PLE'S FOOTf For some years past New York has been dominated by a ring that controlled expression of the will of the people at the polls had gone by. Such, however, is uot the case. New York sprang from her lethargy at the late election, and the ; result is. Tammany has been swept as if by a whirlwind. F.very thing that belong ed to the ring is in a hopeless state of confusion. All the ring candidates were defeated, except Tweed, the boss, who, late despatches say. has dropped his 1 her. The December issue is rich and ! varied. Address Thomcs 4 Talbot, 63 i Congress Street, Boston. uothing else will do. A letter of invitation, signed by '' Oil City, request. mg Senator Cameron to visit the oil re- crion. was received and renlid tn 1t- ih - , ,v Senator on the 3d inst. The Senator I II oa cholera prevails to an alarming eztent iy et'rta'u counties iu Iowa OtctTws Millie TUtflUr for the Belief1 T I'Meag - A Chicago despatch of November the 8ih says the .Executive (.'oaamittee of the Chicago Relief and Aid Society Lave published an official financial .Utement of the 'amount .ctnatlr received up to November 7th. The actual subscription is wJ.OSO.OOO. oat of about SS.SOOiOOO sub - sen ibed. TLi includes 8600,000 in the f V..w vrlr rl..mW nf ! Commerce and 200,000 in Boston not yet I mittee are aiding those burned out to erect small but comfortable houses on the sites of their former dwellings, or on leased gronud, which they may live in not only during the winter, but also next summer, so as to be able to go to work on the rebuilding of ' the city. Four thousand of these houses have already been built, and it is estimated will shel ter abont twenty tlmnsand people. These with the number expected to be built, will shelter altogether 35,000 people The cost of there temporary buildiugs, with some neetswy furniture, will be about SI 200,000. leaving 82 250,000 to meet demands for food, clothing, fuel, and general expeuses from the 13th of October until the completion of the work, which cannot possibly end with the pres ent winter. Tub following is the salutary of an Oregon editress: '-U'e have slrved a regular apprenticeship at working at washing, scrubbing, patching, darning, ironing, plaiu sewing, raising babies, milking, churning, and poultry raising. We have kept boarders, taught school, taught mufic, written fur the newspapers, made speeches, and carried on an exten sive millinery and dress making busi ness. We can prove by the public that this work has been well done. Now, having reached the age of thirty-six. and having brought up a family of boys to set type, and a daughter to run the mil linery store, we propose to edit and pub ish a newspaper, and we intend to establish it as one of the permanent in-: s ti tut ions of the country." Oi'R readers are aware that the mighty mnsititn of Boston, Mr. Gilmore, of the Peace Jubilee, is now in Europe engaging square miles of musical talent for his next gigantic demonstration of mnlulv TT i. mnatu fiat! im tn wf i , t i-i i . the Peace Jubilee colliseum. and will ! probably be named the Brobognagian Concert Palace It is to be 822 feet long, 422 feet broad, a tower 244 feet in height, to spring from the centre as a crown to the vast edifice. This huge establishment will contain seats for one hundred and twenty-five thousand an ditors, and platform room for armies of musicians, vocal and insturaental. PAi'l- O.N the 8th inst , the Governor of Wis- j cousin issued the following : "To the People of the I'nib-J St'il:" "The Relief Committee inform me j that the supply of ..clothing on hand aud j in iransu ana reaay tor snipmeiu win oe sufficient to meet the wants of the suf- f,'rprit br fire in the State. 'n fiiptlwr1 contributions of this kind will be needed icr now. lour generosity has comiortabiy ' would uot tax your liberality a moment ' longer than necessary, and gratefully .t i. r.. i:i l ... J i I uiaiiB. you lur yimr uuurui huu iiuiriy i aid. Lint s FaiRcHtLn, ' Governor of Wisconsin." A .Mits. Spkn Kit brought suit against certain judges of election in the U. S. Dis trict Court at Washington for refusing to receive her vote. She claimed the right to vote under the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments to the Constitu tion. . The conrt decided that the amend ments make women citizens, but "the constitutional capability of becoming a voter created by this amendment lies dormant, as in the case of an infant, un til made effective by legislative action.'' A Washington correspondent of the Philadelphia Jttquirtr says that promi nent gentlemen at Washington attribute the spread of small-pox in many of the cities of the Uuited States to the sale of buffalo robes there, taken from the Ulack feet and Plcgian camps, where the disease prevailed two yeas ago. At that time they were forbidden to le sold to traders ; but several months ago they disappeared from those neighborhoods and found their way elsewhere. It is said that California Society i0oucan just set mat down to Be true. rapidly acquiring the Mexican taste for That feeder h dried nP 8nrc M P"19 faro banks. Roulette sod three-card monte I 1 hc,P bnt teM Joa how 6 1 gambling. The Prct says, that such a taste must prove ruinous to society, must sap the foundations of public morals and destroy all regard for virtue, either public or private, caunot be doubted. It is cer tainly the duty of all who can have any influence in this matter to do all in their power to discourage so degraded and ru inous a practice. - - . - On last Thursday afternoon a fire at Muncy, Lycoming county, destroyed five stables, and . on Friday morning about 3 o'clock another fire consumed at j the same town Major Bonner's barn, to gether with a quantity of grain, hay See. Supposed to have been the work of an incendiary. Loss 4,000. At lloboken. New Jersey, two car penters, named Hogan and Ware, on last Thursday were precipitated from a scaf fold four stories high', by the breaking of a board. Hogan was killed. Ward fell on Hogan, which probably saved his life, although he received severe injuries, Letter tnm IU OM Jsrk law Stfftwerat f Hrwnraai Twsp " Kisk Sara 8ta Taviss, Hovefcr 11. 1871 . , Aw Mr. Editor I got a let- My j 7 7 u . ng j "w .pa ami sae, I a- rigui wen wujtc, smee ire-m we letter ' Ton ala -, -7 -.onnson a I i i v i I . I Dame wnere 7 w 1 1 T J navo oeen, on purpose, a awnncow, j yon kaow lb fe"w printing office, that yon call eemmitori..eme - timea pick np the wron type. and tick them, and make mistakes in that way. T 1 1 .1 . 1. 1 Ifl J i Kuoweu mat yon man t use .may Johnson, and I knowed that you knowed that I didn't like him, from what I said in another letter. It makes me feel bad to think how near the Tennesee Moses j came to splitting yon and me asunder. If it hadn't been for the good sense of Mrs. Speak I wouldn't now be writing j for your paper. What a blessed thing it is to have a good . wife, and oh golly ! what a curse it is to have a bad one. I don't believe that all the matches are made in heaven, by the . Good Man. I ain't a church member I guess I ought to be, though ; the preachers say that all ought to be. I have a kind of a leaning toward the Methodist church in some things, and in some things I lean in an other direction ; but on the question of making a match between man and woman, I lean far out toward that old Methodist who traveled nearly all over creation on foot, and made appointments years ahead, and was put in jail like a thief, by them tarnel Southern fellows, because he said tnat slavery was not godly and was wrong. Them fellows always Kukluxed a fellow if he didn't gee when they said "Gee," and the only thing abont Andy' Jackson that wasn't perfect was that he didn't straighten them fellows more ; but you know that he hadn't the chance. If he now stood in Grant's place he'd fetch them np a whooping. Dow, was that old preacher's name Lorenzo Dow. ; I've got his life in the house that's where I ! read all about him. I'vo got the Pil- grim's Progress in the house, also, and I tell you mighty good books they are, if the one is a dream. Well, preacher Dow didn't believe that all the matches were made in heaven If they had been, he said, they'd been all good, and smooth, and happy. lie thought that the Devil made a good many, and I think so, too. I'm a Dow man on that score. Somehow or other I think that Mrs. Speak and me made our own match. 1 tell you it was a mighty good thing forme, , , , , She had some money and lots of good sense, which is a good deal better, und if she does give me fury sometimes, I just say nothing, and the storm then soon blows over. The other evening just about dark, after I had come in from the cornfield and was npstairs, she called in a very excited way and told me that there was a light np towards Mif flin, and she believed that the other part of Mifftin was burning down. Of course I looked out as soon as I could, and soon saw that Mrs. Speak was wrong. I saw that it was the ''Northern lights." After we went into the honse and got down to supper, we bad a general talk about the fire. We talked of the mighty big fires ,hat have a,, ,hroh the . me year, aim leu saa . 1 . r . r 1 . 1 ovn l,,e g1"1 destruction of property and me, ana rejoiced mat it wasn t as rad as Sodom and Gomorrah, wbete, yon know, it rained fire. The tears stood in Mrs. Speak's eyes for poor Mis Lot, who was turned into a stone for looking at the fire. That seemed hard ; but ii was right she was told not to look. It does my heart good to hear of how the people do send the sufferers help. If anything will open the purse strings great (ires will, and they are the best things to make quiet people talk that I know of. Yon know that last winter our quiet and great working Senator stood up in his place, which bad not yet got warm by his presence, and made a great and elo- qnent speech of a quarter of column of a newspaper, on the great fire in Mifflin It had a powerful effect. The Legisla ture voted twenty thousand right away I keep a scrap book, and I have the speech in that book. Fires will make any one talk ; and now that I am talk ing abont the fires. I just want to say to you fellows at Mifflin and I don't want you fellows to think hard of it either ; if I wasn't your friend I wouldn't talk so plain ; friends always talk plain that yon fellows had better not let another such a big fire break out in your town, fur the Legislature won't do nothing for you after that fight abont the $20,000. (eel over the news that I got to-day as I passed the' Seven Stars. A distinguished citizen of this township told me there that the Jackson Democrats joined the Republicans in New York and gave the Tammany ring as big a licking as Andy Jackson gave the British soldiers that licked the great Napoleon, ne said that it was a regular New Orleans licking, and that the ring candidates were all killed by the paper bullets that fairly rained down on the ring, excepting Tweed I think that's his name ; if it isn't, just put the right name in, the boss of the ring, who was elected to the State Senate. I said to my friend, the distinguished Greenwooder, " Glorious election ! The Republic is once more saved from the danger that threatened it " ' The people are all right, even in New York, when they know of danger. The hearts of the people are always right, if they understand what's what. I tell you that, though they have kicked Tammany out, they dou't realize how much good they have done ; and I far ther tell you that if Tammany had car ried that election, I'd 'bid goodbye to the Republic, end said the jig's up. & we may as well now turn m foa strong government atonee e King nil.in. hnt ' the rale of a rins: that - o wasn't any better at heart than the Paris commune, and only wanted the chance to make it inst as bad." I said all that to my neighbor, and he said that's just bo ,ie Mt Qn be felt on that subiect. lie said 1 was ! . . - th , j M and if t C0I1lj , hwlr the Toice- of Andy Jackson'from j,he ffiih.Ua it would be, - You're right, Uartou; stick to it" And yon may just bet high on it that I'll stick closer to that inspiration than the South- i eners stuck to their last ditch. My letter is again getting long, and I'll have to quit it. I know that Andy Jack son never had a harder time of getting at anything than I have a time at getting to the Fair. I am still hopeful, and I hope you a:e too. There's nothing like hope. Yours, ttuly. BARTON SPEAK. A tKr ati-h dated at Council Bluffs. November 7 lb inst says : Yesterday as laborers were at woik cutting a new road through a hill in the hollow known as "Hang Hullow," they excavated a sack containing ? 12,000 in gold and silver. The money was hidden there 13 years ago, by one Muir, who mnrdered his comrad, a Californian, in this city. - Mnir was hung by a mob of Califoruians aud Buid he bad hidden . the money under a stump in this hollow, but refused to tell where. Many persons have hunted for this secret treasure in vain. The labor ers shared the booty equally. . . Ox Saturday nigbt, tbe4lh instM a negro man entered the honse of a Mrs Bass, living near Windsor, Mo , aud de manded money. She refused it, where upon he choked her until she was nearly insensible. The negro was arrested on the 6th inst., taken to Windsor and ' hanged by a mob. Intblliukncc from San Francisco says that on the 7th inst., the priucipal business block in the town of Vail, jo, in Solana connty, was burned to-day. The post office building, banking office, the Sol i no D mot-rat office, the Vallejo" Ho tel, and eighteen buildings in all were destroyed. Loss, SdO.COO A pi .o factory was burned iu New York city on the morning of the 8th inst. The walls in falling buried eleven fire men. All were rescued alive. Two were fatally injured. The falling of the building extinguished the fire. Loss 88,000. Ten piisseugers were seriously injured on the 9th inst., by a train being thrown from the track by a cow on the Cincin nati, Indinapol s and Junction railroad. THKSiinck of an earthquake frighten ed the people of Georgetown and Cen tral City, Colorado, ou the morning of the 9 h iust. Just as We Found Them. California boasts the largest orchard iu the world. It contains 4'2G acres, and over 75,000 fruit trees. In Manila 25,000 woman and girls work at segar-makiug. at average wages of seventy cents per day. The onion crop of Guilford, Conn., will fall 320,000 short of that obtained :n years past, owing to the low price they are selling for. A Trneesee woman recently released her husband from the State prison by walking 150 miles to Nashville, with a child in her arms, and asking the Gov ernor to pardon him. On Thursday of last week a jealous wife named Slater, in Wilkesbarre, fol lowed ber husband from their home to a planing mill, where he was engaged as night watchman, and after calling him outside, (stilly 6liot him through the breast with a pistol. An exchange says a correspondent who devotes much time to "reading np" the religions weeklies, thiuks the reason these journals afford so much space to quack medicine announcement, is that the object of religion and quackery are similar, because both prepares for an other and better world Probably but few persons are aware of the fact that Indians still exist in the State of New York as a distinct tribe. The Onondaguas live on a reservation of twelve thousand acres in a beautiful val ley neat Syracuse. This tribe never had more than five hundred memberr, and it is now nearly four hundred strong. The Indiana are considerably advanced in morals and civilization, aud support two flourishing churches. tw 3tdwtiSfrafnts. ESTRAT. CAME to the premises of the subscriber, in Tuscarora township, on Saturday last (Nov. 11, 1871), a large Bay Horse, left hind foot white to above lhe fetlock joint, right hind foot a little white above the hoof, slight ly lame in left hind leg. Supposed to be three years old. The owner ia requested to prove property and to take him away, or he will be disposed of according to law, WILLIAM MEGILL. Tuscarora twp., Nov. 13, '71-3w HECK & FASICK, MAXCrCCTFBEBS or BOOTS AND SHOES, East of Odd Fellows' New Halt, Bridge St. MIFFLINTOWN, PA. Geerge W. Heck and A. B. Fasick having entered intra partnership, would respectfully invite the citizens of Mitflintown and vicinity who ars wanting BOOTS and SHOES to give them a call. Repairing promptly attended to. Charges moderate. All work warranted Mifflintowo, Nov. 15, ;87I-tf 2Uuj adrmisrafnts. 53 FOR SALE! 3 ; ! YORK STATE COWS ! i .. t I WILL hare a ear-load of superior COWS from York 5iale for tale at Porter Thomp son's, near Mexico, on . . . ' Monday, Nocemhrr 27, 1871, and at John A. Gallaghar's on the Pike, one mile above Mexico, on TuesJav. Kocembir 28, 1871. This is lhe -st lot of ok State Cows srer offered to the farmers of Juniata county. They have been selected with a vigilant eye by Ibe celebrated iwiry man, jianan and myself. The cows will come into profit in either February, March or April. Far mers and dealers, eome and judge for yourselves.- LXWIS K. RUOADS. Nov. 15-2w TWO STOHES t ASB Two Coal and Lumber Yards. THE undersigned would inform the puMie that he keeps eonntantly on hand at his Coal and Lumber Yard, in Patterson, and also at Tyson's lock, above Mifflin, a large slock of Coal aad Lumber. His stock con silts is part of . STOVE COAL, SMITH COAL, AUD LTJfE-Btr&XERS' COAL, t the lowest cash rites. Lumber of all kinds and quality, such as While Pine Plank, two inches; do. 1 inch : While Pine Boards I inch j do. J inch ; White Pine Worked Flooring, llenikxk Boards, Scantling. Joists, Hoofing Lata, PIsstertag l.atb, sningies. Stripping, Sash and Doors. He has also just received at his STORE IN PATTERSON, a full line of LAMES' DRESS GOOD. MUSLINS. FLANNELS. PRINTS. CASSIMEKKS. BOOTS AND SHOES. GROCERIES, SALT. SPICES, FISH, , . PROVISIONS. 4c, 4c. He has also opened a branch STORE AT TYSON'S LOCK, at his Coal Yard above Mifflin, where be keeps a general assortment of Groceries. Flour, Feed, Provisions, Spices. Tinware. Tobacco, Fish. Salt, and everything to be found in a Grocery Store. agf The highest prices paid in trade, at either store, for butter, eggs, bacon, railroad tics, locust posts and bark."ga Persons on the east side of the rivet ran now be accommodated with coal and lutr.btt at all limes, without any inconvenience, as heretofore, by calling on C. B. Hossisu, at I 'ne Grocery at the yard. GKOKGE GOSHEN. Not. 15, l71-tf MAKE UP CLUBS FOR The Iadispeiisable Hand Iook j How to Write How to Talk How to Behave, and How to do Business. COMPLETE IN USE LARGE TOl.t ME. Thia work in four parl.s embrace jnil that practical niatter-of-fitet information which evory one o!J and yenng ouli. to have. It will aiJ in attaining if it dues not insure, " sueees." It contain some GOO pages, elegantly hound, aud is divided into four parts, as follows : HOW TO WRITE. As a Manual of I.eller-'.Vriiing and Tom. position, il is far snperior to the com:non Letter-Writers." It inche the inexpe rienced liow li write all kimls of Letter. Notes and Cards, and Newpper Articles, and how to Correct Proof for the Press. HOW TO TALK. No other Hook contains so much nspful in struction on the subject a thi. It teaches how to speak eorrecilv. clearlr. fl'ientlr. fur. efblr, eloquently aud effectively in the shop J and in the drawing room. A Chairman's guide. The chapter on Errors Corrected'' I is woreli the price of the volume to every I young man. HOW TO BEHAVE This is a Manual of Etiquette, an lit is be- lieyed to be the best " Manners Book" ever written, it is a standard work on Good Re- havior. HOW TO 10 Bt'SWESS. Imiispensabte in the Counting room, in Hie j Store, in the Shop, on the Farm, for the ' Clerk, the Apprentice, the Cook Agent, aud! for Business Meo.: It teaches how to choose I ft nnranil .nil 1. w ,n r..n.. : - I -It leaches bow to get rich honestly," and' how to use your riches wisely. We offer the book at (he following CLIB BATES: , 1 Copy by mail, -3 Copies by mail. -5 Copies by express. 10 Copies by express, -15 Copies by express, - S2.: S'i.f 0 , $ 7, I f.!.'!'2- i .v opics or more ny express at per eopy and an exlra copy to the Agenl. All orders should he addressed to S. R. WELLS. Publisher. Se'J Broadway. N. V. Nov l--. lS71-'2m Assignee's Notice. NOTICE is hereby given that Cheney J. C'bamberlin, of Mifflintown. Juniata Co , Pa., and Sarah, his wire, by deed of volun tary assignment, have assigned all the estate, real and personal, of lhe said Cheney J. Chamberlin, to William Given, of Fermanagh townsh:p, in said county, in trust for the benefit of the creditors of the x Cheney J. Chamberlin. All persons, therefore, indebted lo the said Cheney J. Chamberlin will make payment to the said assignee, and those hav ing claims r demands will knowa the same without delay.' . ... . WILLIAM GIVEN. Asiignee of Cheney J. Chamberlin. : Nov 6. 1871. Executor's Hotice. Ettate of Chr'.itian Seayritt, dtceaitJ. NOTICE is hereby given that Letters Testa mentary on the estate of Christian Sea grist, late of Susquehanna, township. Juni ata county, deceased, have been tranted tn ! safd I'e'lre rte.P,C"0nl i"Jebt ! .l Vho 1 1 ? , te ,m1mc,,I,'e i payment, and those having claims will please ' present them properly authenticated for set uemenL. PETER SEAGRIST, B. M. BUBB, Nov. 8 '71 6w Exteutort. Dissolution of Partnership. TVTOTICE is hereby given that the parner- X v ship between Lucian, J. Banks, and II. I Latimer Wilson, nnder the firm name of L. I Wilson & Co., at Oakland .Mills, Pa., was dis- j solved by mutual consent on the' twenty- j fourth day of October, 1871. The business j will be continued by Lucian and J. Banks Wilson, under the firm of L. & J. B. Wilson. 1 LUCIAN WILSON. J. I! INKS WILSON. II. LATIMER WILSON. Nov. 1, 1871-lt ATTENTION ! DAVID WATTS most respectfully announ ces to the public that he is prepared to furnish SCHOOL BOOKS AUD STATIONERY ai reuucea prices. Hereafter give him a call , at bis OLD STAND, MAIN St., MirFLIN. j Oct 2d-tf ' ' . . MARTIN & WALTERS always ksp np their stock of GROCERIES and will not I be excelled either in the quality or price of i their goods in this line. Give them a call before goiug elsewhere. grip adwujflMat. : gfgal drtrtiSfmrnt PROCLAMATION -Wimiai thk h. James H. Gbahab, President Judge of the Court of Common Fleas of the 9th JuJi. rial Distr'rt, composed of the eonniies of Juniata. Terry and Cumberland, and n,. Hons. Thomas I. Milukks and 8411. Watts, Judges of tin Court of Common PleM of Jonil county, havs issued their prec.pt to me directed, bearing date the 8th Uj 0f Sept., A. . 1H71, for holding a Court of Oyer aad Terminer and General Jsil DelWerj, and General Quarter Sessions of the Peace, at Mitflintown, on the first Mosdat of Decem ber, 1871. being the 4th day of the month : vmti'u ia urn pnv m Vfc-V ,A ,l. r Jugi of he pece an(J Con!blM rf I be eoonry of Juniata, that tbry be then and there in their proper persons, at 1 o'clonk in the afternxen et said day, with records, in quisitions, examinations and other remem brances, to do those things that to their cili ces respectively appertain, and those that are bound ry reeognimnce to prosecute against the prisoners that are or then may be in the Jail of said coucty of Juniata, be then and) there to prosecute against them as shall be just. By an Act of Assembly, passed the 8th day of May, A. D. 1864. it is made the duty of the Justices of the Peace of the several coun ties of this Commonwealth to return to the Clerk of lhe Ccnrt of Quarter Sessions of lhe Peace, of the resperive counties, all the re. Cbgnixances entered into before them by any person or persons charged with the eemmis sion of any crime, except such eases as may be ended before a Justice of the Peace, under the existing laws, at least tea days before the commencement of the session of lhe Court la which Ihey are made returnable respectively, and in all case where any recogniiances are entered into iess than ten days before the commencement of the session lo whieb they are made returnable, lhe sari Justices ire re quired tu return lhe same in the same manner as if said act had not been passed. Dated at Mitflintown, the first day of No vember, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and seventy-one. JOSEPH AMD, Skrriir. Sheriff's Office, Mitflintown, 1 November 1, 1871. List of Jurors for December Term, 1871. CKAMD jrEORS. Spruce Hill D. K. Barton, J. D. Mini ken, John Wisoiianpt. Lack. Joseph Bell, John Kepner, Henry Tiliel- Susquehanna. 1. L. Rhrner. Patterson. George Goshen, A. J. Fasie. - Fayette. A. Ilaldewan, Jacob Heckinan, E. L. Jamison. Delaware. J. Vi. Knrti. Geo. Kinzer. Walker. -7-Jonas Kautfuian, Cbas. Zeigler. Mitflintown S. It Loudon. Beale J. P. M Williams, FA. Sherlock, John Rodgers. Monroe. lohn M'Connell. Fermanagh II A. Stunib nigh, Juo. Not? stine, Joseph Roihrock. PETIT JltoM. Beale Wilson Allen, Jos. Pomcroy, Har rison Reed, J. W'oodwird. Tuscarora Tlios. Arbuck'e, S. M I! "lie. James Irwin, John Middagb, jr., John Wood ward. Susqnehanna b B-imer, Henry Hoch- enbrough:. Henry Sechrist. MiRliniown Jacob Kerv, II. U. Weller. Milford John Cunningham, John E. Mc- Crum. Greenwood Samuel I)imm. Spruce Hill John Exh Walker John A. Gallagher, John S irtain, Benjamin Kerehner. Pat.eron W. II. Groninger. W. C. Laird. Tnrbell David Hertxler, Wiu. Hencu, J P. Johnson. Philip Kilmer. Fayette John Hart. Michael Hoffman, .L E Kauffinan. John Kenuwell, Daniel Nace, Henry Sieber. Pcrrysville Solomon Hertzler. Delaware D II. Hornbore, Jonathan Kin- ler, A. H. Kurtj, Cyrus Meredith, George Speakman, I'hitip Smith, Jacob Spiece. Monroe A. II. Landis. G. S. Metterling. Fermanagh Josh. PuTiiiherg!rr, Michael Sioncr. Tbempjontown Jacob Spicber. Miffiintown, Nov. S, I71 Iw. REGISTER'S NOTICE. lyrOTICE is hereby given that the following 1' named persons have filed their Admin's- trator's. Executor's and Guardian accounts j in the Register's Office of Juniata county. and lhe same will be presented for eonfirma- Miffliutown, on Wednesday, December 0th, 1S7I : No. 1 The account of John C. Zeiglcr. Adm'r of George ZigVr, lale of Tuscaror township, deceased. No. 2. The account of Jacob Shelly Ad ministrator of Samuel Sellers, late of Mon r e township, deceased. No. 3. The account of Absalom Barner. ... Kleckn"- U,e of SusquehaJi- na township, deceased. Xo. 4. The account of I. D. Wallis, Adm'r of Zaehnriah Webster, laic of Walker town ship, deceased. No. 5. The account of William Kain. Guar dian of Aaron Wetzel. I Tk llnllil tf Thnmna W.tl I.Ihi'b of Jolin Stewart, late of Monroe township. deceased. ELI DrNN, U.giittr. Register's Office. 1 Mifflin town, Oct. 31, J87I. j , '. Trial List for December Term, 1871. I. L. Burchfield n. Milford township. September Term, lh71. No. 2. Overseers of poor of Monroe township vs. Hostettler & George. No. 173, Septem ber Term, 1870. 3. John W. Speddy vs. Juniata eonnfy. No. 8, December Term, 1870. 4. Com. for nse Fanny Cox et al vs. James McConnell et al. No. 38, Feb. Term, 1871. 3. Cora, al suggestion. &e.. vs. Wm. C. Ad ams et al. No (SI, Feb. Term. 1871. 6. J. B. Okesnn, Adm'r ic, ts Alex. Me No. 104 April Term, 1871. 7. Jas. F. Kirk, Adm'r, Ac., vs. Isaac Kirk, ter. tea. No. 115, April Term, 1871. 8. David Cree ts. Noah Hertzler. No. 170, April Term, 1871. . T. J. Middagh vs. J. B. M. Todd. 199, April Term, 1871. No. lo. George W. Smith vs. Joel W. Whitmer. No. 27, September Term. 1871 " L DunJ' "' Whiteman.- No. 101. September Term. 1871. li. urown Ijr nse rmllips vs. James Kob ison. No. IO'.i, September Term, 1871. 1.?. Yonng for use Coffman vs. Dearing St. . Quinn No. Vii, September Term, 18'Jl. I R. E. McMEEN, Vrotk'y. I Prothonotary's Office, Mifflin- , 1 l.i ni 10, . town. uci. .1, lot 1. J JUNIATA VALLEY BANK or MIFFLINTOWX, PEXN'A. JOSEPH rOMEROV, President. T. VAN 1RVIN, Casbict. UIKECTOaS. Joseph Pomeroy, John J. Patterson, Jerome N. Thompson, George Jacobs, John lialsbach. j Loan money, receive deposits, pny interest 1 ai time denosils. bnv ml a1 .Ain n.l TTni- ted States Bonds, cash, coupons and checks, Remit money to any part of the United Slates snd also to England, Scotland, Ireland and Germany. Sell Revenue Stamps. In sums of 5?0 at 2 per cent, discount. In sums of $V0 at '1 per cent, discount. In sums of SI 000 at 3 per cent, discount. r"g 18 1863 CgyJcsi.iTA Sr.sTisi $1,00 tier year.