: --m0BmnlPWf jiihiaia eniieL AatP' -Jif MIFFLISTOWN Vfcdneday Morning, April 24, 1872. B. F. SCIIWEIER, lUIITOB. TROPRIBTOR. BEPUBIICAN NOMINATIONS. FOR PRESIDENT, GENERAL U. S. GRANT. FOR G0VERX0R. Q EN. JOHN F.HARTRANFT! lr MONTGOMERY CUI'ICTT. HI! j'UTUEME JUDGE. HON. ULYSSES M E R C U R,1 OF EUAl'f'OKI. ITOl KTT. FOR AUDITOR C EVER L, GEN. HARRISON ALLEN, r WARItK CLXTT. FOR (IGRKSSMEN ATI.AKUK, itX. MAIiltV WHITE,, or Indiana. OEX. LEMUEL TODD, of Cumberland. tri.KOATKS AT l.MttiB TO THE CONST? TCTI'.KAL CO.WtMIOJi. AVM. M. MEREDITH. Philadelphia. J. Ull.I.INCIIAM HOLL. I'hiUdelphia ;t-n. HAIU'.V WHITE, Indiana. IS. mi. WILLIAM LI i.I.V. Carhou. I IN V I'.AIiTHoLOMEW, fhuy!kill. II. N. M ALISTICIt, I'entre. WILLIAM DAVIS, Monro. JAMES L. RE V.NOLDS. Lancacter. AMIEL E. DIMMK'K. Wayne. lU'-OLCfc V. LA W RENTE, Washington. DAVID N. WHITE, Allegheny. W. II. AIVEY, Lehigh. .MUX II. WALKER, Erie. GE0.P.R0WELLiC0,40ParkRow,NewYork:Ma8Sllc!ltl;;ett3) 0hio, Oregon, Pennsyl- S. M. PETTENGILL 4 CO., 37 Park Row, N. Y, I vaui Rbod,e 8Ceiu' rlh . , , Carolina and lrginia all, more or less Are ur tale stents id HihI citj, and nr. u- , . thvrized to cuuirnct for advertising at our j precisely, instructed their delegates to luwest laics. Advertisers in that city are le- j l'u;iad. hihia to vote for President Graut's uuextcd to leave tbeir favors with either of i , . j r i lie ahove bon.ses. READING MATTER ON E7ERY PAGE. They are having a thaw just now iu Nova Scotia. 'I'll K Japanese Kiubassy visited the ' tomb of Washington. i rf. . ,. ".,""" j . : J wkxty f.iuiit thousand immefrrants have lauded in America within the three , month just past. Axnv Johnson deein-s to be returned to the l uited States Senate. So de spatches say. A Fukmiiman has applied clockwork machinery to a sewing machine, and c'aiins a pittcut. The machine will run three hours when wound up. --- . - m ... An Illinois banker who absconded lat September with i 17,000, was brought to the town from which he took the money, last Saturday, from California. Tub Government has scut troops to the fiontier of Texas, to put an end to the raids that the Mexicans are iu the habit of making ou the herds of cattle grazing on American soil. Tl!K English commissioners before the Board of Arbitrators on the Alabama ijuestion, at Geneva, refuse to recognize the American claim for consequential j damage. The New York World wants a tiade plank in the Cincinnati platform The TiiUvn". says no, to the Worhl. So they go. The end will be the triumph- j ant re-election of President Grant i tion, it looked a good deal as if the Press . j was on a regular drunk, no living man "Tim Cincinnati Convention is to be . being able to tell two days at a time a Convention of office seekers." All the 'what or whom it was for. And now tfforts that this Convention cau make ' Forne? lon"t ,ike Gen Hartrauft.s nom e ., . , .I, . r i r i "nation for Govornor. WTe do not won will fail to estrange the heart of the Re- , , . . t ti . r. der much at tins, for Gen. llarLrauft publican party from President Grant. j committod the unpardonable sin of re- ... v . . , " C7 r r ' fusine to pay hundreds of thousands of .Miss rvisLLlELiRA.NT.dauebterpf I res-1 , ,. " . '- , , lA . ! dollars to Geo. O. hvans, the defaulter, ideut Grant, has been received with j wh(J bccn gtrongi7 rconimended for marked attention iu Fuglaud. The rail- the position he held by said John W. road stations along the line of her travel Forney. Beside, it appears that a were decorated with British aud Amcri- nbew of Forney's had a pick at Evans' can flao 1 stealings to the tune of 56,000 or more, ' and that Forney himself got $2,000 of A despatch fromCarlisle, under date ! il ! AnJ ,ur" "Kain tlle Repnblican r .1 on.i : . . t j t i ! party conld not or would not see that of the 20th nirtt , Favs : Judge Junktn.t'., ' . . . . . , . ,, , prorney wanted to be Loitea states oen- midcr the special act of Assembly, passed ! At0TtU wLich, with other similar causes March 2S, heard a motion for a new trial ! where sundry Wormwoods were uot rcc in the case of Ir. Paul Schrrppe, under J ognized, ha cansed the Press to turn conviction for murder. After hearing ; rehead. Fortunately, the city dailies . ... . , i aie no longer a power in the country a the argument, a new trial was granted, I . r i i i. 7 which will commence on the fourth Mon day in Auguet. A. K. MiCl.t RB and others are out in a card iuviting recruits to the Ciucin-1 nati Convention. If our inamory serves us correctly, the Colonel stated, when he ! ran for the vacancy in the Senate, that j if his constituency favored General . I.raiil fur lltA l'rci.l.ntr tl..it nuM . " " " " be governed by their wishes. Was the j ( olontl unfairly represented to his lie-1 our whaling fleet. The prevailing sum publican constituents, or was it the Dera-1 mer w'"d in Alaska i from the north. ocratic part of his constituency that he ! tt"-(1 il W01 k,9 tU, ice off tI,e Ia,,(i a,ld dis" raeant ' pcrscs it. But last summer the off shore . , , , winds were not so strong as usual, and The Republicans who are engineering 1 ,M 'c returned in a heavy pack before the Cincinnati movement, wheu asked for I k h?d bcf n ,,i,,ed' " tl,Ht u, couId r .1 , , - neither get through it norhold araiuat it a rraou for their course, always fail of at Rncu,,r 11 giving a good and reasonable one. The! . ehief objection seems to 1 arainst tl.n I appointments to office, which in many 1 cases were not good ; but then tha Pre ; . ... . ,, .dent certatuly was not personally ac , qnamtcd with one iu a thousand of the ; applicants for place, and of course was : governed by the recommendaliou of Con- ...r.c.m, d ii. .i.....i.i .... i . i hel l rc.poiiMbI. for the bad rccommenda- ttoni ot oilier. Ihere is little in that argument. There ate 230 oil wells now drilling ' at Tarker's Landing, Pa. The Fish Question. Through 11. management of.Mr,A m in the M&JJg TV :1 - fi.-l. l.ill erentmir A poaru Ol fi-bery Commissioners was pcssca oy .!. Tr;ldtnr. The Commissioners re- 1" .b i I c6, i j ..f ,nm- Iiel JWlell. 01 t arrtu. . v imissioners, witn an appropr.au... . SGO.tOO, for the purpose of placing fish j K'u P" " 'r-T" laVZTr were three Unite quehanna, Juniata, and Lehigh rivers: , . .,,. re,,nr.etivelv 1 , .... . r . 1 States marshals, named respectively also, S 10 000 for the establishment of a , l ...- , iv;, r r state Hatching nouse, ior mc .u.u distributing eggs and fry of the various kinds of fih suitable for stocking our inland wateis; also, a special appropria tion of 53000 for the propagating of shad in the Delaware river, on condition of the same amount beitis appropriated by the S(a.eofXew Jersey." That State has ! - - .. t....l ll.A nnncii. mllint lOV- t 1 ' , i . . j ernor ueary, nowcvcr, nas .w. eg .;. the bill. It would be perfectly proper i to circulate petitions iu favor of His ex cellency signing the bill. early the whole people would sign iu favor of a measure which, if properly carried out, would be the forerunner of a full supply of good fiash fish at prices within the reach of all. Our streams should again be made to run full of the finest of fish. KkiHTKEN States have already ap pointed delegates to the Republican Na tioual Convention to meet in Philadel phia. They are Connecticut, Florida, Iowai Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Misouri, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Khode Islaud, South Carolina, Wisconsin, Virginia and North Corolina. The administration was eudorsed by every one. Florida, Indi- I ana. Iowa. Kansas, Kentucky, Maiue, reuouiiuation, wliile .Missouri ana Con necticut promised their support to who ever was nominated." The Louisville Letgr still opposes the passive policy, saying : "If the Liberal Republican mjvement means no more than to turn out Grant and put in another radical, who will only substitute a new set of hungry radical officeholders OJ r .1 l .1 . ,or luose now ,u "JC,:' lucu "c " " loss to uuderstaud what iutercst Demo- crats can have in the fight. And euch, we arc satisfied, are the views of a large portion of those who are professing a de sire to defeat Grant." It therefore con cludes that "the Cincinnati Convention will develop that vastly more than half the liberal liepublican bluster has been sham, and that it has been gotten up by i disappointed office aeeUer who simply want place ; the remainder, wno really want to defeat Grant because of a re spect for our theory of government and the authority of the Constitution, will be left to cast their lot with the Democratic party, and will cordially do so." Tub course that Col. Forney's Press has pursued in regard to the nominations made by the late Republican State Con vention does not meet with approval in the rural districts, however it may be considered in the city. Last week the Lewistowu Gaztttt delivered itself as fol I lows on the conduct of Col. Forney and frceiLiM,apt'r.: c orusy s i res?, UKe oia uranny Greeley's New York Tribune, has been playing some extraordinary pranks lately. During the Cray McOlure tlec- see them as they are trucklers to great corporations, sycophant to patronage, and adulators, of self, with reporters aud corresnondents who ran outlie the nrinw of liars ; and after a little more exercise f patience, the people will kick the Tribune, and other vacillating sheets out of their road. Tim f m 1 1 VT eavn.ilir nf 1 1. n ..... .Snln. . r . ... may be partly explained by the peculiar ity of the winds that led to the loss of The rector St. Georee's, Hanover Square, Iondon, having demanded a bap ti'nia,eB ot two billings, payment was refused, and the ouestien was referred to Dr. A S.cphen. Ll Mr. Arthur Charles" two well known ecclesiastical lawyers, Both ajrree in statins that the char.- i ""lawful, errn in the case of 5t. George's, ! where a local act is said to iustify it. i The S. Iinscrove and North Rr.nen j , . . latlroad has been contracted for from Se- , ousgrove to Port Trevorton a distance, ' l - ot seven miles. I lie contractor will r- ui seven miies. Aliee eive $20,000 per mile, befin eradins in a few lie expects to- few weeks. Dewit? l. S Marshals, and Three Others. St. Louis, April 20 A special des- rcn frnm Muskasck. Indian Territory, the judge on the bench. Aa indiscrinii- a . wLick - HCHrs. uwrafi iidiuc uu ... in AN ACCOUNT OF TUB AFFRAY. In order that the circumstances caus ing the trreible fight above alluded to may be more fully understood we will tate the following: On April 11 a white man named J J. Kcsterson, living in the Cherokee Nation, near the Arkan sas line, about fifty miles from this city, came here and filed information before United States Commissioner Churchill against one Proctor, also a white man, married to a Cherokee woman, for as saulting him with intent to kill. He stated that while in his sawmill, on Feb ruary 13 last, Proctor cam in, walked up without provocation, ' and shot his wife dead. He then fired his revolver at him. the ball striking just above the left eye. Before he could fire again Ktsterson escaped. It is further stated that Proctor is undergoing trial for the mnrdcr of his wife at the court house in Suake district, about 57 miles uorthwe6t of here. A writ was issued, and the deputy marshals were instructed to go to the court house, and remain until the trial was over, and if he was not convict ed, to arrest him on another charge. Proctor is known to be a desperado, and it being iu the neighboihood where Deputy Marshall Bentz was killed, about a month ago where, in fact, a deputy marshal is ehot at almost at sight it ; was necessary that a strong force should be sent. THB TARTY had also writs for the murderers of United States Deputy Marshal Bentz, who- are supposed to be in the immediate vicinity, and they intend to resist arrest. On the morning of April 13 Deputy Marshals Jacob H. Owpna and Joseph G. Peavy, with Wm Weed, Joseph G. Vanney, James Uarkins, Paul Jones, and Eugene Brackett as a posse, left here for the scecu of action. At Evansville the were joined by Riley Wards and W. J. Mor ris, and at Dutchtown by a man named Beck, who is part a Cherokee. The Indian court house i about 12 miles west of that place. The party proceeded, and about 3 P. M. on Monday thry were within fifty yards of the court-house, when they dismounted, hitched tbeir horses, and quietly walked towards the east ai.ie of the house iu file by twos. They stopped at the corner, and Beck stepped around to the front door, and looked in. Seeing a large number of people inside, AKMHO TO TIIK TEETH, he turned immediately to come away, but not before he was fired upon an d j dangerously wounded. At the same time a volley was poured from the court-1 house upon the marshals force without, who then commenced to return the fire. ! They were nt a great disadvantage, as the attacking party was under shelter iuside of the courthouse. It appears that Deck had some friends inside the court-house, who, when they saw him fall, opened fire on his beck's enemies inside, and presently the fighting was general. It was brief, however, but ' TERRIBLE. I.N ITS RESULTS. Of the marshal' force seven out of eleven lay dead, aud of the assailants only three. Some sixteen or seventeen are reported wounded some mortally, including Marshal Owens. The messen ger knew the names of only two of the marshal's force who were killed James Ward and Riley Woods'. Three were missing James llawkin. Paul Jones, and Eugene Bracket. Morris helped to lay out nine bodies on a porch, about half a mile from the scene of the deadly affray, and thither the Federal wounded were also carried. Proctor, the woman killer and desperado, was guarded by eleven of his personal friends, who would not see him convicted. The eheriff was killed, aud the judge received three buckshot in the knee. Indeed, it ap pears from the sudden and deadly assault on the marshal's force, that the people inside the court-house bad been fully in formed of their approach, and were pre pared for them. The officials were in structed to mike a demand for Proctor only in case of his acquittal, and ex pected soma resistance should they at tempt to arrest Proctor after his acquit tal ; but for THB MLRliEROt'S VOLLEV, on their first approach, they were not prepared, aud heuce their slaughter. Immediately on the receipt of Deputy Marshal Peary 'a letter, It. C. Kerens, chief deputy marshal, Captain J. AV. Donnelly, chief clerk, and United States Commissioner Brooks Churchill raised and mounted thirty men, under com mand ol City Marshal C. F. Robinson, and Jos. Tinker, deputy. Accompany ing the expedition are Dootnrs Julian C. Field and C. W. Pierce A demand has been made on the authorities of the na tion to assist in taking the murderers DEAD OR ALIVE. This is one of the most terrible affairs ever known. in this country, originating in distrust and jealousy, with which the more intelligent portion of the inhabi 131,18 of 9 Indian Territory are misled by bad white men. What protection that Prninr ha. ,mmi.-J "au may ue snrmisea Dy the tact ...... u .gubccu mur- ders and is still unhanded It ia thn stern determination f b TT;(J s... - ua.t UMK marshal in thia di.triet n L,; the murderous and rebellion. r in b nation at any sacrifice or ernpn. - i - . ,,., I : ,loreo( W Ma'pt !gtrect corner of Jane, N. Y and .Bsed j jrr. Mapes to show them some silk. Mr. j Mapes showed them aline of silks that was on the sh. If. Oue ot them said, "Oh. that is not the kind we want. We want a silk to make ties and caravats of." Mr. Mapes, uot liking the looks of the meu, said. "We Lave nothing to suit yon." As they went out they met a boy connected wkh the establishment, and said to him, -kave you got a key to the store!" The boy told tham that he had, and showed them a key to a side entrance. Ooe of them pnlled a piece of wax out of his pocket and took an im pression of the' key. Mr. Mapes then went to the Ninth Precinct Station House, and told Captain Washburn and Sergeant Bird about the man. Although they scarcely thought that they would try anything last night, they detailed Officers Bush, O'Neill and Bradley, who went and hiJ themselves under the couuter. At three o'clock this morning the burglers entered. The gas was on the glimmer, and, they flashed their bull's-eye around the store, the light twice flashing across Bush's nose. In crawling along they came very close to O'Neill. Oue paid, -I'll go for the shelves, an! you go for the window.' Just then O'Neill spring np and fired over the head of the bnrgler nearest him. The jar of the report put the gas out, and immediately a rusk was made by the officers to the door to stop the egress ol the burglars. The firing theu com menced, and'between eight and twelve shots were fired. During the melee Bush and O'Neill clinched, each thinking the other the burglar. They hauled oue another out to the sidewalk under the gaslight before they discovered their mis Like. They then rushed back, and O'Neill found! that he was shot in the head, the ball navin entered at the back part, and followed the scalp around to nearly the top of the head, where it came out Strange to say, there is but one hole in the hat. In the confusion one of the burglars made his escape, but it is thought that he was mortally wounded The burglar who was caught gave his name as Frank Edwards. He bad on his person a pistol known as "My friend." a sort of a brass knuckle aud pistol com bined.. He had fired one shot from it Lie was taken to the police headquarter to day, and will this afternoon be taken to Jefferson Market. O'Neill is getting along very well, and will be out in a few days PhiladtJpltia Inquirer ifthe 19.' inst. Hume and IIealth The April number of this valuable and spicy family aud health journal is received, aud do serves more than a passing mentinu. After a year of unprecedented aneee. the publishers announce a series of im provements which bid fair to eclipse any thins heretofore attempted. The .May number is to be greatly eularged, and will j be under the editorial management of j Rev. Oeo G. Lyon, a gentleman of rare acquirements. Iu every number there will be the most entertaining aud in- stntctive reading for parents aud adults, the choi-est stories aud anecdotes lor rfiitntr and eliiLleen wit nnd fill m(Jr for oJd and yoWf, va,uabIe illfor. mation on plants, fruits and flowers useful hints on housekeeping and cook- a..u a lull ou.uiiiai J vi lui.cii.cichis transpiring in the world, together with the most varied aud elaborate articles on hygieue and medicine, and numerous practical suggestions on the art of pre serving the health, on the care and food of infants, and on the home treatment of all diseases and ailments. Notwithstand ing all these improvements, the price is to remain the same, $1.50 per annum. Address : Home Publishing House, or De Puy, Lyon & Co ,52 Fourth Avenue, New York; Enlarged. The Lutheran Observer, published at No. 524 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, has recently been enlarged from a 48 column to a 56 column paper, and is printed on a sheet 3o by 50 inches, affording 3,500 square inches of space. It has now attained Ihe standard size generally chosen by religious journal isls. The Obstrver is one of the best religions journals published in this country, and I . rii i ., .... decidedly the best paper published in the interest of the Lutheran Church. Every Lutheran family should have it. Subscription prica 92 50 per year. Ad dress Rev. F. W. Conrad, D. D., No. 524 Walnut St . Philad'a, Pa Serious Damage by a Tornado. Charleston. April 19 A tornado swept over Columbia on Thursday night, and demolished the new market house, which was about finished. The greatest damage was in Chester, where sixty two houses were entirely destroyed and others damaged. Nobody wa killed, but four colored persons were injured by falling houses. Miles of fencing were blown down and thousands of large fruit trees were torn p by the roots. The total loss in Chester is $50,000, mostly falling on persons of sm ill means. - A meeting was held in Chester to-day, and steps taken to relieve the sufferers. The tornado moved westwardly, and was of short duration. Horrors of the Famiue. London, April 20 Persian advices received iu this city that the famine is increasing in Teheran, the principle city, and the destitution is becoming wide spread. It is feared with the approach of summer that the plague and starvation which disappeared somewhat during the winter will again prevail. Numbers of persons were perishiner daily from want and exhaustion. Advices from all parts ot reroia snow a similar state of affairs. " mm The Philadelphia and Reading car shop at Reading, make one passenger car and ten freight cars per week. j A, 'Il.-p.lv maid" bridal costumei are ap propriately advertised in a New Jersey paper. Some 9,000 herrings were recently ta ken from the canal bjcki at Delaware City at one haul. Australian preserved meats are now very lirgi-Iy imported aud used through out England. Forty six thonsand persons iu Iowa can neither fad uor write, and one-third of them a:e voters. ( leaifielJ has a schoolboy 15 years old stands 6 feet 2. He stands very high iu his class. It is reported that there are seventy five counties iu Texas iu which there is uot a single Sunday-school. There is a snow drift on Mount Pros pect, in llolderness, N. II., which is eigh ty rods iu length and fifty feet deep. They say the sun shines only once iu forty-seven days in Portland, Oregon, and that happy occasion is used aa a gen eral washing day. ar trumpets of a wonderful construc tion, by winch sounds can be lieaid at a distance of a mile, are to be shown at the Vicuna Exposition. A widow of Liverpool, England, has recovered $1500 from the owner of a mad dog, through whose bite her hus baud died. An Indiana man has instituted pro ceedings to re.-traiu his wife from put ting up a tomb stone over the grave of her first husband. A Memphis dueling party were driven into a cemetery by a facetious hackuian, "So that they might be buried without unnecessary expense." Eighty-seven public halls were recent ly advertised at oue time in Paris. Two hundred and sixty policemen wire de tailed to attend them. A man named Wells, while wading a river at Brownsville, Texa, not long since, stepped into a, quicksand and van ished from sight in au instant. There are hut two or three Indians left a m"i;g the everglade of Florida, and they are killing themselves .1 fast as possible with whiskey. The Pennsylvania railroad company is building a depot at Altonua 371 fret long and -10 wide. It will have a ventilator 330 feet in length aud 20 in width. A dead man being found at L Crose, Wi.-... with seven stabs in the back, the coroner's jury brought in a verdict of "probable murder." A very cautious r ilty seven persons are recorded as 'having disappeared mysteriously" Irmn New York city during the la.t year, What a record of crime is probably hid - den under this announcemei.t. The Legislature of Minnesota, at its ...... ,..;..t..d son nnn r..- ii.hiiv rn-oiuii nuuiipiiui,nt v , ioi .1.-j:...:i....:.... If ......1 -.1 .l iii-j uisutuuiiuii u. pvvu w urn.i iwm..- cations have already been made for $2S0 000 worth. It i. rennrtd llin. lti Irn.litinnnl It... pipe is going out d faehiou iu Turkey. and that the Tuikish aristocracy uo al j most exclusively use cigaretts wheu smo- lllj.. T I ntil Iattly the barbers in (f -rranti cities have received one and a half cents lor suaving, and three aud a halt for hair cutting. They lately struck for five centsre.uectiv.lv tints rtsptciuuy. An aurora boreali. visible in Havana the other evening, fiigutenrd the- hava- nese niio iir.iyeniu cenviiision? i ney hadu't had one in thirty-seven years, and thought it portended the wind n;i of the wor' , ! w,r" ,: V", a" i'Pf""'r ' Mnuhuod : How Lost. How Krstami A painter, weing askod to estimate the i 'roui the haystack, having rntec hi way cost of painting a certain house, drew ! "r,nl ti e centre to the circumference ywWn Jst published, a new edition of forth pencil and paper, and made ihe I There was now on the ground, which &3Hfc7 ''""' i ii ii'-'. . . r i i . i T . i lasajr on tlie rud cil cure iwnh- following calculation : "A naught m a : afforded moisture enough to prevent his : iiut .dicine) or Si Kkm,toii.e. or Se...i nanght; three into five twice you can"t ; j dying from thirst. ' naMVrhknei). Iuvolnmary Seminal Lo-n.-. I'll paint your house for fifty dollars. ! .... ,,,. . ,,. . , ! Imiotkxcv, Mental and I'hjsieal lnc.rp.ciry. ' J j 1 he Untler ( ounty i.tn n says : Il : Impediments to .Marriage, etc. ; l ov-i tr- The fires which devastated Wieconsin is again our painful duty t chronicle an I tics I'eii.Kesv, and Fits, induced l.v self- last fall are not yet wholly extinguished 1 Thb smoke is still issuing through the j record the awful event of another soul snow from the low groinds near Green j hurried into eternity, without a moments Bay, where the ground is swampy and ! warning. The victim of tiie sad occur filled with roots. j ranee this time was Mr. John A. Urown. George Ilearn, a yonng man of Del- "f 'airview townslsip. i.i this comity, m.r. S.is.er rn.n.tv. I..r-. l i It appears that on last Saturday Mr. assaulted and .nre. relv t...m-n.dl..d on man named Isaac Ilearn because the old gentleman opposed the young man in courting his daughter. Mrs. Louisa Zander, of earl township, Lancaster county, patched a quilt con taining 22,000 pieces, ils dimensions being three yards square. This exceeds the one made by the lady of East Calu, Chester county, by over 19,000 pieces. A Maine sheriff, who had a writ to serve, ascertained that the defendant wts dead, and tossing the paper over the wall of the cemetery, he made return upon the writ that he had left the sum cons at his last aud permanent place of abode. A camel Gatlin gnu. proposed to be mounted nn the backs of camels for use in India, is in course of trial by a reldct committee at Woolwich. It has ten bar rels, each 42 inch bore, and is sufficiently light to be fired from a tripod fixed on the back of the camel, without in con venience. '1 he police in Japan are very vigilant. If you have any thing stolen, they run after, the thief and bring him back for identification. If the stolen property is fouud ou him, they chop off his head on your door step. By paying a sum equal to about eleven cents of our money you can do your own killing and keep the body. During the last few days of December, 1871.' Adelaide in South Australia, was visited by dense clouds of locusts The air was quite darkened with them. They came from the north, and de voured everything looking green Nothing remained in the fine lawns in the Botanic Garden hot the bars brown earth. A distinguished German physician states that small pox originates from the express of albuminous matter in the blood and that this is to be prevented by the administration of common salt The habit of children indnleine over freely in sweetmeats he considers one erreat cause of this nndue development of albumen, and coffee and tea, if highly snearod. tend also to excito H in adults. tt lei' :: ii'ji' k: iu i fouJ, nvieh 'u ii-r ai:.";--. mik disgust, a Etnt!l fng embodied iu ti.e ceu ter of it. Charles Livingstouc, V e, a convict at New Albany who had seven years to serve. eh.l-ed ... im.-kfL. , ir.fc- ho" t:n--r she y tried to get out by packing himself into l plow, ! harrow. , box filled with spoke. . Unfortunately j w p ORCVKP he forgot to mark the cae "This side np, ! AP"' nd was placed head downward in the j Executor' Notice, wagon. The pain finally compelled him j of c Gana jte(a,td to shout for help, and he was unpacked AT0T1CE u hmhj girt lb leltm Te,. and shipped back to durance vile. J men,.,r, ,he estate of Kohtn :. r. j. ,.'.. i, . r I laher, laic of Fermanagh lowrship, Juniat Attention is called to Mrs. Peter Cron- countJ jeCMd. haTe been granied to the di, of Makinac county, Michigan She . unaer!igne'i. residing in me township. All haj twenty-three children. One or her perjorn in'lcbteJ to said estate are reqn sons has" fifteen children, one of her : tt-a to cake immeUia'e pavment. anJ thoe daughters has twelve children. .d Jl j y8 P P Pr" l.n was la I . rAnnj u artrtti an1 it 11 (7 11 ters have large and increasing families j 1.V-...1 at.,. . 1.1 1.1 .nstaar anAAU ' and can walk ten miles a day withont ; Fxecutor's Notice. blinking i Ettalt of Valnirutt Cunningham, deceafrj. , ATOTITE U hereby giren that Letters Te3 A careful calculation as to the number i J. mmmrr on the estate of Oitharine I'un of human beings addicted to canibalism ; niaghain. late of Mi'ford township. Juniata at the present time gives a total of only j county, deceased, hare been grame-l to the i : -:j ( . ill:.,..,. .l.;..l. ' un.lersicneJ, residinj in same township. Ail a iracii.i.i ii'o.ue ui .wu ..i ntuus, ninti. ,, . . , , , , actually represents the six hundred and nineteenth part of tlie wliuie populattou of the globe, I he motives assigned Dey ond mere hunger, induced by dearth of other animal food, arc the passions of re venge and hatred, as well as religious sentiments and gloomy superstition. The Utica OLiervr tells ol a monster snnwbanks in Litchfield, the citizens I have dug an arch through one of them. I , I a A :,l. ,.. ...J and a wazon, loatlea witu men ana wo- uuua "o ' men drawn by lour horses passed through the suow-arch. It is 400 feet in length, j aud the heads of the men and women iu the wagon did not reach within four feet of the top. The LitchfleM people talk; ot preserving tne tunnel tor picnic pur- poses auring tne coming summer. The Soarpsville Adeert'wr says : What is the matter with the bees ? Frm , every direction we bear of great mortality j among the honey-maker. The oldest apiarians are as much nt a loss to account J of this county, one of the largest bee - keepers in the United States, writes a friend that he is losing severely, and that, so far. he has been unable to account for it The came is aid to be not a lack ' of food, nor nnusual cold, and so the'; mortality remains a mystery. i M ivif AVI t r 1- ; Mr. V llliam A ronf, of Caroline. County, Md , has a pet lamb that goes rabbit-hlintintr that is he follows the ! d..p- t tl.- a. nud. wlieu thev strike i . :1 r.ll.... :.. 1 ii.r ..i... ..c .....uwa ... ,M..Bu... ...... see... to enjoy the fun as much as the hound them-ielves. The lamb is not always successful in keeping up with his swift footed companions, and sometimes he is ( itlt betiina ana gets lost. lien this occurs be loiters about, stops at some of j the neighbors, and finally work his way 1 home again. I T,i(, IIel)(lerson K. Utjmitr has I the following account of a distressing ac ;,1 M:,, I .,..! 1 ..k... tiui.111, , unci iirj.ui urtiicit. t , Hru uinttu r. J x. c tf- i ' io.il . ecu, ua..ll..Lei I'l .. r. o.t....li'l If . Langley, died vcrv suilih nlv at the resi dence of Mr. John McHride, in this city, : on Monday mornin;? last, while under ' iu.uce t ctilorotorm. 1 he young ( 1 ,a'' Wi" l,,"ler treatment for a disease.! j j 'e. an". un-lerstan-l. j.ist lietore the ; t "perauuii was penormeu ou me eye oy t I Dr. Th'mpon she was induced by her t ' .uter to it.b.le el. ! fatal result stated sbove i , , , , , , 1 . , , , 1 Speaking about being bu. ie.1 alive, there ;;';? vVT-r.vc ine 'if'7" , is a s'ory of an ox it. Wis which stir- t T. S .t 7 r...v. consisting of Men. j : llu.u. and ( h;!dnns Shins. tVus, I viVed the longest living burial on record, t -j v . . ' ' ne l,ad the good fortune, hn-.vever, to be ' ' i l,ried in a haystack, which fell upon! I will munuf.ctnre to order all kind , i :. ,,11, l t,.i L,.,.",,,. ; ol ,l,e cr).ntllr; lllltj aftf,r f , id mysterious , disapi.eiaruce ha.! lasted over three other death by accidental siiootiug to Brown was slim-ting rats that infested his house, and in doing so his gnti was acci uently discharged, the ball parsing througii his head, killing him iti.-tintly. Mr Brown was a yourg man, but 25 years of age, and married. Bridgeport ha a promising boy bur glar, lie broke into a house a few days ago, and to direct suspicion in another quarter he put on a man's pa'r of boots, raised a window tlint it milit appear the entrance had been effected i i that way. and dropped a note in the hall, pur porting to have been written in New York, in which tho writer said he would stop nt Bridgeport and go through Jones' house. The ru.-e threw tho di.-testives off the track, and no knowledge of the thief was obtained until hq was arrested in New York on account of his suspi-! s!tatM- The yield is G J to l'JO bih. U shl - sious appearance, when he confessed the i tl!-c.nrn,p" ac'e' an'' h" Wn " h'H " ..L.t. 'a.:. V . L i .i . bushels per acre, over a field or ten icrc. .vholo affair, rora boy only thirteen! ,w, $1.00 per peek ; Sl.LV, per ball ba-:.-years ..Id this will do. Horre.7-r Spy j el : 50 per boshcl. for sale by ihe un- - - dersincd A Big Hani. - Ii Any person purehasingof the abovs r r -1 l . . . i ro1"11 for seed. a:.d at torn li irfeline eon"id- Uu t riday last a Uerman, registering ers that he h..-. not be.-n well paid by the pur hld name as Dr. F. Fleschcrt, of Laporte, ' chase and ch..i,.ee of seed coin. I will refund Pa., arrived sit the La Pierre house, lie i 10 Iiim ,lje "'oaey paid for the corn, had with him ihnnt tl.in. tl,..,... ,l..l SAMUEL LEONARD. .-. ...... . .uwuJHJl.l ,,,.- 1 .. ..,u i i i lar WOlth nt Btneta. Immla anil ..tituv a curities, besides a sum of money, nil of j which he had in his wallet. He went to the opera on Friday evcuinsr. and there t mane tue acquaintance ot several young men, who remained by him during the eveuiug At the close of the performance they visited several bar rooms and the doctor drank fieily. About one o'clock in the morning, when the bar room of the La Pierre House closed, they went out on the pavement where a scuflla ensued Here the doctor was roughly handled. He called for the police when his new made friends decamped. Fleschert then retired to his room, and, in the morning discovered that his wallet and all his se curities had vanashed. P.'.ilad Jphia Inquirer of ihe 22nd inst. 1., . Matricide. ALBANY. April 21. Mrs. Maher of Grecnbnsh, was struck down and had her neck broke to-night, while attemp - Joseph, the alleged matricide, has fl-jj. o':as S!iiM-i!F,'i'.' Sjiniiie Ili'.i Iimvu-: ' ,i,-h li.n- as we ni;.v s?e proper to v. : 1 onj ware, i ... . rcil , ,0.Ter old heifcr. 7 heaj of . i 1 l V.l. ... .. .... w.. : i ! , lwo-horse wajon. 1 spring wtrou, 1 s!eJ . - . . JOSEI'il KOniKUCK, Ezrcnior. April 17. ISTl'-tii persons mdehtcl to can! estate are rciuct-teil j ft make iH,nl!i!lfe p,jmet, and those hav- inr claims will pleaie present them properly authenticated fr settlement. J. S. KOltlSOX, Eie-utor. April 17. 172 tin. Dissolution of Partnership. ' P 11 E partnership heretofore ei.ting be- I tmmt-n .K .in.lr di crntl. trading UD'lor ,lie firm of i,. Hey Co.. was dis- solved by inntuil consent on the 4ih day of April, )V7.'. All persons knowin? ihem- sclve-" indebted to said firm, enn settle by ' . . . ... . , , c:tl!in? on either of lh undersigned at the oI l sUu,L P. AT. IIAKLEY. JUIIN 1IUKFMAV. April 1, 1S72-CI isolation of PartaersMp. j rpE pm.uiersi,ip heretofore exitin; be. X I ween (i W. Heck aud A It. Fauck the ho?nakin btiniues. in the boroajrb of Mitliinlown. unde.- th fi-m of Ileck .t K sick. h.n this day (March. 2, H7'.'.) bee's di--s.dved by iiititn.l eoiisent. The books of lliij firm are in the bands of A. It Fasirk fov collection i W. HECK. ' ; 5&n GREAT REDUCTION m It Tlltr JJXCJ-X ok Tr.irni: 1 r ., , . , Fu" or Lowcr Sets as Low as $5 0- No teeth allowed lo leave ibe v.Tioe unless 'be p.lient is suisfiel. Teeth em."klrd and repaired. Teeth filled i last for lit, Electricity .a in i be extinction of teeth. rendenng n almost a painless operation. I" ; extr cuurjre) at tlie I le e9t.4i,1UheU : M.fllin.own in j i.. iikki:, ' Jiin 21. lS7J-Iy l'ractical lieuiUt. . j Jg. JjOUJDOx'T 3ii:ij;n.Y:N'r Tvirxm, ,vAM7.v.sr v.iii.visn ox Bridge Street, Hiaiiato-ra, Fa., Ile;ies to iiifnrm his friend J and the p:iM?c ,";, '"' J"" reeeiren a nne an l t . " si.ark of M'M.Nt. OOODh, ci. itiag uf Jr-.wn. rr.OTUSllun Klaek, I5In an nr. Liat.ua. l.io'vnan-l Itnie. TUK'OT .l'.;:iL-k. nine and lirona. ltI.HOS.XLS Hhtc and Black. ' 'HE I O TS All hade. snrrrii i;ot- ah stxtes. !. ICC HOESTiXSA Snneri, r.)t I'itv I'A V 7'S .IX ft VKSr Pi TTEKXS fin". IS I'M ME I! 'SO Qenernl Assortment. i l will sell tiny of the above goods r.y the ya'd or pattern. ' r"M iiuu-Sf.ii.naMr, i suit the times. Milllitito-rn. Aori! 10, 1S7J. if.duliret.ee or sexual cxtr n:i'-.ince EJfl'rice. in a sealed envelope, only f, d. Ihe celebrated au'hor. in this admirable eay. clearly devioiutrntc. from a thirty years" siicee-t-ftil practice, that the abiraiin consequence of seif-abu-e may be radically cure 1 without the d m jerous one of the kn:f ; poimin oul a moJe of cure at once simple, certain, and elfecin.l. l.y means of which every sitlfi-rer, no matter what bis condition may b, may cure himself chety, jirivn fy and rat'rtifi'tf. tzirThli Lecture shjuld be in Ihe hnnd-i of every yeuth and every mm :n the land. Sent, under sell, in a plain envelope, to a-y u ldrcs, po:ta,l, on receipt of ti. cent, o.r Iwo po.f stamps. Also. lr ('ulverwell's " Marriage Guide," price 'St cents. AJ'.ress the publishers, i n vs. j. v.. ki.i:: & co., Post Office Cox -liSii. 1J7 Bowery, ". V. aprl7-ly CORN jS KING ! Improved Chester County Mammoth. Corn. j rpH"; above co-n i." more prolific, will vie' I i A more turn than anr ot)-er in Ihe lniic I i , I , . . . Oaki.u.d ...ills. Juniata Co.. I a. : n. Mar20 A PROFITABLE BUSINESS ! LIGHT KQUAI, to GAS. at ONE-EIGHTH TIIE COST! Cannot bt nplodii. Xo chim ney or wick H-'t l. SlEN desiring a PROFITABLE BUSINESS, can secure the EXCLUSIVE RIGHT for lb sale of DVOTT S PATENT CARBON GAS LIGHT BURN KM ai OIL, for COUNTIES or STATES. Write for information or call oa M. II. DYOTT. No. IU South Second St., Phila , Pa. N. B. CHURCH ES f.irniahed with CHAN DELIERS and LAMPS of every dexcription, 23 per cent, cheaper than at any other estab lishment in the country. March 2 1872-lin FORCE PUMP. ' rT,Iin undersigned ia agent for one of the ' rorce Pumps, for any depih of cis tern or well, in the wor'a. By attaching hose o the spout, w.Uer can be thrown 30 to W ' feet- o'b'"? belter coald bs aked in case ! of fire- U U 8 non-freezing pump. M,ir20 Kr-r rnT, ,