l! in in in 1 'mmTmmm!tuiMViM i i mn Juniata Sentinel. MIFFLINTOW1S Wednesday Morning, Jnne 28. 1872- 1$. F. SCIIWEIER, FI'ITOR PROPRIETOR. REPUBLICAN NOMINATIONS. TOR PRESIDENT. GENERAL U. S. GRANT. Ot ILLINOIS. FOR VICE PRESIDENT, HON. HENRY WILSON, Of JI.VSStClllSKTTS. FOR GOVERNOR. GEN. JOHN F.HARTRANFT (If MoKTOOHFHT rm'NTY. FOR SUPREME JUDGE. HON. ULYSSES M ERCUR, OF IIBAKFOKD COl'NTT. FOR AUDITOR GENERAL. GEN. HARRISON ALLEN, OF WAKRF.X COCNTT, TOR CONGRFS-SMF.N ATURliB, GFX. IIIRRV WHITE, of Indian. EN. LEMUEL Tl)Dl. of Cumberland. ItU.EUATKS AT I.AIit.K TO THE CONSTI TUTIONAL CONVENTION. WM. M. MKHKDITH. Philadelphia J. Ull.LINCIIAM i ELL. Philadelphia Gin. H A l: K V WHITE. Indiana. Gen. U I I.I.I AM LILLY. Carbon. I INS V-AK1 'litiLOMEMT, . Schuj.kill. II ST. r t I 1-iTKIt. I'-,, Irs WILLI AW I) WIS, Monroe. JAMES L. REYNOLDS. Lancaster. PA Ml' El. E. 11 M MICK. Wayne. I.E'iltGi. V. LAW HENCE. Washington. DAVID K. W HITE. Allegheny. W. II. AIVKV. Lehigh. JOHN" II. WALKER. Erie. G EO. P. ROWELL & CO, 40 Park Row, New York AND S. M. PETTENG1LL & CO., 37 Park Row, N. Y, Are our tolt agents in that city, and are au- I honied to contract for advertising at our lowest rates. Advertisers in that city are te quested to leave (heir favors with cither of the above bouses. READING HATTER ON EVERT PAGE. Keeling of lite Republican Slainlinjr Com mitlee. The members of the Rrpubliean Standing Cntmitittfe of Jun'ata county are respectfully requested to meet at Wills' hotel in this bor ough, at I o'clock p. ji , on SATURDAY, JULY 6. 1872. Business of importance will be presented to the Com mi tee lsr their considerate n Let all make it a point to attend, so that each borough and township may be reprefented. The following gentlemen con. pose the Com mittee : Mimin'owc A n Minln, C. B. Horning. Fermanagh Abram Moi-t. W'm. Ileriry Fayette V. W. Sharon, Lewis Depan. Monroe D. W Wriuier, J. G. Ilalleoiaa. Greenwood II. Minium, G. W. McElwee. Sunneh.mua .lcob Weiser. John Light. Walker J W. Parker, L. W. Sieber. Delaware S. O. Evans. Jonas Yoder. Thnmp-wntown 0. S. Mills. V. II. Nelson. Patterson F. F. P.nhtn. S. II. Brown. Mijferd John Ralshaca, D. Cunningham. Pcrrvsvii'c . M Graham, W. II. Ituiherford Turbett A. Y. McAfee. V. W. Landls. Spruce liill W. P. Gruvrr, S. KaufiTuiaa. P.ea'e A. Woodward, 1). Coffmtn. Tuscanra Thomas Morrow. James KiJJ. Lack 1) I!. Sp iupjjIp, R II. Patiers.-n. IJlaik Lug J. 11. Lane, Robert Mein'yre. JOHN EALSBtCII. Cbairnan. Bismarck has st&it-d a movement against the Jcsnits. Oranokmkn will have a grand parade on the 12ih of July in Xew Voik. O.N' the 9ih of July the Democratic National Convention well meet at Balti more The Boston Jubilee has been a sue cess ; 20,000 singers and 30,000 specta tors. 0. this day, the 2Gth of June, it is believed the Treaty of Washington will fail or be sustained e.t Geneva. The Republicans of Philadelphia have adopted the Crawford County System for the nomination of candidates. Forney's Prkss charges Russell Er rett with having said to parties in Wash ington that Gen. Hartranft cannot be elected. Mr. Errett emphatically denies the charge, and the probability iB that he never even intimated such a result iu Oc tober. On the 20ih inst. Free Trade Liberals held a National Convention in New Yoik and bolted Mr. Greeley and the Conser vatives, and nominated William S. G roes beck, of Ohio, for President, aud Fred erick Law Olrastead, of New York, for Vice President, and also adopted a plat form. . e . The I'nu is out against Gen Allen, the " Republican candidate for Auditor General. The Prr.-t might-indirectly advocate the election of Mr. Hartley, the Democratic candidate for Auditor Gen eral by declaring him a patriot of the olden times. Hartley was aneeted sev eral times for favoring the rebels too much. Mr. Buckalew, sue Democratic can didate for Governor, was so favorable to the rebellious South that he never raised his voice against her. His own county was so worked np into a state of oppo sition to the Union cause that troops had to be seut there to quell the rebels at home. Yet the Prett can see iu him a patriot of the olden lime. Mr. Bucka lew H of that class of patriots that had fine soft words of excuse for the men who orove George Washington and his men to Valley Forge. He was the same kind of a patriot as those who, during the revo lution, epeke smooth words of excuse for the British. Communication. Post Royal, Jnne 22. 1872. Mr. Editor : I see in your paper of last week an article in regard to the county printing, and the manner in which the Commissioners discharged their duty in regard to it. Little else could be expected. This whole scheme was conceived in sin and brought forth in iniqnity, and it would have been little lees than a mira cle bad their decision proved satisfactory to all. This qnestinnsble work will doubtless result iu good in the end, publishers will be arraigned before the bar of public opiuiou and an unanimms demand by the people issued that the laws passed in relation to the public priuting, in Juniata county be repealed t' loto. so that the law- will stand as it was before the act of 16G7 was passed, or else, as you suggest, that it be let by contract to the lowest bidder. This, perhaps, would be better. It would do away with the jobbing that has been done through the County Cominis eioners' office so largely in years gone by. But there is little hope for reform un less the people speak out boldly and re fuse lo support any man for office who will not pledge himself to use every hon orable means to- bring about such a re sult. The people for two years have asked a repeal of the law of 18C7. In 1870, when it was known that petitions were circulated asking for its repeal, our able Senator had the law promptly re pealed iu the Senate, and quickly notice thereof was published, so as to blind those who were active in the matter, an 1 create the impression that it was unne cessary to further, petition for the pur pose that it would be done anyway. But the Reverend member who repre sented the good people of Juniata county, not expectiug to be a candidate for re election, could not see it, and the re pealing bill did not pass the House. By what means this was brought about your readers can judge. I have heard that a committee of editors went down to see him. Again, iu 1S72, a repeal was asked for, but instead a new bill was substituted and became a law, and repeali d the act of 1SC7 in so ftr as it conflicted with it The act of lS67.was doctored largely. Two doctors did the work, and it was no homeopathic job either. They required the printing to be done in two papers only, but increased the dose. Had they confined the law to what is geuerally understood by Public Printing sueb as the County Commissioner are required to have done there might have been some estui" for them ; but they attempt ed to include every kind of legal adver tisements, and attempted to compel the people to publish in two papers what wa before only leqnired to be published in one. This is a direct attempt to control the public against their will, to patronize papers and men that they may not wish to. Let the people see to it that this nnjiist and obnoxious law be at once repealed' It is a disgrace to the coun'y as well as to iu author. AUG US. Moi.tkb. the great military leador of Prussia, is reported, on fair authority, to have sneered at our war of the rebellion as a mere rabble rout, General Sher muu, after carefully examining Sabasto pol, asserted that its capture was far les difficult than that of Vickaburg. Yet the combined armies of Creat Britaiu and France, with all their weali.li of engin eering skill and military knowledge, found nearly a full year's work in re ducing the Russian fortified city The siege of Vicksburg lasted two months. This is a military comparison which has never be fore been made, because no of ficer of note connected with ihe Vicks burg campaign ever visited the strong hold in the Crimea. It is a pity that two such masters of the military art as Mol'.ko and Sherman cannot meet and compare notes on their great campaigns, and give their ideas of the wars which they have studied at a distance. Phila delphia Inqu'rer. A terrible railroad accident occurred near Belleville, Ontario, on Saturday morning. The engine jumped the track and telescoped the smoking and second class cars, leaving them on top of the engine, where they were exposed to the escaping steam from the boiler. Sixty five men and women were fearfully scald ed, and the medical men in attendance do not anticipate that more than four or five will survive their injuries The Toledo Blade, in speaking of Greely, pays : "The mau who ate sixty mince pies in an hour the man who ate sixty bari boiled eggs in thirty minutes, aud the other performers of wonderous feats of deglutition, are all thrown in the shade by Greeley. lie has just five months in which to swallow the utterances of twenty years." Thb points farthest reuoved from the sea board have beetr proven by the cen eus reports of I860 and 1870 to be the healthiest frr persons effected by con sumption and cancer. In Massachusetts the percentage of deaths is 25 ; in Cali fornia, 14 per cent ; in Utah, 6 per cent. Christiana Thorpe, aged 22, while on a train from Druid' Hill Park, Baltimore, last Saturday night, had her clothes igni ted by a spark from a dummy engine, and was burned to death. The seaport of Mamida, in the Jap anese island of Sikokf. was visited by an earthquake recently, and 500 persons lost their lives. At a fire in New York on Saturday, some twenty-five firemen were more or less injured by an explosion of vitriol. f- tireeaweod Township. Sia Sirs Stab Tavib, June 22. 1872. My Dear Mr. Ed'tor:Uow clear, how cloudless, how calm and quiet the night is Nothing is. heard but the lazy croak of tho frog in the warm stream and stagnant pond, and the chirk of insects peculiar to midsummer time. 'J he moon has not yet come up to shimmer her sil very rays over this part of this sin-cursed earth. I love such evenings; they fill our hearts with the most delightful feel ings, emotions and longings that in many cases never can be gratified ; but you know that it U better to feci and long and never realize, thau mver to feel and long at all. So with me. Many of my longings can reach no further than a wish and a hope, for you know that I am get ling old aud have passed my bay-day, and have got into a groove or rut, and can't get out. A lovely evening like this awakens feelings and longings so far different from tho feelings and emotions that a dark, tempestuous night start in one's heart that we almost wonder whether we are always the same beings, spiritually. We are told that the body h.iir and nail, fh?sh, bone aud blood undergoes an en tire change every seven years. Tell me, don't we change oftcner than that in our feelings and longings. If it were not for Andy Jackson and a few other good men that were the same thing always, I'd think that a man can be one thing to day and another thing to morrow. Time, circumstances aud weather change, and, generally speaking, men change with them. Few are steadfast. Old Andy was as steadfast to his cause as is the needle to the pole, but he was Andy Jackson, jrnn know. A man vows and weds to-day to morrow another crosses his path ; deeper and more material depths are struck The cords of fidelity that bound him to his former vows are snapped asunder, and he is caught up in the whirling vor tex of his new adoration, and hurried along to happiness or misery. But don't get scared, Mr. Editor, I ain't agoing to caper off into a love story, though these Saturday nights are just the time for such tales and actual love making, for, generally speaking, the mind is free from the cares of the week ; at least so it was in my younger days, aud when Andy lived Neither am 1 agoing to philosophize on the why and the wherefore of these whims, fancies and changes, and try and find the exact cause that moves them in matters of love In the first place I ain't a philosopher, and in the uext place there is the great phil osopher, Horace Greeley, making such changes and somersaults so fearfully that I am commencing to feel a little doubtful on philosophers, too Oaoilneaa. racimiB 1 WV11. merey cave us when such old philosophical chaps as Horace Greeley are ready to change from a life long course into a cnurso that he denounced and fought against and de clared was wroiir 1 jr i? at that kind of philosophy. We've lots of such phil osophy in Greenwood ; so have you in MifHin. But I won't point out jtW now I'll do that by and by. I only say that if Old Andy Jackson who they ain't agoing to vote for any more in Berks comity since the Heading Convention were a living, he'd make the dust and hair fly out of them fellows that sold us out and aro a running our party into the ground so deep that it will be buried too deep for resurrection I shiver and my hair stands np when I eee Old Greeley at the head of our party. What did he ever do for it ? He bailed Jeff. Davis, the man that Old Hickory would have hanged in the petticoat that he was trying to sneak away in. For that bailing the rebels feel mighty kind toward Horace, and it was most blamed kind, that's so. But that isn't all that draws them tarnel Southern chaps so lovingly to Greeley ; not by a long splice. The cause s'icks a good deal deeper than that. You know Horace has been against free trade all his life. He has preached protection to home labor for thirty years. Old Hickory was a pro tectionist, too, but he never showed the white feather, ife did not change, but he told Calhoun " If you take the Stale of South Carolina ont of the Union on your free trade and State Rights doc trine, you'll stietch hemp.' How's that alongside of Greeley, who. after shouting "Protection" for a generation, changes, grows tame, wheels, turns his back on protection and says, " Here, take it into the States and Congressional districts, and do with it as you please. Only make me President, aud I shan't inter fere a bit I won't say a word. I'll have no policy on free trade and protection." I tell you there is the nut, and it's the uext thing to the doctrine of State Rights, uuder which, the rebels left the Union, and that's why they're patting Horaee on the back and saying to him, " Good fel low, we'll help you." D ) you see it t Old Andy n ever believed such doctrine I don't, and the leaders of our party who 11 nominate Greely on the 9th ol July next will find out in November that the people don't. If you don't hear from me asain, I'il see you at the Fair, in October, when we can talk the whole matter over. Yours, truly. BARTON SPEAK. Mrs. Neely, of Coventryville, Schoyl kil county, a day or two ago, while sweeping the house found a box of pow der, and. thiuking it was useless, threw it into the fire. It was blasting powder and Mrs. Neely did not know what track her. A Boiler, Within a hkort DlsUnee of ElKhty-Sre Men, Explode, bat, Singular to Beutte,nOMb Killed. Columbus, June 21 The boiler in tn uTiMiaivA lAons of the Ohio Brash and Wire Works, located witin the walls of the Ohio Peuitentiary. exploded this mornin? i;ist after the convicts had start ed to work, with a terrible noise and ef fect. The flying boiler tore out the three story building in "which it was placed, making it a mass of ruins, and tore the outside walls and roof off of UufTs cooper-shop and George Gill's stove foun dry, not far off. Pieces of the boiler were thrown arcat distance. At the time of the accident eighty -five men were iu the brush-shop' ami were jast going to work. The shock was ter rific, aud yet no person was killed ont right Several men were blown out the wiudows, and fell with the debris from the fourth story of the building- One man at work in the lower story of the boiler-house, remained for thirty minutes between two heavy timbers. The fire man and engineer in charge of the boiler were both buried under a pile of brick and timbers, but they were dug out alive though considerably bnrned and buised Some of the escapes were almost miracu lous. As soon as possible a large force was put to work, and the men who were buried nnder the ruins were all dug out, and with the other wounded were taken to the Prison Hospital, were scores of good nurses were on hand, and they are now all well cared for. Of the persons injured and now in the hospital it is thonght all but half a dozen will recover. The engineer in charge of the boiler says he eannot account for the accident, as a second before the explosion occurred he had on but 85 pounds of steam. Otis end of this boiler exploded about a year aco, aud it is said it has leaked ever since. The loss will be about S3.000. X0TICE ToTeNSIOSERS. An Important Circular Issued by the Com missioner. Washington, June 21. The follow ing circular will be issued to-morrow by the Acting Commissioner Pensions : Persons who are already pensioned under the act of -June, 1806. at either of the rates of S15. 820 and $25. are enti tled by an act passed June, 1S72. to in creased rates, and may secure such in crease without formal application aud without the intervention of an attorney, nor will any attorneyship be recognized in such cases. A letter from the Pen sioner pensioned as above, addressed to this office, enclosing his pensiou certifi cate, and giving his post office address, will be a sufficient presentation of his claim for the increase. The certificate wilt receive such endorsement by this office as will authorize the payment of the increased rale, and will then be for warded to the pension angeney at which the pensioner is payable, aud the pen sioner will be notified of such transmis sion. - ..i m The Davis-Hardy Shooting Case. Washington, June 20. A shooting affray occurred here this morning, the particulars of which are as follows : Some five months ago Joseph H. BradT ley, Jr.. a lawyer here, married a Miss Hardy, of Georgetown. Soon nfter marriage, Bradley discovered that his wife was encietite. Upon being accused of it, she confessed, whereupon Mr. Bradley sent her home to her father The latter questioned his daughter as to the father of the child, and she gave the name of one William L. Davis, a real estate broker of this city, as the respon sible party. Her father to day met Davis and shot him on sight. The wound is not con sidered fatal. Still doubts are enter tained of his recovery. Davis was en gaged to be married to a daughter of a prominent official here. All the parties have heretofore moved iu the best social circles, and the matter creates intense excitement Frlghtrnl Railroad Accident. A fearful collision occurred on Sun day on the Washington and Baltimore railroad, near Counellsville- The freieht and mail trams ran together at full speed on a short curve. The entire freight train was wrecked. Henry Saxton. con ductor of the latter, and Robert Lock hart were killed and Mail Agent Black burn mortally wonnded. Eight passen gers were seriously injured and it is ex pected a nnmber of these will die Nine others sustained injuries of a less severe character. The freight train was run ning at a high ra'e of speed in order to reach the switch at Conmllaville before the approach of the n.ail. Conneticnt proposes to repeal the boun ty on foxes, for the reasons that tho ma jority are believed to be killed in New York and in Massachusetts and then brought across the line. It is also stated that only yonng foxes are brought in for Ihe bonnty the old ones beins left un harmed so as to keep np the supply, and and it is reported that a number of per sons make it a business to raise foxes for the sake of the bonnty. " The city of San Francisco was sha ken on the night of the 22d by a tremen dous explosion of 1,500 pounds of nitro glycerine in the California powder works, a frame building near Laguna Honda, four miles from the City Hall. Six build ings were wrecked, and a hole 12 feet deep and 125 feet in circumference was made m the ground by the exnlosion. No person wa injured. The . famine at Teheran, Persia, la growing worse and worte. SHORT ITEXS. Celery seed will germinate when 20 years old. Grey cherry bugs are the latest afflic tion iu Iowa Eight cases of sunstroke were reported on the 20th in New York. A Fort Madison man fainted while standing np to be married. The gold yield of California is now surpassed by the ei!ver yield of Nevada Japan has purchased 9 40,000 worth of boots and shoes iu this country this year. . Ramie plants sell in San Francisco at $150 per thousand, or twenty-five cents apiece. According to the statistics one person in ten out of the wholo population of Virginia is a Biptist. The divorces granted in Connecticut last year were only one-twelfth as nu merons as the marri.iges. Ivor Davies, a real estate and insur ance agent, shot and killed his mother on the 20th in Wilkesbarre. The Sutro tunnel, which will pierce the Comstock lode in Nevada, has reach ed a length of nearly 3000 feet. It is stated that thirteen children were horu on board the steamer Scandinavian on her recent voyage from Liverpool to Quebec At Clear Lake, Iowa, on the 1st of May, every citizen was expected to bring at least one tree and plant it in the public eqnare "Japanese paste" is the latest device for mining the complexion of our belles. It is green when applied, but soon chan ges to a delicate rose. A woman com mi tie J eulciile by hang ing herself recently, at Cbepachet, R. I.. the cause being, it is alleged, insanity produced by the nse of hair dyes. Russia has now thoroughly organized, and under government patronage and su pervision, fifteen thousand public schools a grand token of progress. At Weldon. N. C, a boy has done well by making S1500 in four years, selling oranges and peanuts, besides attending school regularly. Sisal hemp, having been found to con stitute an excellent mateiial for paper i- being gathered aud shipped in large nantities from the sea islauds of Flo rida. The wife of Joseph Hudson, of South Buffalo township. Armstrong county, re cently gave birth to triplets two boys and a girl and died within a few hours thereafter. The law abolishing the grand jury system in Michigan, aud authorizing the prosecution for felonies by information, his been pronnnuced constitutional by the Supreme Court of that State. Silver dimes and half dimes are got ting into circulation in the interior of New York, and the people are advised to "look out tor them " Most of them are only silvered, and not silver. A Boston woman of 90 got a mercen ary youth of a quarter that age to uvtrry her the other day on promise of au in come of S3 000 a year, while she lived, aud a life interest iu her estate after her death. A girl in JsmesviHe, Wis., in her anx iety to find out who was making the music under her window, the other night, fell out, and so scared her serenader that he ran away and left her to her fate. The Rothschilds are to hold a great family reunion next July at Frankfort on t iie-Main, when, it is bel.eved, im portant changes will be agreed npon in regard to the management of the various branches of the great firm. A lady in Carroltnn county, Ind., re cently rode into town the wife of one man. and a few ho'irs afterwaids return ed the wife of another, having been di vorced, received license and married again in the interim. On June 23d the Still Water Woolen Mill, located at Smithfield, was bnrned. Loss, S350 000 insurance S2G1.000. of which SI 00.000. is on the stock, and SlGl.OOtrivi'the Mill and machinery, in the Manuf cturers' Mntnal Company. Pure water will absorvemany unpleas ant odors. A pail full of clean, fresh water from a well or spring, placed in a room which has been newly painted, will absorb during the night so much of the smell of the paint as to be totally unfit to drink. f The lightning is sometimes very eapri cious in its conduct. At Windsor Locks, Coun., a few days ago, it entered a sta ble where five horses were standing side by side, killing the first and ihird with out touching the others, and then left, doing no damage whatever to the build -'tig Tho Slate of Texas would contain the entire population of the United States without making it any more thickly eettled than Massachusetts ; and the same State would hold the entire popu lation of the French Empire (or republic that now is) and leave uninhabited a margin of sixty miles aronnd a boundary of the State. ' There are few persons, perhaps, aware of the extent of the transactions in skunk skins in Michigan. It is esti mated that no lesa than sixty thousand of these little family pets were sacrificed in Michigan alone, in 1871, to satisfy the insatiate greed of man for gain, and that 1S72 will ebow a much larger "catch." SHORT ITEXS. - Wolf scalps are worth fifteen dollars a piece in Illinois. A Chinaman has invented a new sys tem of telegraphy The arrival of bridal parties at Saratoga averages twelve daily. Oxford University celebrates its one thousandth anniversary this year Canada musters about 43,000 militia, and has a reserve force of nearly 700,000. The subscriptions to the Somerset Re lief Fund amount t3 a little over S20, 000. The wire-worm is doing much damage to the corn, potatoes and wheat through out Maine. - Mr. Alexander, of Kentucky, has sold two short-horned heifers to an Englwh purchaser for $13,600. A negro man and his two boys made eighty dollars in one week recently gath ering moss iu a Florida forest. A Communist, with both legs cut off was brought before the Military Tribunil at Vcrsaills. to receive sentence of death. A special from Richmond, Va., says two negroes, convicted of petit larceny, were publicly whipped in the IleurL-o county jail on the 1.0th. A lady in Milwaukee has just buried her seventh husband. She is thirty-four years old. and was a fresh and charming widow last week, but is probably married by this time. An examination of the records in the En downment House at Salt Lake Cily dis closes the fact that but three plural mar riages were celebrated during three months ending June 1st. A golden rulo for a young lady i. to converse always with her female friends as if a gentleman were of the party ; and and with young men as if hkr female comp-iiuon were preeent. A number of Northern capitalists have purcoast d several miles of the gold region of Spottsj lvania Co., Va., and are bar ing machinery made to get the - gold of the snlpl.'urets by a new process recently discovered. A Philadelphia paper says the bues erected iu that city last year cannot occu py less than thirty-five or forty squares, and the nn.nUc-r built since the close of the war would ocenpy a hundred and fi ty bljcks. Lancaster boys play cards in the cem etery, using the grave fjr ihe card tables, and the Esj-e t thinks it is useless ex pense to send Missionaries to the Fejee Islands to find heathens when there are so many near at home. A number of ladies in Greenville, Ali., have signed the following pledge : "We, the undersigned do promise hereby that we will faithfully abstain from the use of tohaeco in any shape, form, or manner while In church." A child, three years old. received into the Buff Jo orphan asylum the other day, was found to be suffering from delirium tremens, its drunken mother having ac tutlly fed her offspring from the whisky botlh;. There is an arti shin Well in Paris which is nearly two thousaud feet deep, four feet in diameter at the top aud two feet at the bottom, and which discharges upward of five million of cubic feet of water every twenty-four hours- A negro who was stabbed by another negro iu Louisville ou May 29. died oa the 20th inst., aud the coroner summon ed in the cage the first colored juty ever formed in Kentucky, who found a rer diet against the alleged murderer. The east end of Louisville was thrown into a terrible state of excitement on Sat urday night a week, by a maJ dog, which raged through the street, biting ten or twelve per.-ons, including several little children. Some of the persons were badly torn by the animal. Col. Thomas A. Scott, Vice President of the Pennsylvania Railrord, donated $20,000 to the Wilson Female College, of Chambersbnrg, a few weeks ago. Col Scott is a native of Franklin county, having been born in London, that coun ty.in 1824. A party of emigrants from Texas passed through Bristol, Va , the ot'r day, en route for their former homes iu Bath county, Va. They said they had traveled about 4100 miles, aud had been on the road over twelve months. Their horses, the most of which were Texas ponies, looked remarkably well. The Missouri Democrat of the 17th publishes crop dispatches from over one hundred points in Missouri, Kansas, Illi nois, Iowa and Nebraska, which repre sents that winter wheat is very poor. A large amount ha been plongbed up, and the remainder will yield only from one ihird to a half crop- There is Tery little old wheat on hand. Hew arfrtisemtnts. CAUTION. ALL persons are hereby cautioocd against harboring or selling any thing to my wife Catharine King, or ny son Samuel King, Jr., on my account, a I will pay do debts con tracted by them after this date. SAMUEL KIXG, Sr. June 19, 1872iw RECEIPTS AXD EXPENDITURE OF Walker Township School District for the year ending June 1st, 1872: Balance in hands last year. $10fi0 11 Gross amount of Duplicate 2534 42 State Appropriation 177 12 Amt. orders paid out $3156 01 Collectors' fees 127 4 Exonerations 88 P5 3682 45 Balanee on band . $ 89 20 SAMUEL F. 8EIBER. Prut. SjJtccx, McMeis. S'c'g. Jane 11, iB-:-;t lftr drtrtisfmrnts. Agents Wanted for Life and Times of Contain biographies of Drew, Vanderbilt GoulJ. Tweed, Ae., with a financial historJ of lb eounlry for Ihe last three rears what rant kaev about "BLU& TKIln Over 6uO pages. Price Si. a d ire, s KEW YORK BOOK CO. 14 i Nassau St., New York. KANSAS REGISTERED BONDS Safe anJ lrofiiabl Investment ItonK Son, of he wealthiest ennn'ie in fc.lXSIS - Vl.n, Anderson, Franklia. 'Jonnsoa tad tough, Countie. Registered by the Slate of k, saa. Interest and principal pajd bj tb State Treasurer. Th Bond ptj 7 per ceat. intcre.-l. and are over three years old, tin coupons having been always regularly aal promrllT paid Kor stathftici and inforai. lion, ad.lrea S KM'L A. UAVLORD & CO, S3 Wall Si.. i:.T. City. NO MORS RUBBING. " BC1 OXK or STORE'S FOt STAIS WASHERS. Retail prio. SI.ei). STOXE 4 FoRD, 6i Arch St., Philadelphia, Ta. Send for Cir. eular. ft I ft lift nUWARD nl llllllin ltcuin or VlceratcJ VliUUU Piles that D Biso'a Pa, Kkmkdt fails to cure. It i prepared exprest- f ly lo cure the Pile, and nothing else. SaU ) by all Druggists, t'riee, si.w. Wnes the Blaaa Bashes with rocket li't violence to in be id. causing hot flushes, ver tigo and dimness of sight, it is a certain sifn tliat a mild, ailubrious, cooling and eiguili. ling laxative i required, and T.sr.t Kr. rRRVtsersT Scltzeb ArEBtssT should be at onoe re-oried io SOLD BV ALL DRUGGIST-. AGENT.S WANTED. Agents make mart ortm j it w.nk for us tbno at aMj,aiM else. Business light and permanent. Par ticulars free G. !tisos & Co , t'mt An rbliihrrt, Portland. Maine. Uo nto to., f. T . O. !U agents Clrn rurEOan Irralars Free U ORCliIC LltT Or THE SCES -ITon'di-nous which impair viiaiir j positive and nga'iv elee'ricity proof tbar life i evolv ed without union etfel of loSa-jco influ ence of fi.-b n 1 ph.xphr.ric diet mmUn treatment of pWvie diseaiea, stricture aad v.ttieoeele, and arrest of development ; Ira lecture lo hi private anr-rienl cb9, bj ElA WARD H DIXON, M. !.. Fifth Avenue, X. T ; C4 pags. 2'j cents. '-Every line from the pen of Dr. Dixon i of great value to the whole human rac. " Iortiet Qrttley GBEIT HEB1C1L BOOK of useful know!- r ( edge la all bent free for tw stamp. Address Dr. Dox.ir.tKTB & Co., Cincinnaii, ; Ohio. f ' jj b garve::, Eoisopatiiic Pliisician M Sfjisos, Having located in the borough of ThotspsM town, offers hi professional servit.es Iu IL citizen of that place and vicinity. Orrier In the room recently occnprK.1 j Dr. ."org. f Jnne 12, '72-tf Administrator's Notice. EttaU of Marlhfi Wwlteurf. o'fttti-'.'. 'JilK undcrs'sne I. lo wuorn Letter oi a i 1 minb!r:-ion on the estate of Marti Wnolw-trd, late of Milford Iwp , dec'!., hate been dulv granted HC';.rdig lo luw. herehy gives uorice lo all persons iivJebWi! to n'.l esinle to como torward .and make pavtneul. and those huviug claims against it. to pr. ent theiu properly authenticaiel for settle mrnt. RltHAKU 1H)V LE, A I l . June 12, )872-lt Isecutor's Notice. Fsftite of M-iriha Kinzer, detrttt-'.I. NOTICE is hereby given. that Letters Tf mcntnry on ihe esuie of Murilia Kinder, late of Miifvrd township. Juniata eouuiv, di-seised, have ben granted to the uiil signed, residing is same township. All per sona indebted to said estate arc r:queted to m-ike immediate payment, and those having claims will pleas present them prepcr'v authenticated f,r sHl'ement. H A M 1" K L LEONARD, fifu'or. June 12. le'l'-lt KK3entMCaipai2!!. Csjs, Cares Si 7:r3. Send f..rItii srr.,TErrti-ci-he aud 1'ih-s List. rUXXIXOlIAM KILl M !vrF.trTrRiRS, So. 201 t'luircli Mreel, May 81. '72"1: I'iiiladkli hii. Assignee's Notice. i "VOTICK is heroi.y gi'en that Chrisfophfr -i.a G. Engler, of WalUer township. J uniaia county. Pa., and Catharine, hi wife, hint assigned all the estate, real and personil. f sai l Christopher G. Eng'er, to Samuel l-f-nard, of Fayette lowuauip sail coun'y. is ! trust for the henafit of the cre-li.ois ef Mid Christopher G. Engler. All persons, there fore, indebted to the said Christopher G. En g'er will iaVe payment to thenid Assignee, and those having claim or demands will -make known the sitr.e without de'av. SAMUEL LEONARD. Assignee of Christopher G. Engler. June 12, lS72-6t Assignee's Notice. "VTOTICE is hereby given that Joepli ?. -LN Sartani, of Walker township. Juuiv county. Pa., and Cttharins A., Lis wife, i deed of voluntary assignment, hare assigne) all the estate, real and personal, of tke sail Joseph S. Surtiin. to John B. M. TodJ, of : the boronga of Patterson, in said eonntv, it) -trust for Ihe benefit of the creditors of wl Joseph S. Sartv.n. AU persons, therefor, indebted to the said Joseph 8. Sartain wiil -make payment to the said Assignee, and tkon ! having claims or demands will make kacwa the same without delay. JOHN B M. TODD, Ass'gnes of Joseph S. Sartais. May 15, 1872-it - . . . . - Executor's Notice. I K'iatt of Xtria P Litkltnthater, ittW-l ATOTICK is hereby given that Letters iTe l tamentary on the estate of Maris r Lichtenthaler, late of the borough of Tboof sontown, deceased, have been granted t " undersigned. All petsons indebted to ; estate are requested lo make immediate P.' meat, ind those having claims w.ll F1 present them properly authentieated fir lletnent. P. L. GREEXLEAF. May 8, 1872-6t Executor. Caution. A LL perron are hereby cautioned ag11 Iluntinir. Fishimr. or in anr way lrf' Dass'm? on Ihe farm ooaimied bv the uoJ"" signed, in Milford township. All person' offending will be dealt with to Ihe foil of Ihe law. JOSEPH fl'-NS May 22, 1872. - Hies instantly relieved and soon cured bj naing Dr. Crigg's Pile Remedies. Thej duce inflamauan, soothe the irritated PrV' and have proven a blessing to the whether internal, external, bleeding or itj ing piles. All kinds in all stages oast J to the wonderful infl ience of these n failing Tenniies. Sold y Pr Jggi"' iS'Sa;? J, iWmm-.m.rm