5Sf gjuaiatj ntiarl. ESTABLISHED IS 1K4G-' rcsusnsD Knur vTidnssdat M(iiiso, Brljgt Street, opposite the Odd Fellows' Hall, MIFFLISTOWN. PA. The Jchiata Sentinel is publisLed every tfedaeiday morning at $1,60 a jer, in ad- vaoee; or $2.00 " eases if not paid rmp'''J in advance. No subscriptions dis- aantinued until all arrearages are paid, uuleas t ike apiion of the pb isner. usin(.3s Carbs. jOUIS E. ATKINSON. MIFFL1STOVTN, PA. ggie-Co'lt cling and Conveyancing promptly '.leaded OSce on Bridge street, oppoxite the Court JtdOM Square. OBEIir Al.tMEES. ATTORNEY AT LAW, MIFFLINTOWS, PA. tyigaeoa Bridge 3. reft, in the room fitrBierly eeupied by Exra I. Pari tr, Esq. S. MIFFLINTOWN, PA., GJers his services Id ibe cit'iena of Juni ata county as Auotiuneer and Veudua Crier. Charges, from twa to tea dollars. Saliafae tiaa wariauied. novi, '!iJ Q YES! O TES ! H. H. SNYDER, Ferrysvffle, Pa , Tenders bis services to the citizen of Juoi ata and adjoining cuiinties. as Auctioneer. Saargs uioUeraie For satisfaction gve the itorwaaa a chance P. 0. address. Port kstsl, Juaiaia Co., Pa. Feb 7, 'TJ-ly dr. i c. nuADio, PATTKHSUN. I' EX X A. August 18, 13iiH-if. TUOilAS A. ELDER, M. I)., HIFM.IMUWS, PA. ef... haurs A y to t P.M. 0c in Belford'a building, two Jom above theiiVu tmel oftoe, Bridgn eireet. aug lK-tf J B. GAliVEIi, Hois:;atiiiD Ftysiaan asi Surgeon, Havinc located in the borough of Thompson lava, offers his profei-sionai seiviL.es to the! eit.icas ot that place ard vicluity. Ornoa la tha room recen'ly- orcupinj y r. 8org. fJr.ue l- '72-tf j "Be Sa &mM7m7& ICHiOPATIHO PHYSICIAN t So uU EON alav'iag permanently io-jaied in the b- r:iirij r MiSintowu. oilers his pr ifeiu:l service? is the eitneas l ibis place and surrounding eoaatry. Office on Main street, over lieid'.er's I'-rug tir. snp ly la-if "r. R. A. Simpson sailed as follows: M lii oflice in Lirevpo-x Pa., every SATURDAY at..l MONltAV ap psia'iaeBts can he n.ade for other days. HajrCall on ar aldrcss llil. P.. A. SIMI'SttN'. ata 7 Liverpool, Perry Co., Pa ATTENTION ! D.WIIt WATTS must respectfully announ ces to tba public thai Le is prepared to faraish UP iilU UlllllUilbil at reduced prices. Hereafter give him a cali at bis UI.U STAND, MAIS St., MIFFLIN. Oct 25-1 f Sew Mxuw, Stoce IX PER 11 YS VILLI! DR. J. J. APPLEI5AUUU baa -etabliahed a l)ruf and Prescription ft'tore in tbe aheve-aamed place, and keeps a general as asrlment of DRUGS AXD MF.DICIXES, lis all ather articles usuaily kept in estab lishments of Ibis kind. Pure Wine: ana Liquors for medicinal pur asses. Cigars. Tobacco, Stationery, Coufec tisas (firat-olasa). Notions, etc., ee. tafThe Doctor gives advice free D LOOM: D URG STATE NORMAL J-f (SCttOOL AND Literary and Commercial Institute. The Faculty of "bis lustitutirn aim lobe very thorough in their instruction, au t to leak earefully afier the manaers, health and ssarala af tba atudenis. IcjT Apply tor catalogues to IIENHY CARVER. A M.. lept 28, 1P71 -;"' Principal. WALL PAPER. lally te the Place where jou can buy your Wall Paper Cjicap. THE anderaigned tnke ibis method of in forming tbe public Ibat be has just re ceived at his re-idene on Third S-treet, Mif fliatown, a larae asortment of f various styles, which be oilers for sale CHEAPER than en be p-itchaseJ elsewhere te the county. A!l persons in need of tbe ve article, and wish.ne .o save money, are iaviieataeail and examine bis stocl and ata his prices b-re g.iing ewl.re. l.Largt tii jlv constamly on hand. " MMilS UASO'I. W fliatawa. April fi, l72-tf JKST CIO. A US 1 X TO w X BoI.iu1i'm Saloon. Ts far (cents. Also, ma rr-besi Lager, he Largest Oysters, tbe Sweetest Cider, the "isest Domestic Wines, and, in snort, any siSfyoa assy wish in the EATING OR 1K1KIN'G LINE t the aast reasonable prices. He has also MlMd his BILLIARD HALL. tbat it will now compare favorably with J Hall in the interior ef the Stat. Jne 1, l?7(My pOAL, Lumber, Fish. Salt, and all kinds of Mercbanli!.e for sale. Cbeetnttt Oax jwk. Railroad Tics, all kinds of Grain and eds bought at the hiphe.-t market prices in Ik W elenHnl;"1 for merchandise, coal, timber, te., to suit oustiiracrs. I am pre pares, to furnish to builders bills of lumber J"t as wanted and on short notice, of ei'ber or yellow pine lumber. Ja4 SO A II IIEUTZLEP. Port Royal. Juniata Co.. Pa.. gHBLLY a STAMB UGII always keep up their atoek rfcunDipj j excelled ti.he, in O.e quaiil y or pric of aigned, inMilford township All person so "" good, in Ai, ,ine- G. ,h offending wiU be dealt wi.li f tbe Mlnlut rtn elsewhere. Lf,n. I.V. JOSEPH J-DNK. " "inn,t1nltl1 anu win hoi B. F. SCIIWEIEE, VOLUME XXVI, m. a D. P. PAISTE, SUCCESSOR TO JOHN S. GllAYBILL & CO., CEYSTAL PALACE BUILDING. j Ilavit -p purchased the entire mammoth stock and fixtures of Jolin S. jGrayhill &c Co., I wuttld respectfully inform tl:8 public tLat I have on 2 ; hand at all limes FULL ASSORTMENT OF Hardware, Faints, Oils, Varnishes, Leather, And all Kinds of Goods kept in a Tirst-Class Hardware Store. Ilav Cullers, Cider Mills, Meat Cutters and Staffers for Sale. a H 10 Hsv't'g had a full experience in the? Wholesale and Mannfactui ing Hardware Business. I ran afford tu veil (lie same quality of Gooda as cheap a any store iu city or country. Merchant! are especially inviied to buy, as they can aave freij-lit., and at the rume time buy at I hiladrlpbia prices All persons are invited ti itinpect the stock llnoughur the liousa. co:.ri:oxK! cojie Sent. 18. l72-'v CB. Crystal Palace. 1 & Bta fa. The First, The Best, The Cheapest, The Largest Stout of Soo5s IX THE COUXTY, To OiTer to the Public AT THE VERY LOWKMT p;!Ci:. Just Received from Eastern Markets. Seeiflg Them will (Juaranlfc You Satisfaction. SHELLEY &STAMBAUGII. M CRYSTAL PALACE BUILBINS, MIFFLIHTOWH, PA. Oot. 8, 1872. Xew Store and New Goods. GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, &C. rjAVINfl opened out GROCER V ANIl 11 PI ROVIsmS STOliE in ibe old stand on Main Street. Miiiiiuiown, 1 would respect fully a-k the ailentinn of the public to tbe following articles, which I will keep on hand a' all liuee : SUGAR, COFFEE, TEA, MOLASSES, RICE, FISH, H A. I.T, DRIED AM) CANNED FRUIT. HAM, SHOULDER, DRIED BEEF, Confectioneries, Nuts, &c, Tla , Ciarni-s. GLASS WAKE, I1111 XMMl, sSsTO. All of which will be sold cheap f ir Cah or Country Produce Give me a call and hear my prices. Miffl:Uown, May 2, 18 J. W. KIRK. 3 I out! 3roJit! rpHE nndcraigned hereby respectfully in 1. forms ibe citiiens of MitSintowa and Patleron that bis wa.m will visit each ot tl ese towns on Tl'ESDAV. TIM ISSIMY and S VTl'UDAV mort.ings of each week, when they can be supplied with Clioioo Beef, Veal, 31 it 1 1 on, JL.ii.rl, Sec, durinp; the summer season, and also POKK and SAUSAGE in season. I purpose tur nishing Beef every Tuesday and Saturday morning, and Veil and Muiton every Thurs day moruing Give mi your pairooage. an will euarantee tu sell as good meat as tne couutry can produce, and as cheap as any other butcber in the county. . June 14, 1872 Caution. ALT, persons are hereny cautioneQ apiui ir,.ntinrr. Fishing, or in any way tres- oassinz on the farm occupied by the under- . i t. ; n 111 riapun n. an MlFFLLNlWiN. V u eJ B H siaxy D. P. PAISTE. JUMATA VALLEY BASK OF M I FFL I XT 0 WX, . PEN X 'A . JOSEPH POMKKOV, President. T. VAX lHVIX, Cashiei. Joseph PoaeroT. f John .1. fatlersoE Jerome N. Tli-jmp 'ti jGrorpo Jucoba, J jilt? Italsbacii. Loin money, rcaive deposits, pay interest on litre deposits, buy and fc.l cutn and Lin ' ted States lioudt. ctli coupons and checks. I Ucmi: money to any part of i be United Slates j and also to Enf land, Scotland. Ireland and jGeriiimy. Sell i!evenue Stamps. : j In ?unn of '.''Ki at 2 per cent, di-cnunt. in sums o: $--t0 at prr cent, discouni. u suiua of SlbJtJ at i Der,cect. diaccuiit. Tfcc riace for (iuod Grapevines IS AT THE aniala i-allrn Obtjiarbs, AMI (iRAPE-YIXE MKSE1ST. r f H K itr.dersigned would respectfully in- form the public that be has started a Gratie-vine Surefry about one mile nortbesst of Mi.Sinfown, where he lias been tetin a Urge number of the ditferent vriotiee of Gruues; and bating been in the busine-s for seven years, Le isuow prepared to furnish VINES OF ALL TUB LK A DING VAIUirriKS, ANI OF T1IK MOST I'KO.MISIXG KINKS, AT I W K A T H S , hj tiie sine- Tine, dozen, bundrei or thou Htid. All perouB wiliiufc pood nd thriffv vines will do well to call and see for ihem GonJ aad responsible Agent wanted. Addre8t JONAS OBEHHOLTZF.R, Mifftintown. Juniftta 'o . Va. GREAT REDUCTION IN 1 u PRICKS OF TEETH I Full Upper or Lower Sets as Low as $5.00. So teeth allowed to leave tbe office unless the pvtient is saiiGcl Teeth remodeled and repaired. Teetb filled to last for life. Toothache stopped in five minutes wtthaut extracting the tooth. Dental work done for persons without them leaving thir homes, if desired. Electricity ui-ed in be em action op teeth, rendeiing it almost a painless operation, na extra charge) at the Deutal Office of G. L. tlerr. established in Milflimown in IS'.H. G. L. 1KKR, Jen 24. 1872-1y Practical Dentist. C. ItOTIIIiOCK, VEX TIS T. 3IAliMtorvill IVnnn, OFKER" his professsonal services to the putdic in general, in both branches of his profession operative and mechauical. First week f every month at Richfield, Fre mont and Turkey Valley. Second week Liverpool and Wild Cat Val- ler. Third week Millerstown and Raccoon Valley. Fourth week at his office in M' Alisterville. Mill visit Mifflin when called on. Teeth put up on any of the baees, and .as liberal as anywhere else. Addresa by letter or otherwise. New Lumber Yard. I'aUerKoit Pa. BEYER, GUYER & CO. Have opened Lumber Yard in the bor ough of Patterson, and are prepared to fur nish all kinds of Lumber, such as Siding, riooring, Studding, Paling, Shingles, Lath, Sash, &c, in large or small quantities, to suit us tomers. 3(3 Tersons wanting Lumber by the ear load can be supplied at reduced rates. BEYER. GCYER & CO. George Goshen, Agent, ratlarson. May 15. '72-tf V Large assortment of Queensware, China ware. Glassware, Crockery ware, Cedar ware, &c, for sale chtap by TILTbft ot JS&rEAaOHAItG B. I I I I 1 1 I I W J I II II i .11' THI OOMTITL'TiO TUC OillUM AIID TMM BS SOlOa! a T OF JILNIATA COUNTY, PEW A, Poetry. Whon Mary was. a Lassis. Tbe innplo trees ar tiugcj witb rea geavt'tii lh- hircb ith golden jellow, .. And bigb above the orchard wall Hang apples ricb and mellow ; And tbui'a tbe way, through jouJer lane. That looks so still and grasy Tbe way I took one Sundny ere, When Mary was a lassie. You'd bardly think tbat patient facs. That looks 80 thin and faded, .' Was once tbe Tery swecttst on 1 bat ever bonuet shaded ; Dut wbfn I went through yonder lane, ' Tbat looks so still and gratsy. Those eyes were bright, those cheeks were fair, When Mary was a lassie. But many a tender sorrow, And rainy a pmient cure. Have made tboee furrows on the faoo Thai u-eJ to be so fur. Four times to yonder church yard, 1 hruitgu tbe lane so still and grassy, We've borne and li:d away our dead, Nnce Mary wa4 a l isaid. .And so, you seo, I've grown to lov The wrinkles more than rosus ; Eurrh's Winter flowers are sweeter far TLan ail Spriug s dewy pojie. They'll carry us ilirough yonder lane, That looks so still and grassy A'Jown tiie Nne I u-ed to go When Marv was a lassia 3Xi!-sOolIjl.Iiy. A Polish Lady Znoutsd. Til! Ol'riCIAL WHIFPINQ IN PfBLIC OF ALKXAN UK1.NA EOHSoWITZ. At a gathering of Poles iu the little village of Kcruat. on the Southern Nnie men, on the 29ih of July last, when all thought thcmselvi-g secure from the in trusion of any of the numerous spies who keep the Russian officials informed of the malcontents among tliem, Alexau (Jrina Kossowilz, a young lady whose father, the younger son of a formerly nohle Polish family, was killed in the recent troubles iu Warsaw, expressed her eympathy with the unfortunateg hm Russiau severity had murdered or sent into exile. The meeting was a purely eocul one. and none dreamed that anything said thire would reach the tat of spies, for all present were known to be Pole, and firm haters of the harsh rule under which they then lived." Still, as the youug girl in her passionate lenieiubraucts of a father's lovn depl ircd his dt&lb, expressed her rympathy with the relit llion and her do teelHtiou cf her opprei-tors, she was cau tloitrJ It-el lier "louu" tone suouia tujOte the peopie at the window to hear her. Willi a hasty glanca as though to read iu the fuct-s of those about her who ehould betray her, the young lady ceased her execiHti ina and relapsed into silence. When ten o'clock arrived, the latest hour of 1'olixh gatherings, the company sepa rated, and Ali'Xnndrina Ki g-owi'.z, ac companied by her aiSauc:d, Julian Te- mi-tieky, went to her home. If in pureing fium the Lou.-e of the gathering, ehe had been more observant. Aiexaudriiia would have Been the ma liciously triumphant glances cast after her by Caiheriue Merdoff, a woman of about thirty-five years, a Pole by birth, and a sympathizer with her unhappy countrywomen whenever her own pas sion was not concerned, and, from the subsequent proceedings it seems, that in this case she had been superseded in the affections of the youug Dr. Tewensky by the more beautiful aud younger Alexau diitia Kogeowitz Ou the following day, shortly after rising, Alexandrina was seized own home, a short distance from Kernst, by two Cossacks of the guard at the gar rison, and taken before the petty judge. The young lady ot nineteen handsome and trembling, produced no feeling of pity Having at first denied the accusa tion, she was confronted with Catherine Merdoff. and then acknowledged her of fense. In pas.-ing sentence the petty judge raid that her scdittnu. utterances tuiplit have warranted him in sending her before a higher tribunal, where the penalty woaild be death ; but iu view f her youth and com-titution," be should merely order her to receive thirty-five l.ihbes of the knout. Almost benumbed with shame aud terror, the girl was led away to be prepared fur puuishmeut, for in Russia all sentences, save tbat of death, are carried out itnmed.atcly after tliey have been pronounced. Word having b-en sent to the officer commanding the troops, a guard of two hundred men was ordered into the garri son gijunie, and the executioner of the troops was called upon to he ready to carry nut the) duties of bis office Iu half an hour after the sentence had been given the troops had foimed in a hollow square, in the centre of whieh had been plxced a scflfTdd, standing on four legs. .the top of which was an inclined plane Beside this !tood the executioner, having in his muscular baud the knout. This weapon cousists of a stick, or handle, two feet long, with a lash four feet long af soft leather, to the end of which is attached by a loop a piece of flat raw hide two inebes wide and two feet long. In tbe hands of an experienced man the piece of raw hide can be made to cut like a knife As the executioner stood facing the scaffold, Alexandrina Kossowitz was brought to him by ber guard, and in a T LAW, j OCTOBER 16, IS72. few tiiomenta her clothing wi remoTed to her waist, despite her almost mute appeals to be spred the ehame. Aa rhe 4yl iti alsBiwi aniu am (,thm pU,iuR-, bauds strapped to tbe two upjH-r corners, and her bnkles secured to the font of tbe structure. One of the executioner's as sistants held her head, and the petty judge gave the order for whipping to commence Twirling the long lash in the air the executioner steppe'd suddenly backward, and with a sharp crae.k tbe thong fell on the back of the sobbing girl, cutting a livid streak from her right shoulder to her waist. A terrible tremor passed over her, and a quick low cry escaped her lip?, but it was the only sound she uttered, aud were it not for the blood which soon commenced to flow, it might have eeemi d that the whipping was being done ou the back of a corpse. When the last l.teh ha 1 been given the young iy was unfastened, and, with her clothing rudely thrown over her, she was taken to prison, and there, alter thauking the judge for his mercy, ac cording to tbe necessary . foimula, she was delivered over to her friemls. Five days afterward tbe Uazette of Wilua contained this announcement: "The Polieh criminal, Alexandrina Kos sowitz, daughter of the rebel, Peter Kos sowitz who was kuouted for seditious utterances on the 2Jlh of July at Kemst, while submitting her laceratiotn to mcdi cal treatment iu the h' us of the phy sician Tewensky, stole a vial of prussic acid, with which rhe ended her days " A Kerr Eight cf Toasn. WBIN fcHI HAS TUK IllllHT TO KILL HEIt HUS BAND. The French Court of Asrize, held at Basiia. in Corsica, has jut recognized a new Right of Women. By the laws of all nations a hurban i takt::g his wife in jiagranlt del c to could put her and her paramour to dea'h on tint spot, and be held blameless before the I.iv But women are not allowed tbe same privi lege in the same ci'ciimstaucca Lucia Medelli married three years si: ce Carlo Bonavente, and they lived happily to gether for about two years, when the hiihaud formed a criminal attachment to .Maria Fauti, the maid of the daughter of the marriage: The wife was fianti caily ..jealous, took the child fn'ta the maid and tiied to (ii.-nsis.s her. But the girl refused to go unless dismissed by her master. One niglit the wife watched the husband and saw him enter the bed room of the maid, about midnight. Not long after ard she tril.-ntly aj pio.-iched the talal room, opciieil the door with a pass key. ami, by the light ot her candle, saw her husband bleeping iu the arms A his mi-tress. IIaitig previously armed herself with his revolver, rhe fin d tv.o bbots at him and killed hi:u on the spot. The jury unanimously acquirted fur, and she was discharged. This acion of theirs is sustained by the I'leiuh doc tiiue of the equality before the I tw of men and women, and that tbe same measure should be meted t the one as to the oti.er. Mils is more tliuii can be said of those disgracelul juries which have acquitted iu more than one scanda lous case women who had thr sense or principle to preserve their virtue, ami who sought to covtr their tnu-hastily and revenge their own we'tkmss aud crime by assassination. A CtHTAIN locality at Kensington has become historic for the suicides connected with it. embracing the branches of a latge family. The original was a respectable old gentleman having two sons, one of homieuioveil to Maiue.the other settling near his father, and b-c lining iu time a man of much character, and a Senator from his district, hwing a family of three sous. The wife cut her throat with her husband's razor, aud of the three sous one urowneu utmsell. Itio secoiul hung bims'.-lf, and the third committed suicide at the west. The husband and father. while ou a visit to Boston, drow ned him self. The old gentleman. Lis father. Lie came deranged and starved himself lie left a will, and the son from M iiin" re turned to aet'de the estate but drowned himself on hearing that the v,ll would be coutested, making in al seven peisoiir who in a brief space id time eanie m violent deaths bv their own hainis. A lady from the country entered one of our grocery stores and asked the clerk if he wanted to purchase any chickens a couple of them at thus same time throwing a couple ot live ones ou the couuter. I lie clerk replied that ne did aud as the tied pair showed considerable anxiety to be released from their un pleasant fix, he asked ber if they would lay there meaning would they lie a few moments ou the Counter until he could attend to them. ' Lay there ? ' iudig nantly asked the old lady, "of comse not ; them's rooners, they won't lay nowhere. An English gentleman propounds the practicability and economy of using chalk as a substitute for coal lie says he has studied the matter, and that he h .8 dis covered how chalk may be burnt with coals as fuel, the result being a saving of thirty te forty per cent, of cost. i EDITOR AXU PROPRIETOR. WHOLE NUMBER 13:36. An Old Story Estoli A STORM Or TWBNTT-rOI'R TEARS AOO. A correEprndei:t, writhtg from Square traer?rirwe graphic narrative, which fell from the lips of an old resident of that place : "On the 14 h of February. 1S4V said Uncle Tommy Cook. "I was nwa kened in the uii;ht by the shaking of my house: I could feel my bed trembling under me,-aud as I rose and d inned my clothes in the daikuess, I told my wife that an awful storm was ui-on us, and I feared it would mike dreadful woik. I was wret-k master, and the appearance of the sky tho day before had tol l me to expect this; but when I opened the door and parsed out the wind uearly lift ed me off my feet. I was strong and tough, however, and buttoning my oat close to my chin, I stalled dowu to tbe beach. When I 'reached the meadows I found them uuder the water, and the wind blowing so fearfully that I was compell ed to turn about J.tid back towards the shore. 'I he sleet struck my face like needles, aud I wa3 forced to do this to escape the shot that more than once brought me to a stand still But I kept sIm JTr wa tr-srTwTwar s tirt.ult.-i and here and there I could catch sights of figures moving toward the beach. U ben 1 finally passed upon the bluff, I saw through the driving euow and i-l.-et and the almost blinding spray of the breakers a schooner broadside on. with all ber sails gone, and pounding upon the beach. The breakers went pver her deck at every sweep, and I could see a mau in the front and one in tho after rig ging. I hurried away to get a rope, and while I was gone one of the men drop ped into the water. When I came back there were five fishermen on the ground, and we instantly formed a line for the purpose of bringing iu the other. Before, etartir.g I paused a mornont end lo-'ked sharply at him, thinking he was frozen in the rigging, as the: ropes were covered with ice, ami it was one of the coldest iiiehts 1 ever knew. But while looking I saw him raise his liht hand, and fasten one button of his coat. We then formed our line, an I managed to bring him in. As they laid him' nut up on the beach I raised his cap aim found bis for, head still warm, and I be!ieve if we had posse-sed facilities lie might have revived, but in the iuteu.-e c;dd he lived but a few minutes I inser. I had scarcely raised my eyes from his face when I aw, scarcely eue hun dred yards from shore, the American burk John Minturn going by like a race horse. Kvery sail was blown away, and her deck was nowded with passengers, many of whom shouted to us as the cor rent carried them sif:Iy by The ves sel first spoken of was the Alabama, that lort her entire crew, numbering six. As they were now all gone, I hurried ou down the beach to see what could be done to help the Minturn in her ex tremity. She soon struck, by which time linn dreds of the neighbors hail gathered on the shore, hoping that they might do something to save the women and chil dren. who were hn ldh-d together iu the bow, tlte stern having quickly gone to pieces. Several attempts wire mde ta launch the life boat, and finally two sail ois gt til in it, carry it'g a line with them, but the current swept them to the south as swift as an atrow, and they Were Compelled t cm !,. rope to Su e themselves being srtautped. Bud al hough they made repeated alltinpis r.ey were uuable to get back. A elevi n o'clock at night thai Minturn broke up. I heard the cra-hi g of the timbers and the shrieks i f the passengers as they rank in: tbe waves but we could see nothing U j and by the bod its began washing the beach. Muiv of them had been frozen stiff, as they sat in a cramped pr.stuie, and I saw qoite a number silting so naturally on tbe sand that it was tint until 1 had bell the Ian tern up to their faces that I knew they were dead. There were thirty bodies recovered tr..ra the John Jlintnrn. many of them terribly mangled. The wife of the cap tain had her jiw knocked off. and he was caught by the timbers iu snch a way that his head was wrenched entirely off On the same night the Lotta came ashore and lost two of her crew. One of there was the captain who attempted to swim ashore, but was swept under the bow of the bark New Jersey, where he was drowned. The latter vessel managed to get off without any loss Shortly after this, and mainly through the efforts of ex-t.overnor William A Newell, the "life car'' was brought into use along our coasts, and its success has been so marked that we have had no se rious loss of life from shipwreck during the last twenty years Wilminytrt En try E ceiling The editor of a Western paper writes : " My wile and I have separated. As we both wanted to be boss, end she was likely to beat me, I left her. She says she will nail' ms yet. I believe her." RATES OP ADYERTISISG. .? -. A3 advertising for less than three Aoaths for one square of Bins' lines or less, wiUbe charged one insertion. 7i cents, threw $1.60, and 51 cents tor each subsequent insertion. Administrator's, Executor's and Auditor's Notices. $2.00. Professional and Rnsiness Cards, not exceeding one square, and inclu ding copy oaf paper, $8,00 per year. .Notice! in reading columns, ten cents per line." ter chants advertising by the year at aptcial rates 3 6 wmlat. ' 1 year. One square .$ 3.54) $ 5.00 9 8.10 Two squares 5.00 8.00 11.00 Three squares.... 6.00 ' 10.00 l.i.CO One-fourth col'n. 10.00 17.00 25.00 Half column 18.00 25.r0 45.00 One column 3 00 . 45.00 80.00 A Hew Way cf Siliirg Tigers.' sravcuMNS rcT TO GOOD tss. An English tiger hunter ti lis the - dial Bengals :'' I nse the old Kentucky pea rifle, eighty-bore, which I had with me in Texas aud Colorado. Since then 1 got it converted into a breech loader atd it now takes three and a half drachma of powder, and a hollow picket nearly throe diameters in length, made of thin steel and coated wi;h platinum to giwe it weight anil enable it to take the rifling. There is a small screw plug in the base,' which can be taken cut. The cases, w hich are very long, and (lie pickets, I am obliged to get out from Springfield, Massachusetts, as there are none manu factured in Fngland. Well, the secret of my bagging to a certainty every tiger I hit with a single buUet from this pea rifle is this, that I fill np the hollow in the picket with nine or ten gra'ms-aif strychnine of Scheie's strength. That is, I reckon, an overdose, as I bel'isve one grain of this strength would kill a tiger; but I give him to the extent the picket will hold. With this bullet so prepared, it does not matter In Uie slightest "degree iu what part of the body you hit the tiger; all tbat is necessary is that the bullet penetrate the skin somewhere, and if you sit down aud smoke your p'pe, as I gen erally do after firing, yon will find the animal lying dead in from ten minntos to an hour or so, according, I fancy, as to whether the picket breaks up at a larga or small vein when found, the tiger is frequently as stiff as if he had been shot two or three dcys previously It is very curious to watch the effects of the strychnine, which appear to vary a good deal. On one occasion I came on a tiger that I had a few minutes before wounded in the fleshy part of the hind leg; he was standing motionless with his legs spread out like a fonr-legged stool, aud panting like an express steam engine I did not mind in going np to within a few yards of biro. a5 I bad my three-barrel breech-loader in my hand ; but he, nev ertheless, took no notice of me, although he must have seen me. I then went gradually nearer, hot he never moved, aud at last, not wishing to keep the beast in pain, I we.-.t np into a tree just above him, and punched a neat hole in his skull with a solid picket from the Ken tucky. On several other occasions I have sceti a tiger wl, cli I had wounded walking through the jungle apparently all right, but falling into convulsions whenever a twig or branch of a tree which he was passing mider touched his back To show how infallible is this method of killing a tiger, I rnce? fired at a tiger da-hing across me at full tear, aid mule sure I hid missed him, but the same evening after I had returned from shoot ing, a cow herder reported a dead tiger in the jungle where I had been. I instantly repaired to the spot by for chliph), for fear some ilhers nvght eat him. and at once saw it was the tig r I had firej at. After at least half an hour's starch for the bullet t.i irk. we at !t found th picket imbedded in ens cf the joint cf his tail, within al out rn fnet from the tip of it I learned l .i idea from an eh phant l.nn'er at Ntetw. in Southern Cetnrai Africa lie told rne he has fre quently bridged 1 1- ph.vrta l.y this mean! at from 400 to .".till yards but he used a very heavy r l.f , ami I fancy his shelja Would have held twenty or twentv-fivn - j grains at I. a-t. I had no opportnuily of trying it there myself, as I had nonieans) of obtaining ,lrrt Inline. Of Course, if you t ke to my p!n. you m-ist do as I lo with every an'mal you bag, that is, collect dry wool and burn him the mo ment his skin is off albeit to' the great disgust of the. villagers, many of whom are as fond of tiger's fl-sh as he some time is of theirs D'lHLHTV, the late Chiet Justice of Ireland, tells a good story of his posting da s. He was going circuit in a post chaire. and at a dangerous part, wbe.ra llie road skirted a decent, one of the horses, that had been behaving wildly all the way, begin kicking furioti-ly. Much alarmed, l-.he. ty called out: This is outrognouj I don't think that horse has ever been in I ames before." '-Bedad, your lordship's right, lie waa only took out of tbe tield this morning." l( nd do you mean to t-11 me that you have put an unbroken hone in my car riage V Sorra a sight of the leather lie has ever seen till to-day. And if he brings your hardship sefe to the foot of the hill tbe master says he'll buy hefiP" Some one wickedly says that the rea son why very young girls usually taka tbe prizes at fairs for making good bread, is because their mothers make it for them, while tbe older girls thiuk they cau manage alone, aud fail miserably. Louisville, Ky , is agitated on tha question of flogging in the public schools. Its citizeus are beginning to think it about tin to abolisk the practice.