- V i ? rj ESTABLISHED fel 1848."" PDILItaiD EVRT WlDUIDlT HoBBMO, Bridge Street, opposite the Odd FclUwa Hall, MlFPLlKTOVTN.s PA. ' i ' i Im Juiiata Sixtiiiil ii published every Wednesday morning at $1,50 yenr.ia ad vance ; ar $2,00 ia all case if not paid promptly in advance. , No subscriptions dia continued until all arrearage are paid, unless at tbe epiion ef the publisher. Jtasmtss Carbs. JOUIS E. ATKINSON. Attorney at X-av, MIFFLINTOWN, PA.-, . , i i 'Colic vting and Conveyancing promptly attended to. ; - Office on Bridge slr'eetopposiie (no Coart House Square. JOBERT McMEEN, ; A TTORHEY A TXA W, MIFFLINTOWN. PA. Omeoen Bridge afreet, ia the room former! eeupied by Eir D. Parker, Esq. g irLoUDEM, MIFFLINTOWN, PA.. Offers his services to the eititeno of Juni ata eouuty as Auetienoer aad Teadae Crier. Charges, frem two to lea dollars. SatUfae tiea warranted. bovS, '59 Q YES! O YES! H. H. 8SYDER, PeuTytrille, Pa-, Tenders his eervieeo to the ctriteno of Juni ata and adjoining counties, a Anetioneer. Vhargs moderate. For satisfaction give the Jtulchman a chance. P. O. address, Perl Royal, J aetata Co., Pa. Feb 7. '72-ly DR. P. C. RUNDIO, PATTERSON. PENNA. August 18, 1869-tf. TUOMAS A. ELDER, M. D., Physician and Surgeon, MIFFLINTOWN, pa. vSeo heere A M. to I P. V. OSes in Beiferd's building, two deers above the Srn lm$l ofliee. Bridge eireet. eug 18-tf jyj B GAllVEtt, HomBoratliic Physician and Snriieaii, Having located ia the borough of Thompson- I town, offers his professional servivee to the j eitiiens ef that place and vicinity. . j Orrica In the room recently occupied by I r. S.rg. f Jnne 12, '73-if j Do So SEim E9 Do MOJLfiOPATIHC PHYSICIAN t SURGEON Having permanently located in the btrougli ef Midiintewn, offer hie professional services to iLe citiieua ef this plaee and surrounding oeuntry. Office en Main street, ever Beidler's Prug j tore. eug 18 l69-tf Dr. R. A. Simpson Treats all forme ef disease, and way be con sulted ae fellows: t his office in Liverpool Pa., every SATURDAY and M OX DAT ap pointments can be cade for other days. atar'Call on or sddrrss UR. K. A. SIMPSON, dee 7 Liverpool. Terry Co.. Pa. QESTRAL CLAIM AGESCT, JAMES M. SELLERS, 14 BOOTH alXTH STREET, PIIILADM.rHtA. men,. Bonnties, Pensione. Bach Pay, Ilorte Claims, State Claims, 4 e., prumpily collected. No charge for information, nor when money is not eolleoted. ' eefJ7-U ATTENTION ! D ATID WATTS most reepeetfully annenn eee to the publie thai he ia prepared to furaiau SCHOOL BOOKS AND STATIOERT at reduced prieee. Hereafter give him a eall at hie OLb STAND. MAIN St.. MIFFLIN, Oet 2i-tf IN PERRYSVILLE. DR. J. J. APPLEBACOH hae eetabliabed a Drug and Prescription Store in the above-aamod place, aad keeps a generel as sertmeat of - DRUBS AND MED1CISKS, Alee all ether articles usually kept ia estab lishments ef this kind. Pure Wine aad Liquor for medieinal par pesos. Cigars. Tobacco. Stationery, Ceafec tieas (irst-elaee). Notions, ate., . gajirThe Doctor gives advise free. JJEST CIGARS IN TOWN nollobaugh's Saloon. Two for 6 cente. Alee, the F re-beet Lager, the Largest Oysters, th Sweetest Cider, the Finest Uomeetie Wines, aad, ia abort, any thing you may wish ia the BATING OR DRINKING LINE, at the mast reasoaable prices. He has alee refund hie BILLIARD HALL, so that it will now eompara favorably with aay Hall ia the interior of tha State. June 1. 1870-ly WALL PAPER lally to the Plaee where tor can buy your Wall Paper Cheap. rpHE andersicned takes this method of ia- A. forming the public that be baa just re ceived at his residence on Third Street, Mif- tinlown, a large assortment of WALL PAPEB, f various styles, which he offers for sals CHEAPER than can be purchaeed elsewhere in the county. All persons in need of the abeve article, and wishing ;o save money, are invited to call and examine his stock and hear his prices before going elsewhere. Be Large supply constantly on band. SIMON BASOM. COAL, Lumber, Fish, Salt, and nil kinds of Merchandise for sale. Chestnut Oax Bark, Railroad Ties, all kinds of Grain and Heeds bought at the highest market prices in cash or exchanged for merchandise, coal. lumber, ic. to suit customers. 1 am pre pared to furnish to builders bills of lumber iust as wanted and on short notice, of either oak or yellow pins lumber. NOAH HERTZLER. Janl Port Royal, Juniata Co., Pa. A Large assortment of Queensware, China ware. Glassware, Crockery wate, icaar ware Ac, for sale eheap by TILTEN B8PEN8CHADE S. B. F. SCHWEIEB, ran oosstitotios raa oaioa ana tbb aaroaoiasir or ran taws, j EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. .VOLUME XXVI, M. 49 ' MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNT!, PJU.1V A DECEMBER 4, 1871. - WUOLE NUMBER 1313. wmswmtatlmftmaM tVji' WHOLESALE Attn D. P. SDCCESSOK TO JOIIN S. GRAYBILIi & CO., CRYSTAL PALACE BUILDHTG. Having purchased lb entire mammoth atock and fixture mt John 8.j Uraybtll & Co.; I wtld respecuuiiy loin rat toe public Uiat 1 bare on hand at all time a '- i " FULL ASSORTMENT OF Hardware, Paints, Oils,. Varnishes, Leather, And all Kind ef Good kept ia a First-Class Hardware Store. Hay Cutters, Cider Mills, Meat Cotters and Staffers for Sale. Having bad a fall experience in the Wholesale and Manufacturing Hardware Business, can afford to aell the same quality of Good a cheap as any store in city or country. Merchant are especially invited to bay, a they can save freight, and at the tame time buy at Philadelphia pricea. All person are iuvitcd to inspect the (lock throughout the house. COMEONE! COME MANY ! COMK ALL I Sept. 18. l72-'y . PAISTE. x The Place for Good Grape-Tines IS AT THE Juniata llallfj Uintgarbs. ASD GRAPE-USE NUBSEET. rpHE undersigned would respectfully in X form the public thai he hae started a Grape-vine Nursery about one mile northeast of Mifflintown, where he has been testing a j mrge uumner ui .lie nmcrrai twiviw vi Grapes; and having been in the business for seven years, he is nww prepared to furnish VINES OF ALL THE LEADING VARIETIES. a.I OK THE MOST IM!ISIXG KINDS, AT LOW KITE, by 111 single vine, duien. hnndreJ or thou sand. All persons within good and thriftv vine-, will do well to eall and see fur them selves. gtgy Good and respeuaiblt Agents wan'ed. Address, JONAS iiBERHOLTZF.R. Mifflintown. Juniata Co . Pa. JUNIATA VALLEY BANK t MIFFLINTOWN, PEN X'A. JOSKPI! POXsEKOY. President T. VAN lHVIN,Cahtei. BiaacTOBS. Jeaeph Pomeroy, tJoka J. Petlereea, Jerome N. Thompson, lOeorge Jacobs, Joka Relaunch. Loaa money, receive Jenosits, pay interest on time deposits, buy and sell coin and Uni ted Stales Bonds, cash coupona and checks. Remit money to any part of 'be United States and also to England, Scotland, Ireland aad Germany. Sell Revenue Stamps. la sums of at 2 per cent, oieeeuni. In rami of $r00 at 2) per cent, discount. In sums of $1000 at S per seat, discount. NEW DRUG STORE. . BANKS fc HAMLIN, Main Street. Mifltntoten, Pa. DEALERS IN KIfll 1I HWICMIS, Chemicala, Dye Staff. He, Patau. Veraiehee, Glaas, Patty, Coal Oil, Lamps, Baraera, Chimaey. Brushes, la feats Brashes. 8oape, Hair Brash, Tooth Brush, Perfumer, Comb. Hair Oil, Tobaaco. Cigars, ua. HI siiiaary. LARGE VAKIETFOF PATENT MEDICINES, ssleetsd with great earn, sad warraatod from high authority. Purest ef WINES AND LIQUORS 'or Modi al Purpoees. oT PRESCRIPTIONS eompouaded with great eare, mal6'72-ly GREAT REDUCTION IK TBK PRICES OF TEETH I Full Upper or Lower Sett at Low at $5.00. No teeth allowed to leave th oCe ualess the patient i satisfied. Teeth remodeled and repaired. Teeth filled to last for life. Toothache stopped ia iv aiantes without extracting the tooth. Dental work don for persons without them leaving their homes, if desired. Electricity used in the extiaetioa of teeth, rendering it almost a painless operatioa, (a extra charge) at the Dental Ofliee of G. L. Derr, eetabliabed ia Mifflintown in 1860. G. L. DERR, Jen 24, 1872-ly Practical Dentist. C. ROTHKOCK, DENTIST, McAliiatervllle, Penna, OFFERS hit professional services to the public in general, ia both branches of hi profession operative aad mechanical. First week ' f every month at Richfield, Fre mont and Turkey Valley. Second week Liverpool and Wild Cat Val ley. Third week Milleretown aad Raccoon Valley. Fourth week at his office ia M'Alisterville. Will visit Mifflin when called oa. Teeth put up on aay of th bases, aad as liberal as aaywher else. Address by letter or otherwise. PAISTE, 0 s H 3 V H Crystal Palace. Crystal Palace. st3 The First, The Best, The Cheapest, The Largest Stock of Goods IN THE COUNTY, To Offer to the Public AT THE VERY LOWEST PRICES. Just Received from Eastern Markets. Sceia Them will Guarantee Yon Satisfaction. SHELLEY & STAMBAUGH. KEY CRYSTAL PALACE BUILDING1, MirFUSTOWH, PA. Oet. 8. 1872. New Store and New Goods. GKOCI&IES, PR07ISI0HS. AC. Uain Street, Mifflintown. TTAVINO opened out a GROCERT AND IA PROVISION STORE in the old stand oa Main Street, Mifflintown, I would respect fully ask th attention of the publie to the following articles, which I will keep a hand at all tiki : SUGAR, COFFEE, TEA, MOLASSES, RICE, FISH, 8AL.T, DRIED AND CANNED FRUIT. HAM, SHOULDER, DRIED BEEF, Confectioneries, Huts, &&, Tobacco, CJIajHi-ax, GLASSWARE, Flour, ITeetl, Sec All of which will be sold eheap for Cash or Country Produce. Give m a call aad bear my prtcee. Mifflintown, May 2, 1872. J. W. KIRK. New Lumber Yard. Patterson, Pa. BEYER, GUYER & CO. Ear opened a Lumber Yard in th bor ough of Patterson, aad ar prepared te fur nish all kinds of Lumber, such as Siding, Flooring, Studding, Paling, Shingles, Lath, Sash, &c, ia large or small quantities, to suit cus tomers. JB Persons wanting Lumber by th ear load can be supplied at reduced rate. DETER, OUTER a CO. George Gosbea, Agent. Patterson, May 16. '72-tf HELLY STAMBAUGH alwaya keep up O their stock of GROCERIES and will not be excelled either ia th quality or price of their roods ia this lie. Giv tksm a aall before geisg eWrwher. Poetry. The Battle of Life. G forth to the Battle of Life, ray boy, Go while it ia called to-day ; For tb years go .out, aad the year com In, Regardless of the who may lose or wis Of those who may work ar play. And th troop march steadily on, my boy, To th arny gone before ; Toa may hear th sound f their falling feet. Going dowa to th river where th world' meet; They go to relura a more. There 1 room for you ia the rank, my boy, Aad duty, too, aseigaed ; Step into the front with a cheerful grace Be quick, or aaotber may take your plaee. And yoa may be left behind. ' There is work to do by the way, my boy. Thai yoa a.rer eaa tread sgaia ; Work for the loftiest, lowliest men Work for the plow, adz, spindle and pea ; Work for the beads and the brain. Th Serpent will follow your steps, ay boy. To lay for your feet a snare ; And pleasures sit ia her fairy bower. With gsrlaad of poppiee and lotus flowers Enwreathing her goldea hair. Temptatloae will wait by the way, ay boy. Temptations without and withia ; Aad bpirii of evil, in robes a fair A the holiest angels ia heavea wear, Will lore you to deadly sia. Then put oa the armor of God. my boy. In the beautiful days of youth ; Put on the helmet, breast-plate and shield And the sword Ihnt the feeblest arm may Wield In the cause of Right and Truth. IHiseellany. j Henry Ward Beechar on Labor. POPULAR BR BOBS IM THC EDUCATION OF AMtBICAN YOUTH. At Plymouth church oa Sunday eve ning Mr. Beecner pre acuta a aertnoo that i worthy of being read and studied by every nan in the land. If be can learn to practice the wisdom taught in tlii discourse there will not be many Americans who have done mdie good in their day and generation. We copy from the New York Sam's report : Thrn Mr. Bwclier took hi text from Eplic.-iiius iv , 28 : "Let bim that etnle. teal no m-ire ; but rather le him labor. working with hi bands the Hung which ia good, that be may have to give to bim that needeth " That ia the pattern of a reformed life, said Mr. Iieecher. Some people gain their living without earning it. It cau ses suspicions of alight of hand. "Let bim that etole, steal no more " I, ia ne ceesary to have been a thief to steal, but there i a great deal of stealing not done by thieves, and I advise all those who obtain their livelihood in an improper way to earn it in a proper way hereafter. "BY THC SWBAT OF THY BBUW." Every man should earn his own living. I do not say it ia a misfortune to be born rich, but I do aay that of one hundred men born with money and one hundred men born without it, the chance to find virtue and happiness are better in the last hundred. He who ia born in life to rue eerlaj. to work, to earn his living, ia the happy man. A man who works ia healthier and happier than he who dors not, and he is, moreover, debarred from those temptation which , spring from the possession of wealth, and those pitfalls which have mined so many young men. It ia not only necessary to earn our own livelihood, but we must rise with the sun in summer and before it in winter, and work with our hand. There is no deg radation in labor. Il exalts the man. It was not diies teemed in earlier days. Only in Greece and Borne it was despi sed because the Greeks and Roman owned slaves. The nation to which we owe so much and from which we have learned so much the Jewish nation always honored labor. The Jews taught their children some little craft, and they were not drudges. A drudge is a man who labors with bis hand and has no miud to control him, no conscience be hind it, no manhood- MB. BBECHEB A8 AN ACTOR. If I were a eabiuet maker do you sup pose I could construct a cradle without singing a lullaby all the time. Laugh ter Could I saw, plane and rub ; saw, plane and rub (imitating the movement of these tools) and not put my heart in the work T If I did I would be a drudge. The builder is a drudge, who, every time he drives a nail, wonders where be can get a poorer and cheaper one. Men tell na that a mun's character may be bold by bU writing. I can tell you the character of a builder and archi tect of a cold big boose. That man would be heartless and bloodless. But go into a nice, warm, cosy house, and yon would find out that the man who built it was a social, good man, with a heart and brains too. A LIB. Men do not like labor because the worker rank below the thinker. That's a Democratic feeling. I say I'm just aa anvMi aa anw nther man. heeannfl all man are equal. They are not aqoal in size, height, girth ; not equal in virtue ; but all men are civilly equal before the law When a man says, ( I'm just as good as any man, it may be so, and it may not be so. Wheu the universal- man aays so, it's a lie. That has been the grand blunder of tbe Gommuuista and International They wanted all men equal with unequal means. The moat "productive part of man is tbe animal part. A man shears a sheep, and there are five hundred men in tbe same townhip who can do the same thing. Then the wool is sent to the manufactory, but there will uot be five hundred men who can weave tbe fine clith. The result ia that tbe man who shears gets one dollar a day, while the weaver get three or four dollars a day. This is the result of brains and eduea tion. TRUS BE8PBCTABILITY. In Ohio, when 1 lived there, I knew eminently educated German gentlemen earning a dollar a day breaking stones on a macadamised road. Measured by avocation they "were low ; bnt they were thinkers, rauking higher they were honorable. A man who has been a hard worker all bis life says to himself : "1 have a smart boy. - I'll give him chances I never bad. I'll give bim a good eduea tion. Yes, I II make a lawyer out of him" f Immoderate--laughter. In the month of June there will be five hun dred thousand blossoms on every apple tree. There will be about three hun dred apples, and the remainder will drop to tbe ground. It i the same in all pro fessions. Out of five hundred thousand candidates there will be only three bun dred professional men. TUB CUBbB OF WKALTH. Tbe great trouble is that men are more anxious to be rich than to be happy. I never knew a minister who warned bis people about being extravagant, who re fused to receive a good salary. I never derived wealth, never exhorted you about being economical, for I would just as lief walk iuto my yard and say to my cows, "Oh. Alderneys, be careful of your milk ! ' Laughter A man may be ricli and yet be a fool. Of one hundred who have wealth, but one knows how to use it. Tbe insane notion that if a man only bad wealth be wouldn't want anything else, lias been tbe ruin of many young men. Sudden wealth and immense wealth are the dream of many men in tbe cities who have left their farms and workshop to come here. I venture to say that there are 5.000 young men here between twen ty and thirty years of age who have nothing to do New YORK IS FULL OFTHKM. I do uot wish to be disrespectful, but ask one of them if he can do a day's work, lie will answer. No Are you good on sbippoard t No, I've never been to sea Can von make a cbair ? No. Are you a blacksmith I No. Are you a carpenter J No Is there anything on God's earth that yon can do? No, not a thing. Laughter. Now think, what can you do? Well, I'm a good book keeper. Laughter. They can do nothing and can get nothing to do. Not aloue i this the case in New York, but in ail tbe large citie of the Uuion. WUAT THfcY LAUtiHBU AT Thousauds of young men would starve to death on a hundred acres of land be cause they couldu't raise corn. They would be houseless . and homeless iu a lumber yard barefooted with all tbe leather in a Swamp at their cominaud They have abandoned work aud want something nice and easy I think that tbe respectable German iu hi six by nine attic, pegging away at bi last, is more resp-c table than ' tbe youug man who ha left bis lather's farm before be learned to work You ought to go to my Louse and see the number of appli cations that are made to me daily. Why, people must think that I own Ceuttal Park, and Prospect Park, and tbe Poet office, and the Custom liouse, and tbe Navy Yard. Laughter. They won't believe that I have no influence in Washington. Laughter. But I never turn them away. 1 sympathize with them and a-stet them wheu I can. 1 never say. "Young man, go West." Loud laughter I try to encourage them. A WORD TO THE RICH. Mr. Beecber next addressed himself to the wealthy members of bis congre gation aud said : fc-ven ii you are worth a million to-day, your son may be forced to beg his bread because be cau't work. Your daughter -cannot be chamber maids, or cooks, or washerwomen what's to become of them t Laughter In outj thing I would have you Judaized There is an old and Jewish proverb which says: He who brings up his child without a trade, brings him up to steal.'' The, paper teil us of people go ing to seek their fortunes in A merica It ehould be work for tbeir fortunes Ttll your children to work. They say I it will kill them Shall they live ? No. Laughter tJiall they commit smcfae ? No. What then? Simply this: Eat 1 the bread you earn, or don't eat. Mr. Beecher closed with a touching peroration in which, speaking of tbe rising generation, he said : "Let them be men who earn their living by tbe sweat of their brow, and who can hold up their big, bard hands and aay they never took a penny they did not earn " How gossip Increases. How gossip increase and grows till it get into general scandal, and is entirely different from tbe original story, is told by a letter writer. He says that he was told that if be ever took a bonse in a terrace a little way out of town to be very careful that it was tbe eeutre one. For one must be very well aware that a story never loses by telling, and conse quently if he lived in the middle of a tew of houses it was very clear that tbe tales wbich might be circulated to bis preju dice would only have half the distance to travel on either side of bim, ami. therefore, could ouly be half as bad by tbe time tbey got down to the bottom of the terrace as the tales that might be cir culated of tbe wretched individual who bad the misfortune to live at ei:ber end of it. As an illustration of this he was informed of a lamentable case that actu ally occurred a short time sine'. The servant of No. 1 told the servant of No. 2 that her master expeeted bis old friends, tbe B.tyleys, to pay bim a visit shortly ; and No. 2 told No. 3 that No. 1 expected to have tbe Bay leys Iu the house evety day, and No. 3 told No. 4 that it was all up with No. 1, for tbey couldn't keep tbe b.i'ifis out- Where upon No. 4 told No H that the officers were after No I, and that it was as much as be could do to prevent himself being taken in execution, and that it was near ly killing his poor, dear wife ; and so it went on increasing until it got to No. 32, who confidentially assured tbe last house. No. 33, that the Bow street officers bad taken up tbe gentleman who lived at No. 1 for killing hia poor wife- with arsenic, and that it was hoped and expected that he would be executed. Power of Comprehensions. It was said of Thoreau, we believe that he could take up any given number of lead pencil without counting. A cel ebrated trapper once assured us that he could tell bow many balls he had in bis pouch by placing bis hand on it, without stopping to count them, and added : "I cau tell tbe number of bullets instantly without counting, us you pronouuee a word without spelling it." Southey was accustomed to take iu the substance of a book in turning tbe !eaves over contiu ously, glancing down tbe pages. Uou dan, the magician, trained himself to quickness of perception when a boy, by running past a show-window at full speed, and then trying to tell what was in it. We once met a man on a canal boat, who was amusing himself by going from passenger to passenger, aud telling almost every on where he had seen bim before, on such a train, ia such a hotel, in such a street, giving date and place to peo ple with whom he had never exchanged a word. This training of the faculties in particular directions is carried to a mar velous extreme by woodsmen, trappers and mtn wbo guess the weight of aui reals. Perhaps the most remarkable in stances are tbe markers, who leap from log to log at tbe mouth of a boom, slau ding on tbe floating log and translating instantly an old mark into a new one. remembering what equivalent to give for each of a hundred marks, and chopping it upon the log in the time that it floats its length. It is said that Thoreau knew tbe relative order of the flowering of all the plauts iu tbe Concord woods, and knew the note of every bird, and a thousand other out-of-the-way things be side. 'llenrlh md Home. Tub Capital Oity (Nebraska) AVws says: A family by tbe name of Hunt, consisting of tbe father, mother and three children, have b?n living on a claim some two miles from Marion Centre, in .Marion county. Their house was situa ted in a ravine, built of stone and roofed with dirt and sod, wbich was supported with timber. Night before last as some persons were returning home from a dance they noticed that the roof of tbe bouse had fallen in. Tbey immediately went to .ta bouse and fonnd that the roof had fallen in upon the family aa tbey lay sleeping in their beds. The party went at ouce to relive them, and upon taking tbe dirt away found tbe mother and three children dead, and the father so fastened and held in bis place that he was even powerless to help himself. Tbe roof was very heavy and came down in crushing force upon the inmates of the fatal house. For hours tbe father bad lain pinned to bis bed, and was compelled to bear the dying agouies of his wife and children ; compelled to listen to their piteous cries for help Out on the prairie, I eyond burnau reach, immured iu a living tomb, the hours slowly dragged along and still no help Still tbe appeal to Father, help us," until all of human agony had been eodured, and then a silence crept over the dread abode, wbich wa but tbe stillueM of death itself. ' RATES 0? ADVERTISING. - Alt advertising for lee than three month for one square of nine lines or lees, will be charged one insertion. 75 cents, three $1.60, and 5' i cents tor eaea subsequent insertion. Administrator's. Executor's aad Auditor' Notices. $2,U0. Professional and Business Cards. But esceeding one square, aad inclu ding copy of paper, $3,00 per year, folios in reading columns, ten eentsper line. Mer chants edvertiein g by the year at epseial rate. 3 TeaMe 6 emits. $ 6.00 8.00 10.00 17.00 25.ro 45.00 I year. S 8.00 11.00 15,00 2&.00 48.00 80,00 On square.. S S.S0 Two squares. 6.00 Three square. One-fourth eel's. Half column.-... One column . 6.00 10.C0 18.00 30.00 Sow the Son Caught a Thief. Five or six day ago, says a Pari paper, M. X , a photographer, al! Br ed by the brightness of the raa and soft ness of the air, provided himself with, necessary baggage and hastened to Fon tainbleau to take view of the forest. He installed himself in a very picture esque quarter, erected his apparatas, pre pared bis plates, opened his object glass, and enveloping at once his case and hia head in a large, dark and fluctuant veil, set himself to tbe task of seeing the ob jects in view, lie had just taken oat his proof from tbe dark chamber, and was subjecting it to chemical reaction, when a strong hand was laid npon hia shoulder. lie turned round hastily and found himjelf in tbe presence of a spe cies of giant, meanly attired, who, by gesture and voice, demanded his purse. M. X is not a Uercnles, and from the first glance toward his adversary, he concluded that all resistance was useless. He therefore politely offered the robber his purse, which was accepted with thank' fulness. The robber bowed and leaving him to resignation went into tbe depth of the forest. Poor M. X , medita ting on his sad loss, remained for some time motionless ; his looks were mechan ically set on his photographic proof ; he mused npon it with an unconcerned eye. Suddenly, " What is this 1" exclaimed he, "what ia the tinman torm iu this cop pice under the shade of tltia oak 1 Hea ven ! Should I believe ray eyes t It is he, it is my robber perfectly delineated, and very easy to be recognized. Oh, divine sun, my co-laborer, how well yoa do things !'' On hi return be repaired to the commissioners at Fontaiobleau, related his adventure, exhibited his proof plate and the malefactor's likeness. Next day, with tbe aid of this singular de scription, the robber was arrested. Onb of the sweetest stories we have ever read ia told by a Los Angelos cor respondent in the San Francisco Herald. On the eastern slope of the San Fran cisco range of mountains is a rift in the solid wall about ICO feet deep, thirty feet long and seventeen feet wide. For years it has been selected as "tbe borne of the bees," and from the opening tbey issue forth in a solid column one foot in diameter. Here tbe busy little fellows have improved the shining hours until -they have stored away, it i estimated, near ten tone of boney. They guard their treasure jealously, and fight for it if any attempt is made by the vandal man to help himself therefrom. Dnriog the last four year they have by actual measurement added fifteen feet to their store. As tbe climate is so mild that at almost any season flowers may be found blooming tbey are not compelled to feed upon their store, but are constantly add ing to it Mrs. Drake, a widow lady of Mublen bura) county, Kentucky, has in her pos session an apple wbich has been in exis tence since the beginning of the Revolu tionary war. The Greenville Gazette gives this account of it. Tbe soldier, Mr. Drake, recieved the apple from hi betrothed just as be departed for the army of Washington; be kept it during tbe whole war; returned after the sur render of Yorktown, and married tbe fair doner. The apple is sacredly pre served in the fanily. It is dry and shriveled, nothing rem lining but the woody fiber, the heir-loom is highly prized by every member of the family. A LADY, remaikable for having a high sense of her own dignity, being one day detained in her carriage by the unload ing of a cart of coals in a very narrow street, leaned both arms upon the door of tbe carriage and asked th man : "IInw dare you, sir, stop a woman of quality in tbe street V A woman of quality 1" kaid the man. ' Yes, fellow," rejoined the lady, "don't you see my arm upon tbe carriage 1" " Ye, indeed I do," he replied, aud a pair of coarse arm they are, too." -i. - i oo - BBa e i - - - The Mayor of Chicago ha recom mended to the employers of that city that Monday instead of Saturday, be chosen a pay day He thinks this one of the most practical, well as practicable, methods of preventing drunkenness, and that it should be immediately and gener ally adopted. A San Francisco woman covered the dress of another with her flounces in tbe horse-car.' the other day. and when she left tbe vehicle she found that the ob scured fair one bad revenge herself by cutting ber dress into shreds. - j - Aunt Susan says, " Sup, all tbe men were in one country, and al! the women in another, with a big river be tween tbem ; good gracious ! what lot of girls would be drowned !" The drum mj"r wbo ran away from Cbickamauga. when reproached for cow ardice, replied. "I'd rather be called a coward all my life than be a corpse fif. teen minutes " A Detroit picture dealer says the hard est work he haa to do i to frame excuses.