Juniata Sentinel. MIFFLINTOVTN Wednesday Homing, Tone 25, 1873. B. F. SCIIWEIER, EDITOR k PROPRIETOR. G EO. P. ROWELL 4 CO, 40 Park Row, New York S. M. PETTENG1LL 4 CO., 37 Park Row, N. Y, Ar. our tole agents in that city, anil are au thoriied to contract for advertising at our lowest ,-ates. Advertiser in that city are re quested to lere their favors with either of the above homes. Dailv raius have crops in Texas. nearly ruined the The Pope Las excommunicated King Victor Emanuel, ftoes the King caret . if J Ei uar Thompson, President of the I'. C. It. It Co., is in the VV ttstern coun try wilh a party of capitalists. B. F. Boiler, it is said aspires to the office uf the Governorship of Massacliu sitts. lie was champion of " Credit Mobilier Washington city has had a case or two of cholera. It is also reported from Cincinnati, Memphis, Nashville, and other western cities. England is puzzled how to receive the three women who accompany the Shah of Persia as wives, in his visit to the "Realm." . She cannot recognize poligamy, and to recognize any one and not all thrre of the ladies cannot fail to prove an insult to Persia. It is quite a dilt-mma that our English cousins are in, and no one has been original enough to conjecture which horn they will take. A certain Englishman has brought his mind to the conclusion that there are better people in the world than the Ne gro race, and that the world bad better te rid of them, lie lias conceived the ?cb me of extirpating them. His plan is eiu.piy to colonize Africa with 200,000,000 Chinamen, who, he thinks, in the course of a generation or two, would redeem that country from its wilderness state, and solve the Negro question for all lime to come. Wonderful man 1 The Republicans of Main, in their State Convention, on the 19th inst, at Bangor, passed the following on the Con g'.tsMonal salary grab : firtotre-t. That the Bepublicans of Maine denounce the recent action of Congress, known as the salary grab, in creasing the salaries of its members, and especially its retroactive feature, by which m arly S50OO was voted for each member for services already paid for, as a grocs violation of the pledges of the last National Convention, and demand the immediate and nnconditional repeal of an act so disgraceful to Congress ami so odious to the people. Scientific men profess to believe that drouth is of great service, iu this, that it brings to the surface of the ground, gasses from the far down depths of the earth that are highly beneficial, indeed essential to the promotion of vegetable Tie. Who knows enough about the gap see thnt pass in aud ont of the ground duiiugjhe various phrases of weather to pronounce the theory of the scientists incorrect. Whether correct or incorrect, the declaration itelf imparts a certain degree of consolation. How consoling il ;a to be taught that drouth is a great benefit, a substantial good and not a curee, but a blessing. Mr. Wiucali., ouce a United States Senator from Texas, and a leading spirit in organizing the Southern Confederacy, was recognized ne&r Baltimore, among a company that had assembled on the 17th inst., to decorate the graves of the Southern soldiers, and called on for a speech. He deliver-! himself in such a manuer that bis fric.os on the platform took occasion to have him close as soon as possible. Wigfall don't want the tires of the Lost Cause to die out. It is a little queer that these people who profess such an undying love for slavery do not go to live in some of the Eastern countries, where it is practiced without discouragement. It is a lies of time and labor to preach for it here. Tne Secretary of the Interior has maJ a curious dtcieion upon an archi tectural question The Homestead laws require that, in order to validate a claim of pre-emption of land, a house must have been erected upon each quarter sec tion. Some astute fellows have under taken to comply with this provision nom inally, not really. Building a house at the point where the boundaries of four qnarter sections come together, they have made the building partly npon each quar ter section. This is so smart an arrange ment that it might be supposed that the Interior Department would not submit to it- The law requires a house to be erec ted on each quarter section of land. The cunning fellows interested in this exper iment have really but a qnarter of a house upon each quarter section, and yet Mr. Delando decides that this is Sufficient, and that a quarter of a house is, in the Laud Department law, a house. The decision has a tendency to encourage frauds upon the goverumeut, and is such a one or speculators iu land will greatly approve.- Philadelphia Inquirer. . 1't.aihcs ate ripe in Louisiana. NEWS DESPATCHES. -; A special agent of the Government reports the following of cattle stealing on the Mexican border under date of Hay 31st: On the' 15th inst. there were stolen and driven to the Mexican side of the Rio Grande three hundred head of Texas cattle, a portion of the herd belong ing to Messrs. Read & Brother, who were en route with them to San Angus tine, New Mexico. This theft was committed by three or four different parties who stampeded and crossed from ten to fifty head each, -according to the strength of the party and opportunity. Through the assistance of the general politico at El Paso, and his various dep uties, about one hundred bead were re captured. The remaining two hundred were driven into the mountains, scattered killed and otherwise made way with, so that there are no present or future proe pects of further recoveries. It is not claimed that this robbery was committed by Mexican citizens altogether, for it has been ascertained that Mexicans on the American side of the border were in strumental iu bringing about the stam pede, if they were not the originators of the entire scheme A special despatch to the Cincinnati. Inquire reports the arrest atOwingsville, Ky , on the 16th inst. of an outlaw, named Hagan, who has confessed the names of eighty members of a band of desperadoes, of which he was a member, lie says this line of robbers extends from Pendleton county through Kentucky and Virgiuia into North Carolina. The manufactures of Stoves in the United States held a convention at Niagra Falls on the ISth and 19th inst. It has rained in Arkansas almost every day for a month. Oh ! for a few days of it here. The village of Maysville, Duscola county Michigan, was nearly destroyed by fire on the night of the 18th inst. Under date of the 17th, a despatch from Augusta South Carolina relates the following : Arthur G. Glover shot and killed William Goumillion and his father, Lovctt Gonmillion, at Edgefield Court House, S. C, this morning at ten o'clock Glover and Lovett Goumillion bad some words a few weeks since, during which Glover cursed him. Young' Goumillion threatened to kill Glover, and a fight had been anticipated. Glover sent for father and son to meet htm at a store in the vil liage. Un entering, young Vioiiroilliou was shot in the head by Glover with a Der ringer, and died instantly. The father appearing on the scene, was also shot in the head by Glover, and mortally wound ed. Glover surrendered himself. The affair creates intense excitement in Edge field, where the parties were well con nected. Abont thirty years ago Lovett Goumillion killed Joseph Glover, uncle of Arthur Glover A despatch from Missouri on the 17th inst. says : Joseph C. Howard, arrestel here for stealing horses in Franklin coun ty, was taken tip to Pacific City last nijrl.t, to be placed in jail at Union, the county seat. He was put in the cala boose at Union. Abont niue o'clock P. M. an armed mob of 200 men took him ont and hanged him. He made a con tession lmNicating several other men in horse stealing who escaped. A despatch o( the 17th inst. relates how J. S. Thomis, sheriff of Prescott county Arizona, had an Iudian fizht. It says on last Sunday he was fired at by Apaches near Rio Verde. lie returned the fire from his buggy, and killed two and wounded one. The rest, numbering seven or eight, fled. Thomas' horse ran away, but its owner escaped unhurt General Crook has gone to San Carlos reservation. Conflicting reports are cur rent regarding the Apaches, some say they Lave all gone on the war path, and others that one or two bands ouly hare gone. The National Associations of Millers met at Toledo on the 17th inst. Mem bers were present from five States and the District of Columbia. Jacob Barnes presided The Committee on Permanent Organization reported the draft of a con' stitulion and by-laws, which was discuss ed until the hour of adjournment " A Nashvill, Tenn., despatch of the 17th inst says : The cholera is unabat iug iu Nashville, and there is considera ble exodus of people from the city. Yes terday three draymen were attached on the street A number of convicts are down with the disease. Thirty deaths from cholera were reported yesterday, of which eight were whites and twenty-two colored. Business is almost totally bus pended and commercial interests are suffering badly. . - While the Modocs were being remov ed from Peninsula, Tule Lake, on the 17th inst to Fort Klamath, one of the Indians, known as Curly-beaded Jack, who surrendered with the Hot Creek band to General Davis at Faircbild's Ranche, shot himself and has since died. It is reported that some of the Indians who were ironed nearly succeeded in fil ing off their iron, but were detected in time to prevent their escape." A despatch from Minnesota under date of the ISth inst. says : A special from Bismark, on the Northern Pacific Rail road, reports that the Northern Pacific surveying party, which left Lincoln yes terday morning, when about . two miles oat from the latter place, were attacked by about 150 Sionx Indians. -.Two com naniea of infantry and a detachment of - cavalry came to their aid, and foot Indi ans were killed. An escort of 200 arm ed men is now accompanying the survey ing party and no serious trouble is antic ipated. After the skirmish the survey was resumed- An Albany N. Y. despatch of the 18th inst. says : Two suicides occurred in St. Johnsville yesterday. It appears that a physician, named A. D. Wheelock, a married man, was paying attention to Miss Ruth Smith. The parents of the young lady objected to his conduct on the ground that he was not divorced. Yesterday, from some reason unknown (proceedings for divorce having been commenced). Miss Smith took arsenic and died, and the doctor, on learning the fact, took a doee of morphine, and also expired. - ' i ' A Sarnia, Canada, despatch, of the 19th inst., says: Mrs. Workman was hanged in the jail-yard to day for the murder of her husband in February last. The woman, up to the time of execution, declared that she did not intend to kill her husband, and that his death was the result of a drunken brawl. She ascend ed the scaffold with a firm step, and man ifested fortitude and nerve which as tounded all present. She expressed a hope that her case would be a warning to wives who have drnnken husbands, and to husbands who have drunken wives Sbe died almost instantly after being dropped. Mrs. Susan B. Anthony was sentenced by the Court at Cauandaigua, N. Y , on the 19th inst., to pay a fine of one hun dred dollars and cost of prosecution for voting at the election last fall Fifty years after this posterity will langh at that decision. A despatch of the 19th inst. says : Chinese have turned strikers at Beaver Falls, Pa., and left the place. A paper in the Western part of the State says that it was not a strike but a quarrel among bosses that caused a number to leave. The town of Micbigamme, on Michi gamme Lake, in Marquette county Mich igan, was entirely destroyed by nre on the 19th inst. Over two hundred houses were burned and the loss of property immense.' Eight lives were lost. is A despatch from Washington on the 20th inst. says : The Secretary of the Interior to-day decided that the erection of a house by two, three or four pre emp tion or homestead claimants'In such man ner as to occupy a portion of each of their quarter sections under one roof is a legal compliance with the law requiring a house to be built on every quarter see tion in order to secure title to it A despatch from Canandaqua N. Y under date of the 20th inst. says : Rela tive to the legal prosecution of Mrs Susan B. Anthony for votiug. The motion for a new trial in the case of Jones and other inspectors of election, &c, was this morning denied. Upon being asked if he bad anything to say why sentence should not be pronounced, Mr. Jones arose and said : Your honor has pronounced me guilty of a crime. The jury has had but little to do with it. In the performance of my duty as inspector of election, which. position I have held for the last four years, I acted conscientiously, faithfully, and according to the best of my judg ment and ability. I did not believe that I had the right to reject the ballot of a citizen who offered to vote, and who took the preliminary and general oaths, and answered all questions prescribed by law. The instructions furnished by the state ontbonties declared tbat 1 bad no such right As far as the registering of names is concerned they would never have been placed upon the registry if it had not been for Daniel Warner, the Democratic Federal supervisor of elec tion appointed by this court, who not tu)y advised the registry, bnt addressed us, saying, "Young men, do you know the penalty of the law if you refuse to register these names ! ' And, after dis charging my duties faithfully and honest ly and to the best of my ability, if it is to vindicate the law tbat I am to be im prisoned, I willingly submit to the pen alty. Each of the defendants appealed to the honesty of their intentions in their actions. They were sentenced to pay a fine of $25 each and costs of prosecution $30. A common crime in London is to en tice away children, strip them of their clothing, and then leave them naked in the street Twelve such cases were re cently heard before one magistrate. In one of them a mother who had bunted frantically through the streets for her child, was so fortunate as to encounter him, at eleven o'clock at light, in the hands of a woman who was dragging him towards Westminster bridge, ex hausted and stripped of nearly all hie clothing. The persevering mother res cned her child and arrested his abductor. President Grant has accepted an invi tation of the Centennial Commission to participate on the approaching Fourth of July, in the ceremonies attending the transfer of grounds in Fairmount Park to the Commission for the Exhibition in 1876. Fifteen new indictments were found on the 17th, against members of the late New York Tammany Ring, six of them being against Tweed - BOOST ITEMS.' Erie is investigating a 'pavement swindle." The Bedford Springs postoffiee baa been discontined. Paris has ten large museums and and is collecting to start five more. Persian etiqnet forbids the Shah to occupy any other than the first floor. John Johnson, of Titusville, is buil ding two oil rigs to be sent to Japan. A boy defioes salt as "the stuff that makes potatoes tast bad when you don't put on any. Japan has a national debt of $104, 000,000. The people think this an enormous debt. . A Clarion county man has just named his twefth Omega in hopes that it may prove the last '-. . Jeff Davis, ex President of the South ern Confederacy, was in Bethlehem, Pa , recently, visiting his niece. A man's body was fonnd floating in East river, New York, on the 19th, wilh iron weights attached to his wrists. A Charleston father gave a young man who saved his daughter from drowning, a two year old steer and a shot gnn. A Locomotive engineer has invented a pump with which to squirt hot water on deaf prrsons who walk on the track. A California paper insists that SC00, gold, is a liberal allowance for the ex penses of a trip from the East to Cali fornia. The Boston papers estimate the amount of money paid to the lobby - of the Massachusetts Legislature this year at $100,000. In London, recently, a girl in order to save her lover, who was the real culprit, went into court and swore that she stole a certain diamond ring. A man in Wayne county. Pa., recent ly received a check for 81000 from Japan as a reward for having saved the sender's life fifteen years previously. At Burlington, Iowa, a little girl 8 years old walked up and fazed a few moments on her dead mother, and then turned away and died almost instantly. The Governor of Kansas on the 18th inst. commuted the sentence of C. B. Chute, who was to be hanged in Monroe county, to twenty-one years' imprison ment. A Chinawoman was sold at auction on Granite Creek, Idaho, the other day. The bidding was spirited, and she was finally knocked dowh to a Chinaman Six, fr'S575. The Tenth Regiment, Pennsylvania Reserves, will hold their next annual re union in New Castle ; on the 5th of July. The oration will be delivered by J. G. White, Esq , of Mercer. A. D. Meachio, alie Peace Commis sioner who was wounded in the Canby massacre, has gone to the Pacific coast to appear before the military commission tbat is to try the Modocs. The Harrisburg Telegraph states that a number of capitalists from other places have lately been in that city selecting sites for new iron furnaces, a number of which they propose to erect An English shopkeeper had. for his virtues, obtained the name of the ''little rascal " A stranger asked him why this appellation had -been given him? ."To distinguish me from from the rest of my trade." Counterfeit ten cent notes have been put in circulation in New York. The bogus note is said to be so like the gen uine article that it requires the closest examination and inspection to tell one from the other. A valet, throwing open the door, an nounces a visitor ; bis master, wbo is very short-sighted, advances before fix ing his glass ; shakes the valet by both bands, hopes his lady is well, and orders the visitor to put wood on the fire. The Attorney-General of Kansas on the 18Lh iiiSt. brought suit in the name of the State, in Pulaski county Circuit Court, similar to the one brought by Brooks, setting forth that Baxter was not elected Governor, and asking judg ment of ouster agaiust him. Thousands of dead pickeral have been cast up on the shores of Lake Como, in Oswego eonnty. New York. The fated fish are the largest and finest and what is also very strange no other varieties of fish seem to be affected by the apparent distemper. The late grand jury of the Court of Oyer and Terminer, of New York, found an indictment for libel against Charles A. Dana, of the Sun, on complaint of Wil liam II. Kemble, who had him indicted in Philadelphia. Dana claims his ability to prove Lis allegations against Kemble. A Young man in Peoria sought to se cure his sweetheart by strategy, so he took her ont for a boat ride, and threa tened to jump overboard into the lake if she didn't consent to marry him. But it did not work. She offered to bet him a dollar that be daren't dive in. A man once went to a lawyer's office and told the legal gentleman that he had been insulted by a man who told him to go to ,and desired to know what he should do. The lawyer suavely said. " I wouldn't advise you to go: the law doesn't compel you. : The Boston Journal says that the av erage number of perfectly clear days in a year i. e. days entirely cloudlese is only about fifty ; and the number of completely cloudy is about the same ; j bile the number of days which are. clear half the time or more is about two j hundred and fifteen. 1 On Monday a week in Verner town ship, near Mendville, a number of chil dren, while playing under a tree,' nea the school house were struck by lightning and somewhat injured, one of them, a little girl, having her clothes torn from her body. It is thought she will not re cover. The farmers iu Connecticut Valley are making more extensive preparations than ever for raising tobacco. From East Hartford to East Windsor Hill there is scarcely a farmer who is not building new tobacco shads, some of them very large. The young plants are coming up finely, and there is every promise of a large crop this year. On Friday evening Dr. Lewis, a phy sician of Zapesville, Ohio, learned that Thomas Smith, a married man, having three children, had taken a daughter of his in a buggy aud eloped. The Doe tor followed, overtook them and shot Smith through the lung, besides beating him severely. lie is not expected to re cover. Lewis was arrested. The first house ever built on Mt Washington, erected in 1827, is still strnding, though new it is neatly covered with weather boarding, thoroughly dis guising the log cabin constructed almost half a century age. Years ago it was known as the place where the bed-bugs threw up the window to let the mosqui toes in. Recently a young man, who was at tending a night writing-school, near Dan ville, Indiana, was smitten by the charms of a lady who was present and at the close of the school bustled forward to solicit the pleasure of escorting her home. "Yes," said the lady, "if you will carry my boy." He wilted, and the young matron walked home alone. Eleven thousand five hundred people were killed in the United States in 'one year, we learn from the last report of the Bureau of Yitol Statistics, after this fashion : From burns and scalds, 3391 ; explosions, 290; falls, 2074; falling bodies, 712 ; railroad accidents, 1580; mining accidents, 365 ; injuries by ma chinery, 429 ; gunshot wounds, 429 ; other injuries, 1853 ; total, 11,574.' The invention of the circular saw is generally attributed to Captain Kendall, of Maine, who died a few weeks agu at the ago of eighty nine, This is a mis take. 'The circular saw waB invented by Joseph Murray, of Mansfield, England, son of an old servant of the Byron fami ly, whom Lord Byron, the poet, often speaks of his letters as "Old Joe Mur ray." The first saw of the kind ever made is still shown by his descendants. Sir James Eyre, in his well known little book, mentions three curious cases of idiosyncrasy the case of a gentle man who could not eat a Biugle etraw bery wilh impunity ; the ease of another whose head would becoma frightfully swollen if he touched the smallest parti cle of hare ; the case of a third who would inevitably have an attack of gout a few hours after eating fish. Let us add to this the instance of the clergyman who always fainted when he heard a cer tain verse in Jeremiah ! THE UNDEVELOPED WEST OH, Fire Years in the Territories. January, 1868, found me an invalid in the goodly city of Evausville. A bron chial difficulty, produced ten years be fore by severe application to study, had in a year of army life developed to a con nrmed asthma ; and now, in the moist and enervating climate of Southern In- 1- W 111 aiana, i was snaaen Dy an ominous graveyard cough, the heaviness of mother and the despair of friends and creditors. I tried fifty remedies : cubebs, troches, caramels, hoarhound confections were my hourly refreshment ; a score of nasty syrups iu villainous green bottles adorned my mantel ; pastilles smoked upon my stove, ana my coatnber was redolent with the fumes of burning nitre. My friends sympathized and suggest ed ; one had heard his grandmother say she never knew a tea made of chestnut leaves to fail in such cases, if taken in time ; another quoted an equally vener able source in favor of bloodroot and whiskey, with snuff of powdered galin gale ; a third had all confidence in the regular school, while a military friend just from Texas contented himself with the cheerful suggestion, " My boy, the angels have taken a fancy for yon ; try a southern climate." If there is anything worse than dying of consumption, it must be the reception of the advice prevalent on the subject. The general voice ran In favor of travel. One thought a sea voyage a dead sure thing ; another was enthusiastic for Florida, and a third was positive the Lake Region would straighten me out In a mnltitude of counsellors, non-professional, there was anything but safety. My physician, watch in one hand, the other on my pulse-, looked solemnly wise and thus pronounced : uGo west young man ; go west." I went west. For the interesting particulars that the traveler relates, the reader should send for The Undeveloped West ; or. Five Years in the Territories ;" being a com plete history of that vast region between' the Mississippi and the Pacific, its re sources, climate, inhabitants, natural cu riosities, etc., etc Life and adventure on prairies, mountains, and the Pacific coast, with two hundred and forty illus trations, from original sketches and pho tographic views of the scenery, cities. lands, mines, people, aud curiosities of the great West By J. H. Beadle. Address National Publishing Com pany, Philadelphia, Pa. An Arkansas gentleman hat divorced himself hv tha aimnltt nrocesa of nostintr the following notice on several door posts and rails in the vicinity of his dwelling. t. i .ij.n.ffo i . It is headed -Cast-off Pegga, and reads : "Marion Ark Crittenden County May m io-jq v..ii i , Um ; : ; 31 1873 Notice is here by given is in ten Days Notice, that Peggy Davie no more mine for she ia nothing but a Piecebraker for there is no getting along with her no ways that a man can do and Reather then to be in trouble all the time I part in public that it will be understood by all People." Mr Burdges Davis. Secretary Richardson is disagreeably faced by a rash promise made some four years ago to Dr Maiy Walker, the lady in coat and trowsers, that if ever he rose to the then improbable station of Seen -tary of tha Treasury, ha would give her an. appointment in Alacka. The lary doctor now demands the appointment, and the Secretary is in search of the promised office and the means of sendin her to it His predecessor offered her place among the lady clerks of the de partraent, if she would abjuie her pantal oons, but she declined A young man in Indiana, Pa , seduced a young lady, under promise of marriage more than two years ago, and left sud denly for the far West, in order to escape the consequences of his villainy. A half brother of the injured lady procur ed a requisition from Governor Geary, and followed the fellow for two years, finally catching him at Lincoln Nebraska about two weeks ago. He returned with his prisoner last week, and had him put under bail for -trial. A young lady poet who ought to repressed, and who evidently wants be re-pressed, thus advertises for her young man : "Come ia the evening, or come in the morn ing. Come when you're looked for, or eome with out warainc;. Kisses and welcome you'll find here before you. And the oftener your com the more I'll adoer you." ANNOUNCEMENT. SENATE. Ma. Editob : As the time is drawing near when the Republicans of this county must select a standard-bearer ia the Senatorial contest we would announce the name of Da. J. 1. Stikbett, or ISeale township. In a district where the party lines art so closely drawn, we must select our best man one who, with an incorruptible character and peraonal popularity, will run the full party rote, and d.aw from the Democratic ranks. Da. Stibbbtt in his late eanYafs showed tbat he is the strongest candidate we can get iu this county, and there are many circum stances that indicate that if sustained by the Republicans of this county, he will get the nomination in the district. TUSCARORA. Jtnr mdwtisfinfiits. Dissolution of Partnership. VTOTICE ia hereby given that the partner 1 1 ship between J. W. & 3. A. Hoffman was dispolred by mutual consent on the first day of March, 1873. The business will be continued, and conducted at the old stand in Spruce Hill township, by J. W. Hoffman. J. W. HOFFMAN. 8. A. HOFFMAN June 25, 1 873-4 1 X0TICE. To all whom it may concern : The School Board of Walker township met May 31st, 1873, at Flint Hill. DaTid DWen, Treasurer of Walker School District, for 1871, in account wilh same, as follows : Balance due District at laat settle ment $178 16 Amt of Orders lifted................... 117 14 Due township '. $56 02 Due bill given for same by Diven. William Hetrick.- Treasurer for 1872, in account, (aud.) as follows: Cross amt. of Duplicate.. State appropriation ........ .$2156 90 . 217 34 $2374 24 Arat of orders lifted $1879 21 Collector's fees............... 83 81 Exonerations......... fc3 33 2026 35 $347 89 56 02 Doe bill given by Hetrick for . Due bill given by Diven ... Gross amt. due Twp. on settlement May 31, 1873 $403 91 - SAMUEL SIEBER, Prtt't. N. D. Vaxdtkk, Sec'y. June 18, 1873. Dissolution of Partnership. NOTICE is hereby given that the partner ship between 8. V. Shelley and U. A. Stambaugh, under the firm name of Shelley & Siambaugh, has been this day dissolved by mutual consent. All debts due to said part nership are to be paid and those due from the same discharged at the Crystal Pah Store in Uifflintown. 8. T. SHELLEY. H. A. STAMBAUGH. June 9, 1873. THE undersigned have entered ioto partnership, and will continue the b eo- bnsi- ness of the late firm of Shelley & Stambaueh ronae of the old firm is respectfully solici ted by the new. " . a ouniiouance or tna mi. JACOB STAMBAUGH, H. A. 8TAMBAUGH. Jnne 9, 1873. NEW DRUG STORE. BANKS & HAMLIN, Alain Street. Mifflmlmen, fa. DEALERS' IN MECI A EBICIIE1. Chemicals, p., gtaff . Paints, Tarnishes, Glass, TtMy, Coal Oil, Lamps, Burners, Chimneas, Brushes, Infants Brushes, 8oaps, Hair Brushes, Tooth Brushes, Perfumery, Combs. Hair Oil, Taw. Ci". Notions. and Stationary. - LARGE VARIETY OF PATENT MEDICINES, selected with great eare, and warranted from high authority. rarest of WINES AND LIQUORS rrUM- eal Purposes. HF" PRESCRIPTIONS compounded with great care. rmal6'72-lv A FINE assortment of Cloths, Caesimeres Vestiars. Ac. inst raaairat mI tr ..I. 8. B. LOUDON. $tvt mdrerti5fiarnt5. j A GREAT OFFER ! 'sol' teTiray' I. T. will ! rill OS ORCMs of irlt-f laM makers) tneiudina WSTEftV, tUrtmtlj , prkes fo- cash, or part rA. nt bUnrr v, small tkly pitm,. ; Mew 7-Octave Irst-class riIS all i . m lm9T.mtnUf fr ,m 0ri),n, '$55. $75. BOl ILE-BCEs) OtCMS, $i0; i -"IS 8-STOr $115. ,d vpvard.. Waters Concerto Mar Organs . re the meet bcantlfal n style and perfect in toac ever made. The. COHEtTO STwT ii the best ever place 1st asty vrgaa. It it produced if - ihirit tel of reed eallarly voice), the EFFECT "f h,eh Mwit cniftitne uu soi l-stieri jc - u ISITATIOf of the Hill tvlCE SITE1B. Terms liberal. ILLUSTRATED I'AIA LUti UES HA IL ED Jot one ttnmp. A liberal aueounl to ilntis'err. Churehei. Sunday tehooli. Lodge; etc. 1CE1TS WIITE. " All XJUU. Generated Local Agents. TTT a WT m TT n - for the Bantram Sewing Machine, madeal Danbury, Conn. The at il lest, faatest and easiest Leek-Stitch. Straight Needle Machine ia the market. We give better terms than anT'Dthtr company. Alires iOHX A. DODUE, Gen'i Agent, Daabary, Cows. WALLACE it CO.HPAJIVSt CREAM TABLE CHOCOLATE. No bailing necessary. A cup of delicious Chocolate made with it in two minutes. No waste. Packed in pound jars. Vanilla or plain. One dot. in box. Unequaled ae a eonfection for lucob, spread on crackers, with a glass of milk at hand to drink. For making Soda Water Syrup or flavoring lee Cream it is superior to any Chocoiate made ; and for Chocolate Cake, nothing else will be used where this has been tried. For sale by J. T. WARREN & CO., Cincinnati, O. WE WANT AN A CENT In this township to canvass for the new, val uable and fast selling book by Dr. JOHN COWAN, THE SCIENCE OF A M LIFE. Recommended and endorsed by prominent ministers, physicians, religions and secular papers. No other book like it published.' $40 per week guaranteed. Address, COWAN & CO., 139 Eighth St., N. T. Write for a Price Lnt to J. B. JOHJIBTOH. Breech-Loading Shot Guns. $i0 to $300. Double Shot Guns, $8 So $150. Single Guns, $3 to $20. Rifles. $8 to $75. Reyolyers, $5 to $2.5. Pistols, $1 to $8. Gun Material, FishiDg Tackle. Ac. Large ditcountt-to dtal eri or eluhs. Army Guns, Revolvers, etc.. bought or traded for. Goods sent by express C. O. D. to be examined before paid for. WORKING CLASS MALE ob FEMALE. S'iO a week guaran teed. Respectable employment at home, day or evening ; no capital required ; full in structions and valuable package of good sent free by mail. Address, with six cen return stamp, M. iOUJU & CO ,13 Green wich St., New tork. t" tfl C9fl per fiy Ageiits waited t All 4w iu eiaes of working people. of either sex. younz or old, make more money' at work for us in their spare moxeuls or alii the time than at anything else. Particulars free. Address G. STINSON A CO., Port land, Maine. BLATCHLET mPRnVHD I Cucnmber Wood Pimp. w Tasteless, Durable. Efficient. anu Li.-np. ine oesi rump for the least money. Atten- Viod is especially invited to lllaichle; Pa.ent Improved Bracket and New Drop Check VaWe, which cob bo with drawn without removing tbe pump or disturbing I he joints. Also, the Copper Chamber, which never crscks or scales, and will outlast any other. For sale by dealers everywhere. Send for Catalogue and Price-List. Chas. li. I latculet, Manufact T, SOU Commerce St., Philada., Pa. GREAT REDUCTION I!t THI PRICE.S OP TEETH! Full Upper or Lower Sets as Low as $5.00. No teeth allowed to lears the office unless the patient is satisfied. Teeih remodeled and repaired. Teeth filled to last for life. Toothache stopped in five minutes withsut extracting the tooth. Dental work done for persons without them leaving their homes, if desired. Llectncity used inihe extraction of teeth. rendering it almost a painless operation, (no extra charge) at tne Uental umce or U. I,. Derr, established ia Miffiiatown ia 1BGO. G. L. DERR. Jan 21, 1 872-1 y . Practical Dentist. C. ROTIIKOCK, DENTIST, MoA.listtcrvi.lle, Penna., OFFERS hi professional services to th public in general, in both branches of his profession operative and mechanical. First week of every month at Richfield. Fre mont and Turkey Valley. Second week Liverpool and Wild Cat Val ley. Third week Millerstowa and Raecooa Valley. fourth week at bis office in M Alisterville. Will visit Mifflin when called on. Teeth put up on any of the bases, and aa liberal as anywhere else- Address by letter or otherwise. 3Icat I 31 eat ! THE andersigned Hereby respect felly in forms the eilisens of MifBintown eg! Patterson that his wagon will visit each, el these towns on TUEsDAT, THURSDAY" and SATURDAY mornings of each week, wheat they can be supplied with Choice Beef; Veal, Mutton, Lard, Ace, Hiring the summer season, and also PORK and 8AVSAGE in season. I purpose fur nishing Beef every Tuesday and Saturday morning, and Veal and Muttoa every Thnrs day morning. Give me your patronage, and will guarantee to sell as good meat as the country can produce, and as eheap as any other butcher is the eownty. SOLOMON SIEBER. New Lumber Yard. Patterson, Pa. BEYER, GUYER & CO. Have opened a Lumber Tard in the bor ough of Patterson, and are prepared te fur nish all kinds of Lumber, such as . Siding, Flooring, Studding, Paling, Shingles, Lath, Sash, ia large or small quantities, to suit cus tomers. SL- Persons wanting Lumber by the ear. load eaa be supplied at reduced rates. " -BEYER, GUYER & CO, George Gosbea, Agent. . Patterson, Hay 15, '2-tf -Juiiata Seitibix, $1,60 eer year. Of iil