JENTINEL & REPUBLICAN MIFFL1NT0WX. Tedneada), April 2. B. F. SCII U'K I Ell, cditob axd raornrroK. Bepublican State Ticket. STPKEME JUDGE, iiijxry .iti:i::v, or xuaTHASirTtix coi ntt. 4UMT0K GENERAL, . .IO II A A. LKMO., or BLAH COI'KTT. 1'lTTSBriKJ is pOKl-officC to Lave a $750,000 Blacksmiths earn $4.50 per laj in LdKlrillft. Clerks are a drag in the market" A srspENHios of coal operations in the Schuylkill region has thrown 73, 000 uu-n out of employment. Kearney, the untamed Irishman, li:i8 been sent by the conrtti of Cali fornia to the Honwe of Correction. Afteu reeling an account of the fctorut at MarHhfield, Mo., on Sunday night a week, one is led to eschiiiu, wliat may the wind nut do ? Wektmixsteh Presbytery met in Lancaster last week, and deposed from the ministry, and excommuni cated from the church, Rev. W. J. JJri.lels. on the charge of drunken ness, falsehood and immorality. The Harrisburg Telegraph of April 23rd has this to say of the member ship of the l.-ite State Convention of Common School Superintendents, that met at Hurrishiirg last week : The educators have gone home. They were a quiet set of people, but there were more brains to the wpiare inch in the Senate during this wevk than ever liefore." The Superintendents of Common Schools held a State Convention at Harrisburg last week. . The State Treasurer niade an explanation to the Superintendents. There was a deliciency of $1,700,000. He paid the school districts last after paying other obligations, and that is how it came that the school districts were so long in getting their money. They have quite an excitement at West Point, in the presence of the investigating committee, in the case of the hazing of Whittaker, the ne gro cadet It is .too late for West Point to set itself up on the' color line. Rebellion settled the color question, and if West Point refuses to recognize the settlement, let Con gress pass an act and settle West Point wipe it out and start anew. On Monday, the men who pleaded pailty to the charge of " corrnptly eo liciting" members of the late Legisla ture to vote for the "Riot Damage act," came before the Dauphin county Court for sentence. They are, Charles 1$. Salter, William 11. Kemble, Jesse R. Crawford. William F. Rnmberger and Ktnil J. Petroff. They were filled, each $1,000, and sentenced to the Kastern Penitentiary for a period of one year, io separate and solitary con noemect at labor. . "Divide Time" A New Name for Bull-Dozing. A Charleston dispatch says: The month piece of the Gary faction, the Abbeville Medium, after protesting against the machine" work of the Hampton-Hagood ring, in the last issue, turns its attention to the Re publicans and says: "The Radical Convention will be held some time next week to elect delegates to the State Convention and agree upon some plan of action for the campaign. It would be a good idea for some of the 'red-shirt' Democrats to hang around town in case of emergency and to 'divide time' with the reviving rascals. The campaign has begun and we cannot afford to be any less active than our political opponents." Divide time" is a less offensive term than intimidation and bull-dozing," but it has the same meaning. Dem ocratic speakers, escorted by well armed "red-shirt" cavalry companies, take cliarge of the speakers' stands at Republican meetings, and the Re- lnililim.HR. linloKu fliv lora til lw'ilr themselves cursed ami abused, dis - perse and go home. It was the uietli od successfully applied in 1876 and in 1S7S, and there is every reason to believe, and the reorganization of the red shirt" companies warrants the assertion, that it will be resorted to in the ensuing campaign. The ipies tion almost daily asked by Republi cans is : "Will the Republicans of the North iierrnit this great outrage upon our rights aud lilierties J" In San Francisco there is an ex preacher named Kallock. In the same city there is or was an editor named De-Young. About eight months ago Kallock, while delivering a Biieet h, reflected severely on tin character of the mother of De-Young. The editor drove in a closed carriage to the place where the ex -preacher then was, had him called out and without trivinir him an opoortunitv to defend himself, shot him. It was an unmanly act The ex-preacher did not die, but recovered, and is now in good health. Recently there have utuLH. xvev;iiLiy mere lllive been ugly personal publications, in lamph!et form, issued against Kal-1 lock. He blamed De-Young for is- De-Young for is- suing the pamplet On last Friday a, ess pleasing and whose sin evening a son (also a preacher) of the j centv anJ earnestness n working out ex preacher delilerately walked intolLw thoughts were very apparent: the office of De-Young, and, without 1 but "Is thought itself seemed to have giving himself a chance to defend I uo more ration to the moral needs himself, shot him five times, usuv a iof ,aaukln'1 than the song of a cana revolver. The editor died instantly, j "7 """J- I cannot tell which made It was an unrm&dv, a cowardly act i me, tbe more heavy-hearted the but not more unmanly than was the K.'bt8 'tnrday or the Bounds of attack on Kallock. The ex-preacher I ndM j is Mayor of San Francisco. If the "A WsPatch from Des Moines, Iowa, living De-loung (also an editor) hasy,,; Tie Supreme Court has had me uniiues in uia uram oroiuer, before it a case from Jasp-jr county, the prolwbihty is that he will shoot ; wherein a Greenbacker and an Anti both preachers. If it were not for ! Monopolist agreed to take a county the wholeside demoralization that j office for less than the legal salary, follows the work of such men, it were j aI1J to return the surplus to the best to allow them to settle the dis- j county if elected. The decision was put in their own bad way; but as that the election was void and the other people are likely to become ! proffijr a bribery of the voters." lnvoieo, me uutuoniy oi oau i raa- cisco should put its strong hand on them. The fewer sermons from such preachers, and the fewer articles from such editors, the better for the vhole people. Tbk fact thai colored people are leaving the SoTfllr in great numbers, is an importaut fact, (me that is the cause of no little thoifcbt in the t minds of people, who ask themselves, j Why do the colored people leave the South ! hat effect will their leaving have on the community ? What effect will their presence have on the com munity where they locate ? They go in great numbers to Kansas. The JVttrth .American of the 17th inst pub lished the following relative to the colored refugees in Kansas : Since the first of November the Committee has received and forward e l for the relief of the colored refu gees in Ivan bus $1700 in cash, and 211 packages of supplies, consisting of clothing, betiding, crockery, kitch en utensils, building hardware, seeds, Bibles, school books, etc., in value not less than $12,000. To the sup ply of clothing many private individ uals as well as Dorcas societies and sewing circles, have contributed. A large portion of these donations have come from anonymous sources, but whenever the name and address of the donor could be ascertained writ ten acknowledgment has been made. At least one-third came from New Knglaud, a few from New York and Delaware, and the remainder from New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Free transportation was procured not only from several of the points of shipment to Philadelphia, but also from Philadelphia to Kansas. For their liberality in this respect ac knowledgments are due the Clyde and Wiosor steamship lines and the Pennsylvania and Chicago and Alton llailroads. The distribution of these snpplles has leen entrusted to Mrs. Klizalieth L. Comstock, who, in coojeration with the Governor of the State and the Kansas Freeduien's Belief Asso ciation, has, with most self sacrificing devotion, given herself to this work for the past five months. The most reliable estimates place the imui!er of refugees who have reached Kansas in the last few months at not less than 20,000. They come in families, not only the able-bodied men and women, but the old people and the childreu, most of them very destitute, and their suffer ings have been severe. There seems to be no decline in the movement. Mrs. Comstock writes : A sternly stream of emigration con tinues. The refugees come to To peka at the rate of 200 to 300 per week. We hear from different arts of the State of fresh arrivals in still larger numbers, and in great destitu tion. They are crowding in faster than they can be cared for." The exodus is principally from Louisiana and Mississippi, but is spreading into other States, and is likely this spring to be very large. For seventeen years these poor people have been looking for the re lief which emancipation promised them. It has not come, and it should lc no surprise to ns that they should at length seek this relief in emigra tion, as oppressed ieop!e have ever done. The friends of the refugees do not propose to support them in idleness. Every endeavor is made at once to distribute them where home and em ployment can be had. Their readi ness to take the positions found for them, and the ahicrity with which they enter npon work, evidence that the emigration is of the better sort, and the representations made as to their general good conduct and so briety are among the most gratifying features of the work. Very few of these people can be put upon their feet at once, and made wholly inde pendent Under the most favorable circumstances to be looked for, most of them will need help to help them selves. Senator Logan on Grant. Logan' Chicago Speech, Aril Iti. It is claimed by some that General Grant after all his great services for his country in military and civil life, is ambitious. Qesar, after he had led the Roman legions victoriously in every hostile country, was assas 6inr.led by his friends because he was said to be ambitious. Welling ton was stoned in the streets of Lon don by a populace who had been defended aud honored by his sword. Abraham Lincoln, toward the close of his first administration, was bit terly reviled and antagonized by pro- ifesswl political friends, on the as- sumption that he sought his second j f j ' Presidential term. General Grant fceems, is not to have immunity from tLe malice of ingrate, for at the head of those attempting to or ganize an army of malcontents in this State is one who was treated most generously by him when he was in military and civil command. But in this instance detraction and defama tion will fail in their work, for the man whom the world has honored as man was never honored before, will not le deserted nor dishonored by the people of his own State of Illi nois. r iifsaid that there is no city on the Americ-an continent that has so many petty religious cliques as Bos ton. A corresjondent, writing from there, says : " I went with the throng 10 uear a ""nous orthodox preacher. 1 1 fult myself in a theatre ; for j Vr3eTt w-'rmon and music seemed but 1 " exhibition of human vanity and ! P1 sclf-dhiph-y- There was no up- 1 . - I - fting, no light 1 rheton;- In the i ht." a f'W-ous libe uiuii, uu ngui. ont or pyroteennic evening I went to i ntar a lilH10U8 liberal preacher, whose Ice DEALER had a $10,000 stock or pile of ice on the shore of Lake Cliamplain. On Monday a week the whole stock slid into the lake. The loss to dealers is estimated at $12,000. STORM IN MISSOURI, i Man j Ptoplt Kilfeit Mart Ptc'plt 1 111 a sr. a - iroumieuuretu uetiructumy Property. A dispatch on tbe 20th, from St Louis, Mo., says : Tbe first dispatch di rect from Marahfield waa received late last night It gives tbe following ac count of tbe storm . This town and county were visited by one of tbe most destructive eyclones on record last evening. .After pawing through sev eral miles of country in Cbristiau, Green and Webster counties, destroy ing everything in its pathway, leveling bouse., bams, mills and limber, it struck this town about six o'clock. Kye wit nesses of the approaching storm say it waa a frightful iookiug black cloud, lined with fleecy white, funnel-shaped and moving in tbe manner of a screw propeller. It moved with wonderful velocity, literally destroying and blow ing away everything in its path, wbicb was about balf a mile wide at tbis point. Trees were twisted off, tele graph wires snapped, and the bark was literally peeled trom small trees; bouse were blown from tbeir founda tions, cattle, bogs, sheep, borsea and poultry were whirled into tbe air and carried a great distance. Tbe noise of j the storm, the crash of falling houses 1 .1. -r . : c i i auu luc screams ui imiueu people made a scene of horror that beggars description. What was a beautiful, pleasaut town of 800 inhabitants twenty-tour hours ago is now a waste of des olation. Out ot '200 dwelling not more tban twenty are left standing, and but few of those remaining are uninjured. Of tbe business houses around tbe pub lie square all but three are utterly de molished, and tbeir contents blown away, burned or badly damaced. About j 3 o'clock a freight train from Spring l field brought about 300 persons with ! provisions and medicines for tbe wound- ed. As rapidly as tbe bodies of the i dead and wounded could be extracted ! freni tbe ruins they were prepared for i interment The wounded were con veyed to tbe on'y available structure left standing, tbe publics school build iujt, which was not badly damaged. It was turned into a hospital, and there are utw fifty wounded in tbe building under tbe care of noble women from Lebanon and Springfield, wbo are doing all in tbeir power to alleviate the suf ferings of those noder tbeir chireo. ; Tbe loss by tbis terrible calamity is i estimated at from $350,000 to $400, ( 000. Of tbe eight hundred inhabitants j of Marshfield wbo yesterday had happy j and comfortable homes seven-eighths j are without bouses, clothing, food or J means to procure tbeni. The destitu j tion and suffering are terrible. A great many bodies are lying in the Court House. Of tbe total number killed, which is not far short of one hundred, cot more than a doxen have been buried. TUE STOHM EI.SE WHERE. Marshfield is the eounty seat of Web ster county and 215 miles from St Louis, situated ou a plateau of tbe Oiark Mountains, but not of great al titude or particularly exposed. One of tbe incidents of the storm was the find- : ing of a child lodged in the crotch of a J tree thirty feet above the ground. It ; nas but slightly Lurt. - At Gray's Creek, four miles from Jefferson City, seven bouses were demolished and tbeir inmates injured. A log house was blown into a deep cut on tbe Missouri and Pacific Railroad at this point, and a passenger train from the west ran into it Tbe engine was detached and the engineer, James McCourt, and tbe i fireman, James Murphy, were severely 1 wounded. A dispatch from Fulton, Calloway county, sajs tbe storm which ' passed through this eounty on tbe night j of tbe 18th did an immense amount of daaisge to farm property, besides de i stroyiog a number of bouses. At New rjlooniheld .urs. Pi am waa Killed by a falling bouse and a negro girl was killed by lightning- Another special from California, Manitau county, sajs that the storm of tbe 18th instant, wbicb visited the southern portion of that eounty, did great injury to tbe proper ty and killed and wounded a number of persons. The storm first struck the little town of Rarrettsville, destroying almost every bouse there ; then passed down the valley toward North Moreau, demolishing nearly all tbe buildings in its track. Tbe following is a partial list of those wbo were killed : A. Y. Campbell, two children of Coridion Green, Reuben Kanton, Mrs. Scbaffer, Jack Watson, two children and Henry MoKinney and a son of George Harter. Several others were killed and between twenty and thirty wouuded, bnt tbeir names were not ascertained. A dispatch from Janesville, Wis., ajs that for ten miles along tbe track of the storm evidences of destruction of property were seen which it would take over $100,000 to replace. Churches, dwelling-houses, barns, fences, orchards etc, were much damaged, and some persons received dangerous injuries. 1 be State L Diversity at Champaign, Illinois, suffered severely by the etoroi. A large portion of tbe new main build ing was unroofed, and tbe old Univer sity building, used as a dormitory, was wrecked, the western portion of it being leveled to tbe ground. 1 be students just escaped in time. Many of the buildings in tbe city were badly dam aged and minor casualties were report ed. 1 Paso, Illinois, reports that the damage there by tbe storm will aggre gate many thousands of dollars. Tbe storm seems to have extended over a very large part of the State. Great destruction of property and loss of life occurred within a radius of fifty miles of Jefferson City. Tbe bouss of Mr. Baker, five wiles from tbat city, was totally destroyed and the whole family swept away in it, injuring them severely. The house of Mr. George Spubr was totally wrecked, besides a roof being lifted from tbe ground floor, leaving tbe family unhurt. The bouse of Mr. Wade was blown down and car ried a considerable distance, and Jo seph and Virgil Wade were injured. Mrs. John Zimmerman, living near Wade's, had ber bip crashed. Tbe farm building of Mr. Myers was torn to pieces, and Henry Eggers bad bis leg broken and Mr?. Antweiler waa badly hurt Loos Gordoon waa lifted in tbe air and carried some distance, but was not injured. It is repotted that great damage and loss of life oc curred at Russellville, thirty-five miles southwest of Jefferson City, and in Morgan eounty, but nothing definite has been received from there. In Cal loway county, in addition to those men tioned last night, tbe houses of Ike Merti, John Herring, Oscar Milg and R. II. Dunn were demolished. A great amoirot of damage was done to orher dwelling and out-hoaxes. A report from Texas county s'syi : Tbe town ot Licking is very badly torn up, nearly one-balf of tbe place being destroyed, bat no details have been re ceived. Eighty-one persons are now known to be dead in Marshfield, abd four more deaths aie expected to-tiight. Tha fol lowing bave died since last night : Lear Evans, Corn Crjsman, D. .1). Smith and bis three children, Mollie, George' and Orange. Nearly all the inhabi tants of tbe town are wounded, and fifty or more of them are seriously hurt, and no doubt many of them will die. There are a good many dead children and negroes whose names cannot be learned. - - AIIHT10M.. DISPATCHES. MaRsiiriELK, April 21. Seventy one victims of Suuday'a storm bave been buried, and some twenty five more are in a dying condition. The number seriously wounded is about one hun dred aud fifty. A baby eighteen months old, wboee mother was killed and all its friends wounded, was fouod on Monday in a ravine north of tbe town, where it bad lain all night. It is now doing well. Another child two jeara old, which was found on Monday afternoon in a tree, where it bad been nearly twenty -four hours, was claimed yester day by its parents, wbo live two miles and a balf away. Tbe vbild's aerial flight must have been over three miles. It was bruised bat not dangerously burt Various kinds of property, such as wagons, are being claimed tbat were blown three or four miles. It is re ported tbat from thirty to forty persons were killed by the spurs of the tornado in tbe surrounding eountry, and tbat the town of Corsicana is as badly wrecked as Marshfield. A Strange Statement. .f White Child Tarns BtwkTh Pig. Meat Thtvry. I Tlie following strange statement : comes from Philadelphia : Yor over sixteen months an np-town pbysieiab has been attending a case of tliseuse that is so rare that the like of it has never lecn known, or, at least, re corded in medical works. It is a case of real melanosis, or pigmentation, where the pigment, or melamemia, as it is technically called, which gives j color to the hair and eyes, pervades the whole body. A boy born of white parents, and crfectly natural in color at his birth, turned under the disease as black as a full blooded ne gro. The parents live at No. 1307 Lemon street, the father, John Salter. Ieing a mechanic. Ten months after his marriage, there was born to the couple a fine and apparently healthy boy. The infant thrived, and prom ised to develojte into a robust man. He was a beautiful child, with fair complexion, dark eves and silky, dark brown hair, which grew in profusion. But in a few days the parents were alarmed at a remarkable change that was coming over the child. He grad Uiilly grew dark. At first his skin became a pale yellow, then deepened into a saffron hue, and then, to the terror of the parents, grew darker yet The color was uniform all over the IkkIv, except at the joints, where it was a little darker, and in the palms of the hands, where "it was lighter. The once brown hair grew stiff and j jet black, and the eyes also grew ! darker, so that the line between the pupils and the iris could not be dis tinguished. In spite of medical treatment the boy became worse, and grew very weak, all the time the color of his skiu deepening. At List he became as black as a full blooded ne gro. Then he was attacked with con vulsions which grew more frequent and violent until they threr.tened the child's life. It was in one of these that Dr. Reynolds was called in. He succeeded in curing the spasms, and then devoted his attention to the strange disease which afflicted the child. He at once recognized it as melanosis or pigmentation, which is mentioned in the books in a general way, but there is no case given where it had develoed all through the body. This was over sixteen months ago, the child being then thirteen months old. Since then the boy has greatly improved, by degrees lccoming lighter, until now he is of a light chestnut brown color. Since Dr. Reynolds has had the case in charge the child has been visited by over two hundred physicians. Dr. Reynolds thinks the over pro -duction of pigment, which caused the cliange in the color of the skin, is now checked, and the pigment will gradually be absorled as the child becomes stronger. He has two up per and two lower teeth, but no signs of any others. He is very backward for a child of his years ud ha a preternatural look of a-re. He in a very beautiful boy, however, and was i bo even wbefl he was blackest Dr. Reynolds intends writing an exhaustive paper on this strange case, and has been carefully noting every stige of the disease for that purpose. "Harvabd College has a Chinese professor, but it is said there is only one student at that college who is willing to study that language." STATE ITEMS. Williamsport hopes for a new silk manufactory. Tbe blue grass of Chester valley is promising an immense yield. Tbere is not a prisoner in tbe Sulli van eounty jail. A wife and child monrn tbe depart ure of Fraoklin R Stood t, wbo until last Wednesday kept the Mansion House at Mount Etna in Berks, bnt who is now missing together with about $5000 in money. A blue heron, four feet and a balf in boigbt, was bbot in Chester county last week. Erie has bicycle elnb with seventy nine members, one of whom made six teen miles in an hoar and a-balf the other day. Tbe Secoud Adventista in the North ern part of the State look for tbe great eonflagation some time in June. Tbe New Hanover, Montgomery eounty creamery is now using nearly 3,000 quarts of milk per day. j f oar lamoermeo killed sixty-seven snakes in tbeir cabin in Monroe eounty tbe other day. An old farmer named Ash brook was shot and killed at Jacksonville, Pa., on Sunday a week by some fishermen wbo were trespassing on bu farm. tfTATE ITEJIS. A Bethlehem bfttcber kills cattle ij efeetricity. Tbe piue forests iu Elk eounty are fill I ot rats. Tbe body of John Siney, the labor agitator, was followed to tbe grave by a procession over a mile in length. Governor Ilojt and Secretary Edge, of tbe State Board of Agriculture, bave beeu informed tbat cattle are being brought into Chester oouuty from' sec tions of Maryland where pleuro pneu mooia prevails. William W. Retter, of Reading, bas bad a piece of lead taken from his breast tbat was shot into it at tbe bat tle of Gettysburg. At fairs and festivals in the interior of tbe State tbere is invariably prixe for the best eater. In Washington eounty a gourmand got a butter-knife for eating aix large suits pies. " There are more organs and melo- deons owned in Berks, Lebanon and l.....t M.ni!. ,i..n ;n nth.r thr 1 oouoiies in the State. I it .i ij j i. Ida, the nine-year-old daughter of I r, nf H,nn.r Y,k ,,nn.v ! J T J i PostmaHter II. M. Zeiglef, of Hat of $150 worth of 'goods the other night, ; and $75 In nosfae st.u,t,s. ! uuiu, i'juuiifuujcr t iuuuit. wan lUIUCU . , e too of the . M. .b. a, in Jieris ,.. m. The lihtuing melted the rnH An Mrs. T.srn lia' tsirn. conntT mnd killed lour of his cow.i. ; n.n;Ai i nwA ).- r iBuii-a viiivj. iiio j oim ibjs.-t'u vi Erie wbo went crazy over tbe fifteen j puzzle, hag recovered and been releas- j ed, but the puzzle is still unsolved, j The Fottsville veterans celebrated ; tbeir march through Baltimore the oinrr nignr. Tbe Bradford eonnty bar is exercis- i ed over personal quarrel, during j wbicb General II. J. Madill seized Ml. I James Wood by the whiskers and rrat in bis face i E- . , i igbty rafts are anchored on the! Snjder county tide of tbe fiver op- posite Sunbury. Tbe 'Pennsylvania Reserve Associa- ! timi will have its annnai rimnimt at ! Ilarrisborc in July. tred letter, a wealthy Westmoreland county, bas tried three times to commit suicide ; tbe third tima be was successful, and he was buried last week. Fifty fo a bnndred derricks were blown down by a wind storm tbat Pfu- sed over tbe northern oil fiold on Fri day afternoon, a week, j Robert Trego, of Salisbury township Lancaster county, banged himself oa j Thursday. lie was sixty years old. Mrs. Ann Wenned took rat poison, but j fouod that in vaio, and so jumped into j a eistern, but tbe doctors will save bet life all tbe same. j Joseph Goldberg, wbo shot Edward i Mulbearn at Weissport, Carbon county i for suspected intimacy with his wife, j bas got off with a verdict of voluntary manslaughter. Tbe second trial of Mrs. Zell at Car lisle came to an enJ last week in a ver- diet of not pailty. i Ellen Keiger. a lass of fifteen, who i had been confined in tbe Reform School at Erie for cause, climbed down a rope of sheets from tbe fourth story tbe other night and escaped. Tbe colored citizens of northwestern Pennsylvania will hold a grind mass convention in Oil City, Wednesday, May 19, for tbe discussion of political matters and eonsideration of such other business as may eome before the meet ing. Judge Livingston, of Lancaster, lately administered a severe rebu'ee to tbe constables of tbat eounty and city for tbeir neglect of duty in reference j to unlicensed groggerie and haunts of the prostitutes and gamblers, because tbey feared tbe political influence of such people. It is estimated tbat there are now over 2,000 rafts between Lackawana and Easton, on tba Delaware river. Each raft eontaios about 00,000 feet of lumber, makiug a total of 120,1)00,000 feet on the way to Philadelphia. Tbe lumbering season this year has been rather unfavorable on account of high winds wbicb drove the rafts against rocks and sand-bars, in many cases wrecking them. j Lewis Robinson, tbe Chester county j farmer wbo was recently arrested for alleged complicity in several robberies, is understood to bave absconded. He was last seen in Philadelphia, where he purchased on Monday a week a tick et for some point in tbe west. His wife was arested jesterday for com plicity, and taken to Westchester where she was placed under $2000 bail. As Mrs. Angie Bach, a woman in Whitehall township, Lebigh eounty, was scolding ber children, the neigh bors, a hired girl and every-body in general, ber husband entered and in terposed a mild word. She opened ber meutb for an angry reply, but a spasm contracted ber cheek, her lower jaw fell, and sbe could neither speak nor i shut her moutb; ber touoge hung out, and ber eyes nearly started from tbeir sockets. Sbe bad dislocated her jaw bone in ber violent effort to make a stinging reply to her husband. A surgeon was called, who reduced the dislocation, bound up her bead and prescribed a quiet diet. GENERAL ITEMS. The suit of James Wbalen against Gen. Phil Sheridan, for $420,000, the value of personal property in tbe large Killone plantation, in Louisiana, from wbicb be was ejected by Gen. Sberi dan's military order, bas been appealed to tbe United States Supreme ( onrt Buffalo thinks tbat onr boy revival ist, Rev. Thomas Harrison, is insane. He said one evening tbat twenty peni tents were in the chancel, though there were only five, and that hundreds of bands were raised for prayers wbereas tbe nomber was exceedingly small. It is thought tbat over excitement bas crazed him, as be does some other very eccentrie things. We often bear of a man sneint be cause of the aleniation of his wife s af fections, bnt net er bas a woman sought damage for the loss of ber husband's esteem. In Brooklyn, tbat locality where oddities are especially prepared for a prnrient pobiic, Mrs Breimann sued Mrs. Pach, a widow, fur stealing ber husbands' affections, alleging tbat the latter bad offered tbe man tbe $10, 000 to eome and live with her; and of coarse he went At least tbe jury be lieved be did, as a verdict was return ed for tbe plaintiff in these words: "Tbat in our judgement no amount of money is equivalent to a blasted hearth stone: still we agree to assess the dam age $2,500." I GEilERaL' ITEMS- A revolution has broken out in Bo livia. Three little eirls discovered1 tbe tbe beadTess body of a young man in woods at Durham, 3. 11., Atlanta, Ga.,- is puzded over a per fect iron wedge that was taken from the middle of a blue granite rock found forty-six feet under the ground. They just want to find the man that put that wedge there that's all , . Time brings strange revenges for wrong-doing, and Sometimes the pun ishment follows so quickly on the sin ful act as to surprise the sinner in the enjoyment of the first fruits of his wickedness. A Missouri farmer fell in love with his step-son's wife, sold out his farm and eloped with her, taking with him twenty thousand dollars in cash and leaving his wife almost penniless. He turned his steps westward with his paramour, I and in Colorado lie was met iy an- other man. named Thomas, and his wife, the four joining company. . They traveled together Ui Walla alla,l . . . ti ; Wellington Temtory, where Thorns and hiH paramour, ani utole their paramour, ! uk ney.' This was the severest pun ; ishment tluit could le nuted out to , , . - -l 1 tbe erring conpie ; out a siraiiai iy, tuo?h ad.n.nis- , i severe puiiisnniem, iuoiiu auiiwus- ! tro according to law, will doubtless i overtake the blood-stained couple, as ... , . , . they liiive been arretted for the mnr- !r tier. Sew Advert Utemeut, PUBLIC SALE OF VALUABLE wy -ry r T1Cfl, 4 f I" it hi f 1 JLiS X A. X -l-is ' u 1 u mtlE nml.iinzned will MiT Tm s.Ue at J public vendue, at the portico of the Court llouae, in Mimmlown, Jitniata conn- ( tv. Pa., at 2 o'cloclt r. n , on ! ' ' ' i SATURDAY, MAY 15, 1830, jbe following described valuable leal e- ' tate, to wit s ! !" 1 acres and 99 perches of land I In Talker township, Donmiea by lamis m . . I J. 8. Lnkens. James Winner, unit II. II. i farmer aflKI.,.,. Tliiisa:iltilrfeTIMKKRTIt CT. : being well set with roek oak, white oak, ; yellow pine, chestnut and some pine. No. 1. 21 acres of Unit in Walker town- j ship, bounded by lauds of Mrs. Elizabeth j Ma-nirler, S eth Kerehner, D. Hickenbach and U. auker. Thto land is of excellent j quality, is m good efthiTation, H well set with timothr, and is highly valuable for by ami pasture, (trowing crop reserved. I Jio acre and 50 pVrches of land in I rVrnctmiglf trnrnsliip, bounded by kinds of Samuel Yeifth, DjvmI smith, Samuel Leo nard and David Kickenbarh's heirs. This is Timtor Land, ami is well set with Hue nf.H'K af Cb-trrt1t aud rock oak, and is easy of aeCess No. 4. 3 acres and 114 Yrches of land in r'eriuanajjh township, bounded by lands of B. V. Schweier. ami the Presbyterian Graveyard This Hold adfrim the borough of Jlitfl)mown, is very desirable for pnt-lots i i i . . , r a.. .. I . I'-. r oil lor RrK.miiirai pirKTCs. 11 is pun well set with timothy ami clover, (imwm; crop of wheat reserved. This lot will be sold in aiihdivision; of two, thren or lour parts, to suit purchasers. No. i. Two tracts of Mountain known as the - Macedonia trsrt " and the Roaring Kun tract," containing 8-1 arres, more or leu, situate in Fermanagh town ship, bounded west by lauds ol William K. (iraliam, east by lands ot SuloiitTand rrthers, and son lb by lands of James Burns' heir and Jackson Graham. These lands are well i timbered, there being a great iiauliiy off chestnut, roek oak, pine, hemlock, locust j and hk-kory thereon, and all lying verv con- I venient lo the Canal and Railroad. It will I be sold in two sepante tracts, if desired. j No. C A Lot of Ground in the borough of MiflUntown, 28 feet I rout on Maiu street i by 140 feet to an alley, liavuig thereon a goorl cistern ; bounded on the borth bv lot of A J. Patterson, on the sonch by lot ot Dr. Eldur, on the west by an alley, and on ; east by Main street, anu is one ol the most desirable building lots in the borough of Miltlintowo. No. 7. A Lot of Ground in Milllintown, fronting on Third street 2) teet, and ex tending east 1'JU fuel to an alley, hounded on tbe north by Lutheran Graveyard and on the south by limestone quarry lot. There is a coiulortable Dwelling-house on the lot that rents for $1 per month. The rent to go to purchaser from the 1st of June. No. t. A Limestone (Jiiarrv, fronting H teet on extension of Third street, in the borough of Miltliiituwn, and extending 14U feet to an alley, bounded on north by Lot No. 7, and on the south or lands of C. IS. North. No. !. A Lot on Third street in Milllin town, bounded on the south by lot of Mrs. Tnrbett, west by au alley, north Lr lot ol Miss Mary Kunner, having thereon erected a Frame Dwelling House and outbuildings. This is one of the most desirable prorties in Milllintown, the house being a very good one, in goiid repair, and the Ineation being particularly pleasant. No. 10. A Lot of !round on Orange street, Milllintown, bounded on the north by said Orange street, east by lot of Mrs. Mar garet Kurtx, south by an alley, and west bv lot of Jesse Hone, and having thereon erected a Frame Dwelling House and out buildings. Tbis is a very desirable prop erty, and now rents for $7.5' per month. Rent to go to purchaser from June 1, 1840. No. 11. A FARM in Fermanagh town ship, one mile east of Milllintown, on tbe Ceilar Spring road, bounded by lands of Jonas K. Keno, John Musser and Kurtz KaurTiuan, containing 5t acres and 117 perches of land. This (to pert y recom mends itself, being one of the most sightly ami attractive tariu homes in Juniata county. It has a large number of apple, peach, plum, quince and cherry tree in lull bearing con dition. Two never-railing Wells of most excellent water, with pumps in them, Tbe Buildings are good and there are plenty of them, and the land iiself is a garden, its yield in agricultural products, for live years past, being, it is llionghl, the largest in the county, to the acre. Growing ciops re served. TERMS OF SALE. Ten per cent, of the purchase money to be paid in cash wham the property is knocked down, or satislac torv security riven tor the rai ment of t . same wilhin 10 days. Terhis of i.jvmetit 1 of remainder of purchase money ol each ! property sold will be announced on day of sale. HOBKRT McMEKN MilBintown, April 2", 18W-3t. JUMATA VALLEY BAXK.im"y--'of a.". A as Hteel astfnMAKBrv M ww jurru.iiun.1, a WITH BRANCH AT PURT ROYAL. Stockholders Individually Liable. I. NHVIN IO.MERtlT, Prtmtt. T. VAN JKW1N, CosAirr. Diskctoisi J. Ncvin Pomeroy, Joseph Kothrnrk, George Jacobs, Philip M. Kepner, Amos G. Bonsall, Louis E. Atkinson. W. C. Pomeroy, STOcKttotDaas i J. Xevin Pomercfj R. E. Parker, rump m. nepnrr, Joseph Kothrock, George Jacobs, Bam'l HerT's Heirs, Jane JI. Irwin, Mary Kurti. Samuel M. KurU; l. Holmes Irwin, T. V. Irwin, t . B. Frow. John Ilertaler.- L.. K. Atkinson, W. C. Pomeroy, Amos G. BonMII, Noah Uertaler, Danifcl Stonfler. Charlotte Snyder. U- Interest allowed at the raid M X re cent, on months certitcatea, 4 per cent. g 12 months cert ideates. jn23,1873-tf Ltgtl JWwres. Assigned late fMeU Miller NOTICE i htnby pien that John Mil ler aud ile, of fwnuumgh luwnslnp, JdnUU count r, Fa., have made an assign ment fr the beoeHt of crwlitrs to the un dersigned. All persons indrlrfeU to sod estate are re.inesle.1 l niake payment, ami those having claims to present them, with out further dulav, lo SAMl'EL II. KIXZEK, As-is1"-April 27, imK - ArOITORS JtOTltCi (it Malttr of ike Estate of Jacob Slime- ling, decerned. j THK undersigned, appointed Anditor to j distribute 1 he balaiM-- in the hand ot ; Samuel Stimeling, Admii:itratr of Jacob j Stiiuvling, deceased, will attend to lh du- i ties of his nppnintuient at his othce in the i borough of ililiiiiiiowB, on j WEDNESDAY, MAY 5, lf0, j between the hours of 1 o'clock a. . and . 4 o'clock r. , when and where all parties ; interested may attend, or be foretei de-: barred irmu coining in upon said fund. j MASON IR.W IS, JmJitor. J March lHXO-tt j Dissolution notice. TVT OTICK is hereby given that the partner 1 1 ship lately exixtiiig between C . Wi- , ney and B. H. Cnfter, of Kat Salem, fa., ; under Ibo flrin Dame of Winer . Custer, . was dissidrrrf on tbe lth d.iy of Man-b, , 18MO, by mutual consent. All deUs owing j to the said rtnerlnp are to be received by j said C. ti. Wlney, and all demand isi the ! said partiienditp are to bo presented lo una for pat ment. C G. WINEY. B. ll.CL'STKK. East Sale, fa., March, 111, 1XHO. Executors' Notice. Estate of George .Hitler, dece.itd. LETTERS Testamentary on I In: e.tale of Ueorse Miller, late of Walker town ship, Juniata comity, di-ce-ised. having been granlrd lo ili undersigned, all persons indebted to said estate aru request- ; make pawuent, aim inose naima;. claims or demands are requested to make known the same without ilelav to Ill-VUV M MM I VI.' Wellington smith. March 21, lcW). tjentore. COURT SALE! BV virtue of an order of the Orphans' Court of Juniata county, will be sold by the Executors of the estate of Peter ' RuinbiTger, deceased, late of Greenwood township, Juniata county. Pa., at the man sion bouse on the premises, at one o'clock P. M.,on SATl'RDAT, JUNE 5th, lsso, The following real estate, to wit : A tract nf laud situate in Greenwood township, Juiii- : ata rrinnty. Pa., bounded by lands of Adam ; Will's devisees. Levi Light, Henry Kautf man, and lands lately owned by Jacob Diium, now Doty, Parker k. Co., containing 238 ACRES, more or less, about One Hundred ami Sev- ' enty Acres of which are cleared, and the J balance woodland, having t her. on erected a Weather-uoarileil Log Hqusb, j FRAME BANK BARN, Tenant House, Wagon .Sliest. Oraiu House. ' Hog Pen, and other outbuildings. i TERMS. Ten per cent, of the purchase mouey lo be paid on day of sale ; ten per ' ceuf. on continuation of sale by the Court. Twtniy-lhree ami one-third per rent, or the 1 purchase money lo be paid April 1, ltM,. when deed will be delivered aud possession given. Twrntythree and one-third per cent. In be paid A Til 1, ItWi, with interest ! Iroiu Ajril I, lt(, ami to be scenred by j Judgment. Thirty-three and one-third per. rent, id' the purchase money to remain in ' the premises during the natural hle-time j "f Catharinu Kumberger, widow of said i Pi-ter Rnn.berger, and the interest to be paid to ber annually on the 1st day of April : ot each and every year during said period ; : lirst payment of interest to be made Aitril I, IWJ, and to be secured by Judgment ; ' llie principal to be paid at, and immediately , alter her death. j ELIAS RUMBEftUEU, ; THOMAS Rl'MBKltliKR, : Executors of Peter Kutubergcr, dee'd. j April 7, lXt. j COURT SALE.! i BV virtue of an order of the Orphans' Court of Juniata rouutv, will be sold by the Executrix of the estate of Dr. C. L. Weimer, deceased, late ol Monroe town ship, Juniata eonnty, Pa., on the premises, at 1 o'clock P. M., on SATURDAY. JCNE Vilh, m The following real estate, towil : A certain house ami lot of ground situate in the town of Richtieid, Monroe township, Juniata county. Pa., bounded ami described as lol lows: On the north by an alley, on the east by an alley, on the south by Main street, ami on the west by lot of John S. Shelley, and having a front of about sixty live feel ou said Main street, and extending back about one hundred and twenty feet, with GOOD DVTELLKG HOI'S E, and outbuildings thereon erected. TERMS AND CONDITIONS Twenry- tive per cent, of the purchase money to be paid on confirmation ol sale by tbe Court ; one-half of tbe Balance on the first day of April. lfM. when deed will be delivered and possession given ; the remainder on the lirst dty of April, with interest from April 1, to lie secured by judgment. ELIZABETH WEIMKR. Executrix of Dr. C. L. tVeimer, dee'd March 2t, 1J0. C ACTIO. ALL persons are hereby cautioned against hunt ing or otherwise trespassing on the lands of the undersigned in Walker town- Samuel Aiiiier. Isaac Anker. David Auker. Joseph Auker. George Dysinger. JIe Tyson. Kurta kantrman. Keuben Hoist. Jonas Kauffman. ocll.5,'79 CAT TIO.T SOTICE. ALL persons are hereby cautioned against trespassing on lands orthe undersigned, in hunting, cutting timber, breaking down fences, fcc. H. L. McMeen. John Grey. Alexander Anderson I..i.B rtirii.K Jane McCulloch. n ct 22. 1879-tr CAITTIO.t. A LI- ""'""ns are hereby cantioned not to XX fish, hunt, break or open fences, or cnt WoO(t Or VOIIH9 thnlur nm in - H .1 Thompson J B Thompson Win O Thompson Davis Smith, Jr. Oct 9, 1878. T S Thompson E P Hudson Abram 3fcey C A 8 berrocr CAl'Tfoai. A LL Pwsons ,re hereby cantioned not to . h H 1!" ,.he,r d"gV rnn' or l'niselves to llsh, hunt, gather berries, break or open fences, or ctit wood or young Umber, or in aofy,hcnnnde7Jy M. K. Beshore. M. 4. J. n. Wilson. Henry Hartman. Porter Thompson. William Iletrick. David Sieber. aug7, 78 David Hetrlck. Thomas Benncr. Christian Shoatfstall John Motzer. Henry Kloss. NJetlce ta Trespassers. rTICfilhweb' We" tiu Persons found trespaasmg on tne ia.,,,,, the undersigned in Delaware township, either ing area or in any way whatever, will be dealt with a the law directa. R. W. BcwrnaiT. Gioaoc Srunii. way,1873-tf Uu'xmKEtn. Jihtertlmenl. t - In a compound of the virtues or sarsapa. rilla. stillinira, "nandrnkw. yellow dis k, with the iodide of potash ami him. all powj erful blood-makimj. blood-cleansing, ami life-sustaining elemrnfs. It is the xilvst, safest, ami in every way the moat rffn-tual alterarive medicine known or available to the publie. The sciences of medii-ine ami rhemistTy have never produced so valua Ide a reiiiedv, nor one so potent to rnn all diseases suiting from impurn M.. It cure-. Srrofnla, ami all srrnfaloas diseases, Krysipelas, Kos, or St. A a thony's Kire, Ilmples and Pact, grubs. Pustules. Blotches, Bolls. Ta. mors. Tetter, Humors, Suit Kheam, Scalil-hrnd. Ringworm, I leers. Sorr, Rheumatism, Merrurlal Disease. Nww ralgia. Female Wraknesses and lr regularities. Jaundice, Affections of th Mver, Dysprp, Kniaclatkin, and General Debility. By its searching and cleansing qnaliti It urjes owt the foul corruptions which ronfarrtinat- the Mood, ami cause 1c rantfi-TOtilt and decay. It stimulates ami enlivens til" vital functions. It pnuoTt enersy and sfrenirth. It restores ami prw serves health. It infuses new life ami Vi;?r tbroiitflMHit tlie whole system. N snTfererlPMii any disease which arises from Impurity of the Idood need desruir. wIb Will riv Aria's SAriRii.u a taif trial. Remember, the earlier the trial, the speeslicr tlie cure. Its recipe has 1en fnrnished to phvsi rians everywhere; ami they, reisienizjng Its superior qualities, administer it in tbeir practice. For noarlv fifty years Arm's S strAKJLLA has Iwen widely used, ami it Mow paawesses the confidence of millions of people who have exerience,l benetiLS Irotu its marvellous curative virtues. Prepare fcy Or. J. C. Ayer 4 Ce, Practical and AwalTOcal Chemists Lowell, Mass. SOLO BV ALL Iai-M.IST CI IITSBIM. 7 : Warner's Safe Kiinsy and Urer Care. . TYrbl prtpnmttmt HiwMii.T wru rfwifii? in th Wvirl'J Brilta'- Mnmm linl-i-ak. mtHi ALL 14 iai IUvr. mm Iriwnry -lui iVwtiiixHiiui- u I tie fcbrst onW-r to prrf of tri" !altfw. Kry-y,r l Jv- rrr- fff .taWMk TU1 tut Wm K o KtJC lit rur" WtriaUVu .Tft f thfWf .iia-iftft. r:ilt fur lhukrr S-U"t It --j ami lw4'fjirw WARNEP d 8AFE BITTERS. l.Bthi-hf Rltial !Hrilr.iiiMlif(niaUl-4 f VfT7 folfttftMMi i Biatr- hrM I twit MCtMM, Mmh ilhttm Uim-iH rft ali Ui!Hsw. It rifiaftjiloiiH! .Mhr-rkl Frw,w- tiwM nntl IH-hsn, mm lualiy Ct I ft r alltllwhrTfffw o-n pmum. Wi kp mrm of itn ntmn. ilj. Sr- vtavi iff !! IV lilMP- It 1 la tiw(t -w itM tafSlaf iXtMlisi V-ular l"th. litiw- ntwt !"; prw---, 3tjit-. WARMER'S SAFE NERVINE iM-fchr !: iiikI Klrt f?h)trtfVTniftfa w'- iSatMtm-aW mih! -Mrwlslm r",T', aV.prlln tr aV'iiw. arxl rHi-v- 5tyrvw frw trni im hr.olti im by -ir-s-sir- finish.. vv M-k. tisttijaJ url4. nni Oi-r . arr-r-. Jlrvvrftll :f-rlt llbiM4il IVtlf-HIMl MX h 'It ftuitv-il N''rv(. t itrvt r tiijurv th .tun WARMER'S SAFE PILLS rrti lii.nH iliiilf ami tttriv .ttmiiiii li-r Torrid Lirr. r.ti'r r-nraj CmUvibcii, DTfet. Bil u4 Ajmo. im1 ttll Da llst' w lriM r if frlv s:it r--fiUrlr Vihrr riUu w astro NjarTarr H. H.Wsrcer&Co.. Iwsfrf-f. S0CHE3TEB, K. T. WTTWr'tVABUa'a TI1K JUNIATA FAK.MFRS MUTUAL INSUMCE COMPANY, ilICALl!TERVIL.L.E, I A., ( Limit td to the Serrm Towwkip East of the Jnmialu Rirrr,) Insures ITouses, Kuniitilre, Merchandise, Barns and their contents. Live Stock, Jlc, against loss by Fire or Lightning. This L'oiuisiny kis. by its economical management, secured tlie confidence of the public, and has, during tbe lirst six months of Its existence, issued policies on property to the aggregate amount of $400,000,. and we have no hesitancy in predicting th.it in less tliau another six months it will reacll $1,000,000. The object of the association is .MUTUAL PROTECTION, and each member has an interest in the pru dent ami economical management of thir Company thereby attbrding a guarantee tor it proper control. Applications for iusnrance may be madu to the Secretary, who will either call ou yon, or promptly semi an agent. DiaccToas: Hon. Samuel Watts. W. II. Knouse. Joseph T. Smith. George Martin. John Niemand. William llarman. Jonathan Keiser. John N. Sloorc. William People. Hox. SAMUEL WATTS, Pres'l. W. II. Kxorsa, Sec'f. marl7-6ni XJIN DERT AKIJN G JW. STIMMEL lias opentsi n Unnder taking Establishment in JlilHintoa A riill stock of Burial Cases, Gaskets, Coffins, . and Burial Bobes always on hand. Goods suitable for every person and all classes. We agree to give good value every time. .Vo Farj Prices. Call at WaioiiT k. Gbatbill's Furniture Store, Crystal Palace, MirHintown. X. B. A new Plate Glass Hearse the heat in the county. Equipments complete in every respect. Jan. 28, lsVHO-6w . PRIVATE SALES. A FIKST-RATE FARM a TUSCAROR.i Valley, containing . 205 acres, about i'J acres clear. Two aets of buildings. No. 1, Log Honse, 20x21, plastered and pebbled ; Kitchen attached, 12x18; Spring, and also a Well of water near the door ; Stone Bank Barn, fOx'.X) ; Orchard. No. 2. New frame House, 28xS2, good cellar; Summer House, 14x20; Spring and Spring House; New Frame Bank Bam, 45x66; Wagon Shedj Good Tonng Orchard, of gTaf ted frnit, ta bearing condition. Will sell all, or half, t suit purchaser. The land is well adapted by aatnre for the raising of grain and stock. Plenty of lime stone. Tbe community i good. Churches ami school house conve nient. Terms moderate. For particulars call on or address C. MEYERS, Farmers' Grove, Juniata Co., Pa- A 0 D a week in your own town. Terms and $00 $- ontat free.. Address H. H tLicrr i. Co., Portland, Maine.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers