fia nti tr rtijt kutt M i tt'tj 1 1 1 H v y., w i . ia tw-Ljtlrtfa liiinniliinnlnmimnniin 8ENTINEL & REPUBLICAN MIFFLIXTOWN. Wednesday, July 20, IS1. B. F. SCHWEIEPv, fcMtXB AXD riOPBIETOR. Opium eating is on the increase in this country. Gev. Loxostkeet is United SUtes Marshal of Georgia. Tei ice in the arctic region is just beginning to break np. The crops in Germany are report el at one-half to two-thirds full. Obiscoji did not eat during a period of 45 days, but he drank a quart of water a day. Cases of 6tin stroke are not con fined to America ; the telegraph rc jKjrts many coses from across the sea. It was singular that l'ottstown, IV, (should have two suicides in one day, as was the cjikc on the 11th inst One man hanged himself, the other luaa cut bis own throat A cibcus that was advertised to show at Wilkesbarre, passed that town be cause of the small-pox in the place. The men became alarmed and refused Iti stop there, feuriag the disease. The New York Legislature in joint convention elected a man nruned War ner Miller, to the United States Sen ate, to fill the long term made vacant by the resignation of Thomas C Piatt Mr. Conklings successor has not yet been elected. The Parisian agricultural journal. Bulletin des Halles, sars : "The wheat crop will be fair in the southeast of Prance, poor in the south, good in the west and center, fair in the eat-t good in the northwest and north, and poor in the northeast." Geiscoji completed his fast of forty-five days in Chicago, on Tuesday a week. About two hundred people were present to witness him break the fast He delivered a little speech n the good effects of fasting. The first food taken was a glass of milk. Last Friday night an astronomer at Ann Arbor, Michigan, discovered a comet It is not visible to the na ked eye. It is believed to the comet of 1812, or the Eneke comet, that runs its orbit in a period of about seventy years. If it is the Eureka comet, it will become vuauie to tne naked eve in October. Goxco3 Chubceill, of Arkansas, wit last Thursday apart as a day of fasting and prayer for the recovery of President (iarfield. The day was closely observed. The business of the State was almost entirely su pended. The State offices were a'l dosed, and meeting was hel.l in all of the churches. The Philadelphia Record says : The sixth boy victim of the toy pistol in Itnrhestcr, N. Y., died yesterday. There have VxM-n six fat:d cases from the Eanro deadly plaything in Balti more and six in lii-ading. LVisi year fifteen juvenile deaths ia this city were the fearful fruits of celebrating the Fourth of July with tliis weapon. This year the toy pistol was sup pressed Result : No cliildren dead of lockjaw. Moral : Shut down on it again next j-eur and every year. We acknowledge the receipt of a pamphlet copy of an address of Franklin B. Gowen. 'On the Position which the city of Philadelphia should occupy to tho Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, to its Transportation Lines, and to the Railway Problem," delivered upon the invitation of citi zens of Philadelphia at the Academy of Music, Thursday, June 16, 1881. It is a document that contains a great deal of information that is new to the public. Alkeakt certain mos are talking of the efforts that w ill be ma le to acquit the mur derer Guiteau. The country is in no mood to endure a foolish hair-splitting scene oyer G uiteau ia court. There is no doubt of his guilt, and what the country demands is a speedy trial and sentence: under the law. It has a weakening effect upon popular gov-j em merit that bad men bate the audacltv j and deviltry to deliberately shoot the Chief j Magistrate of the nation without provoca tion having been given ; but it would be in finitely more weakening in its effects upon popular government if the murderer should be taken into court and his case there be wrangled over by a lot of lawyers. Within the next ten years great fortunes will le made in Mexico, by the men that go there as skilled me chanics, or with money. Jt is, how over, not a profitable place for un skilled labor, as hands are plenty and ! can be obtained at 12 to 40 cents a j day. Skilled mechanics receive from 575 to $175 a month. A man with a little nionev csu buy property cheap. Luid can be bought at 20 cents per acre to $2i) per acre the be6t of laud. It would be a first-rate place to bank in. as there are only one or two banks in the country, and instead f paying depositors, they charge for taking care of the deposits. A writer says that Guiteau should le taken before a magistrate, where all accused people have a right to be t liken and heard, and further, that ha may be released on a writ of ha but corpus, all of which may do juite well to talk about and act upon in cases whore there is doubt of the giii!t of the party imprisoned. A man accused, is a different man from 1 lie nun that is a confessed assassin. The spirit of au examination is in tended for the lienetit of people that have hee-sx cliarged with a crime, as to-the commission of which there i doubt There is ho doubt as to who t.hot President Garfield. Exam ination as to the guilt of Guiteau, before a squire, would be a mockery of ju-stice, and would be a natural crime almost as great as the shoot ing of the President As to the ha beat corpus, there, too, the object and tnrit is for the benefit of such peo pte as raay be suffering by false im prisonment Its provisions were never intended to meet such clear rases of natural crime as that which Guiteau has committed. The great pity is that there is no statuary law tr met such a crime as that of which biutuau is fjufllj. A VEsmrso Presbyterian danced. Ha ni SeMioned unfavorably. Be appealed to Presbytery. That body decided against him. In October lie expects to carry the question up to the Synod of Erie. If t!e Synod decides against him he proposes to go the General Assembly in May with the question. lie is right in carrying his ques tion from one ecclesiastical body to another, for in that way he will get a rule from the church's ecclesiastical bodies on tba ques tion. As the question now stands the Pres byterian church has no rule on the subject of dancing. The question is left to the Session of each and every congregation. If the Presbyterian Church Government all the way through were so congregational as to leave other general questions to the Ses sions, it would seem like just the proper thing to do to leave such a question as dancing to the Session of each congrega tion, to manage for itself. But the eccle- sUstical bodies of the Presbyterian Church i are not simply advisory bodies ; they bavej the power to lay down rules and enforce them upon their membership. With the power to rule in favor oi a question or against a question, it seems like begging a point to say to the respective congregations, your Session may settle the question as I suits them. The Session of a church may not bare more jealousy or unkind feeling than is usually fonud among that number of gentlemen any here else, but it may happen that when some one of those to wards whom they have not the kindest chris tian feeling dances, they may rule against the dance, not so much because of the dance, but more because of against the member that danced. a feeling A rule of Presbytery, Synod, and General Assembly, or a rule of General Assembly would settle the question and save a great deal of con tention among members down in the con gregations. If the higher ecclesiastical body say there is no sin in the dance, if properly conducted, that will end it. II the higher ecclesiastical body says there is sin in the dance, no matter how conducted, that wi'l end the contention down in the congregations and prevent a great deal of unpleasant feeling and scandalous talk among the membership. Societt in Washington, D. C, has had a sensation within the past few days. The wife of a well-knoan scientific gentleman was told that her husband had rented one of his houses to a captivating widow, and that be almost daily cilled to see the widow. To satisfy herself she called ; no one was ia but a maid servant. She inquired of the maid, Who owns this house" The an swer was, Captain so and so." The wife then walked in and searched the premises ; she found letters that her husband had writ- .. .. ....... ... .. ......i a .......... no longer possesses the undivided heart of bcr husband. Proceedings in divorce have been brought by the wife. Governor Blackburn, of Kentucky, set apart July 14 as a day of prayer for the rc-covery of President Gar field. The day was quite well ob served throughout the State. The Yankee is scratching his head over ths fact that the murderous attempt on the life of the President should be so publicly disapproved of by the South, and that the chief men of that portion of the country should be the first to publicly officially ask the people to pray for the recovery of the stricken President Ex-Senator Mebeimon, of North Carolina, is reported to have said recently in a speech at a prohibitory meeting in Reidsville, that State : "I have never meddled with liquor 1 I have never drank it, have hardly kept it as medicine in my family, and yet it has meddled with me, has made my boy a wandering vagabond, has broken my wife's heart ; yes, when I was asleep, thinking him at home in the house, he was being made a drunk ard in the bar-rooms of Raleigh." " The English language dates back to about A. D. 455. The term " Anglo-Saxon" was not then known, but is a later name, applied by historians, because, at the time of the early con quest of the island called Britain, the conquerers were chiefly composed of two tubes, the Angles and the Saxons. The English, or " Anglo-Saxon," lan guage must have been spoken in the country whence the Angles and Sax ons came, but no trace remains. The early English was a simple language, its words being all, or nearly all. of one 6tock, now known as the Piatt deutsch branch of the Teutonic stock. It remained in this condition without any material change for about COO yeai'o or until the year of the Nor man conqist A. D. 10CG. The lan guage spoken or the Normans was what is now called Noinian-French, and the English tongue, by amalga mation with the Norman-French, soon lost its distinctive forms and nicer inflections. It however, remained Anglo Saxon in its essence and struc ture. The English language of to-day is composed of the following elements (1) Pure English, or "Anglo Saxon ;" (2) British, or Celtic: (3) Danish, or Norse: (4) Norman-French ; (5) Lat in; (G) Greek : (7) miscellaneous, or words adopted from all languages, including Arabic, Hebrew, and even those of the savages of Africa and America," General Grant has a new grand son. RTATE ITEMS. The farmers of Warren county de sire to wage a war of extermination against the English 6parrow, and talk of petitioning the coining Leg islature to repeal the law which im poses a fine for killing them. The Franklin Repository says : On Wednesday last, as the Mont Alto train under charge of conductor Sam uel Horn was coming down the heavy grade at Pond Bank, the engineer noticed a little child trying to drive a wayward hog from the track. The whistle was sounded and the brakes pulled with all the energy of men trying to save an innocent life. Just as t he engine was on the the point of striking the child, the. hog dashed off the line, currying the youngster with it, and the train rolled by. All hands drew a lyg iTeath of congratula tion and passed a vote of thanks to the porker for its timely action. Mrs. Henry Berger, of Maple Hill, Lycoming county, broke her neck on the 18th wit, by an accidental falL John Burn, of Pittsburg, was in stantly killed at tht place by a man running against him while running a foot-race. i Sally Boggs, of Masseysburg, Hunt-; ingdon county, fell into a cistern on ' Saturday a week and was drowned. ' A Statement. The following statement explains itself : Washtxctox, D. C. July 11 United States District Attorney Corkhill has furnished the following statement for publication, in order to correct cer tain erroneous assertions which have been made relative to Guiteau, the would-be assassin of President Gar field: The interest felt by the public in the details of the assassination, and the many stories published, justify me in stating that the following is a correct and accurate statement con cerning the points to which reference is made : The assassin, Charles Gui teau, came to Washington city on Sunday evening, March 6, 1881, and stopped tt the Ebbitt House, remain in? only one dav. He then secured a room in another part of the city, and has boarded and roomed at va rious places, the full details of which I have. On Wednesday, May IS, 1881, the J ftsujn determined to Liurder the j President. He Litd Neither U10Uy nor pistol at the time. About the last of May he went into U Aleara s store, corner of Fifteenth and F streets, in this city, and examined some pistols, asking for the largest calibre. He was shown two, similar in calibre and only different in the price. On Wednesday, June 8, he purchased the pistol which he used. i i .: i . 1 - : 3 iMn 1. 1 : for which he paid 10, ho having in i the meantime Ixirrowed Mo of a gen tleman in this citj- on the plea that he wanted 4o pay his board bill. On the same evening about 7 o'clock he took the pistol and went to the foot of Seventeenth street and practised firing at a board, firing ten shots. He then returned to his boarding place and wied the pistol dry and wrap ped it in his coat and waited his op portunity. On Sunday morning, June 12, Gui teau was fitting in Lafayette Fark and saw the President leave for the Christian Church on Vermont ave nue, and he at once returned to his room, obtained his pistol) put it in his hip pocket, and followed the Pres ident to church. He entered the church, but found he could not kill him there without danger of killing some one else. He noticed that the President sat near a window. After church he made an examination of the window, found he could reach it Jfhon ? double, and that from , I , , , , . . , . em mrougu me nea.t wituout, kui insr any one else. The following Wednesday he went to the church, examined the location and the win dow, and became satisfied he could accomplish his purpose, and he de termined therefore to make the at tempt at the church the following Sunday. Guiteau learned from the papers that the President would leave the city on Saturday, the 18th of June, with Mi s. Garfield for Long Branch ; he therefore determined to meet him at the depot He left his boarding house about 5 o'clock on Saturday morning, June 18, and went down to the river, at the foot of Seventeenth street, and fired five shots to prac tise his aim and be certain his pistol was in good order. He then went to the depot, and was in the ladies' waiting room of the depot with his pistol ready when the Presidential party entered. He says Mrs. Gar field looked so weak and frail that he had not the heart to shoot the Pres ident in her presence, and. as he knew he Would have another opportunity, he left the depot He had previous ly engaged a carriage to take him to jail. On Wednesdny erening the Presi dent and his son and, I think, United States Marshal Henry went out for a ride. The assassin took his pistol and followed tkeiu, and watched them for some time, in hopes ih carriage would stop, but no opportunity was giv.:. Ou Friday ever, In. r. July 1. Gui teau was sitting on the seat in the park opposite the White House, when he saw the President come out alone. He followed him down the avenue to Fifteenth street, and then kept on the opposite site side of the street up t uteentn until tne President entered the residence of Secretary Blaine. He waited at the corner of Mr. Mor ton's late residence, corner of Fif teenth and H, for some time ; and then, as he was afraid he would at tract attention, he went into the alley in tiie rear of ilr. Morton s residence, examined his pistol and waited. The President and Secretary Blaine came put together, and he followed them over id the gate of the White House, but could gei po opportunity to use bis weapon. On the morning of Saturday, J uly 2, he break fasted at the Rig"S fcfcnse about 7 o'clock He then walked up into the park and sat there for an hour. He then took a one-horse car and rode to Sixth street ; got out and went into the depot and loitered there ; had his shoes blacked ; en gaged a hackman for $2 to take him to the jail ; went into the water closet and took his pistol out of his hip pocket and unwrapped the paper from around it which he had put there for the purpose of preventing the perspiration from the body damp ening the powder ; examined his pis tol carefully ; tried the trigger, and then returned and took a seat in the ladies' waiting room, and as soon as the President entered advanced be hind him and fired two shots. These facts, I think, can be relied upon as accurate, and I give them to the pub lic to contradict certain false rumors in connection with this most atrocious of atrocious crimes. GENERAL ITEMS. The question of raising food fishes at a profit bas been tested by a man in Sonoma ennnty, California, who bas sold over $700 worth of carp this year from a pood covering less than an acre of ground, and bas 20,000 fish of var ious sizes remaining. Tbe average yield of wheat per acre ia England is eraduallv decreasing. In 1849 it was 292 bushels per acre, and in 1879 about 16 bushels. In France, on the contrary, tbe reverse is the ease, although the increase has been very slow. Thus in 1815 the yield in that country was 13 busbels per acre, while in 1876 it was 16.4 bushels. The editor of the Troy Telegram was dismissed from his position for writing an article approving of tbe abolishment of the tfljee of Vice President. It is the general belief that Char lie Ross was stolen for the purpose of extorting? money to nave him re turned. The body of A. T. Stewart, of New York, was stolen for the same obiect Such fiendish methods of makinsr money have not been much practiced in this country. Indeed, on every occasion where they have been attempted they nave laiiea. xn the old countries of Europe, however, child stealinsr. and the stcalinj? of crown people, is no uncommon oc currence. The mountains of Italy have been more of less used by people-thieves ever since the Roman gov ernment was broken up. To-day the mountains contain certain bands of robbers that frequently descend into the populous valleys and carry off neb people, and then demand a cer tain sum for their releasa Some months ago a band of people-thieves made a raid on a road on which an English preacher was traveling. The preacher was caught and carried away. Twenty-five thousand dollars was demanded of his wife for his restoration. Rev. Mr. Rose was his name. Mrs. Rose could not give that sum ; she did not have it ; but before she sent an answer " the brig ands wrote a second letter to the dis tracted wife, threatening that if she did not forward the money by return mail they would cut off one of her husband s ears and send it to her. Her friends tried to cheer her and laughed at such a threat She wrote, refusing to pay the ransom, when the brigands carried out their horrible threat and the third letter she re ceived enclosed the right ear of the unfortunate clergyman. The same letter also contained a threat that if the money was not how sent a like package would be sent to her con taining hei" busbund'8 left ear. Soon after the wife received her husband's left ear and a letter telling her that his nose would be sent nest, end other parts of the body would follow. Upon receipt of this letter Mrs. Rose fell seriously ill and her friends, by great efforts, at last raised the money, which Was forwarded, whereupon the clergyman was released and returned to England, having suffered the loss of bis ears only. When Mr. Rose related his grievance to the home au thorities the English Government at once took the matter up, assuming such a position that the Italian Gov ernment sent out a strong military force and thoroughly searched the mountain retreats of the brigands. In these raids, which were pursued with vigor, many of the b?fiuits were killed and a large number captured.' Among the prisoners was the captain of the band that stole Rev. Rosa The bandit's name is Esposito. He escaped and cane to tbe Vnited States, and engaged in the fruit trade at New Orleans. He was captured and taken to New York on the 12th of this month. He was arrested en a warrant issued by Secretary of State Blaine, and will be sent back to Italy for trial. His personal appearance is described by a correspondent of the Philadelphia Times as follows: " The brigand has a dark, piercing eye, jet black curly hair, beard and moustache, regular features and is what might be called a handsome man. His height is five feet seven inches and weight one hundred and forty pounds. Ho had on a peeper- j and-saat colored suit well worn, a blue check muslin shirt and a soiled and broken Panama hat Ho looked like the average street vender of fruit There is nothing in his appearance to indicate that he is a man of brutal passions, whose hands have often been dyed in human blood, and who, as the leader of a band of banditti, created terror throughout a large pail of Italy." The Painlessness of Death. Dr. Thomas D. Spencer, in Popular Science Monthlr for July. At birth the babe nndergoes au ordeal that were he conscious, would be more trying than the most painful death ; yet he feels it cot Born in an unconscious state, the brain inca pable of receiving conscious impres sions, his entrance into this hitherto unknown world is accomplished dur ing a slate of oblivion, knowa as Na ture's anesthesia : "Painlessly we come, whence we know not Painlessly wc go, whither we know not I" From the earliest period of human history death has been considered as necessarily accompanied by pftin. So general is this belief that the terms death-agony," 'last struggle,' 'pangs of death,' etc., have been in almost universal use in every age and under all conditions of society. Nothing could be more erroneous. The truth is, pain and death seldom go together ; we mean in the last mo ments of life. Of course, death may be preceded by weeks or even months cf extreme suffering, as occurs during certain incurable diseases. So exaggerated has been this no tion that it has fceen considered an act of humanity to anticipate the "death struggle" by violence; for ages it was customary among the lower classes of Europe to hasten death by suddenly jerking the pillow from beneath the head of the dying, thus throwing the head backward, straining the pharyngeal and thoracic muscles, rendering the respiration, already difficult, shortly impo6sible. A Venetian ambassador, in the time of Queen Mary, asserted that it was a common custom among the country people to smother the dying by means of a pillow placed over the face, upon which leaned or sat the nearest rela tive. This was founded upon the pious belief that a short road was the best one. The custom was handed down from generation to generation, parents performing it for their chil dren, and vice versa. But perhaps the saddest privilege ever allowed the near friends of a dying man oc casionally occurred during the reign of Queen Elizabeth, when through executive clemency in executions by hanging, they were permitted to grasp the feet of the suspended crim inal, and, by clinging to the extrem ities, precipitate their additional weight on the body, thereby hasten ing strangulation. It is needless to say that these theories are false in both conception and practice. Death is a physiological process, and, like all other animal functions, should be painless. Michael Reiser, seed 66 years, a farmer in Rapbo township, Lancaster ooonty, committed suicide, by banging on Thursday. Two Great Storms in Minnesota, A Benson, Minn., dispatch of July 14, says : The towuship of ?tayer, m the immedicto vicinity of rairfield post-office, was yisited by a terrible wind storm or cyclone, about 9 o'clock on Wednesday morning, the 13th. The storm seemed to come from the northwest, veering around southward until it assumed an almcst easterly direction, and leveled everything movable in it course. The first house in the track of the tempest was that of Wesley Hanner, who lives on the west bank of the Pemmede Terre river, Mercer. It tore down over the hill, leveling tbe trees around his house, and prostrating it in an instant throwing the man and his family out of doors and leaving them bruised, drenched, homeless, and bereft of everything except the clothing on their bodies. They have suffered some very severe injuries, but none of them are dangerous. Four out of five horses were killed outright The storm next took the bridges, one a wagon bridge of a single span, about forty feet in length, lifted it from its foundation, turned it over and drop ped it about four rods down the riven where it now lies. On the north and upper side of the bridge stood a small blacksmith shop, which is utterly de molished. The storm next struck the blacksmith's house, which it tore to pieces in its f uryt hurling the man's wife and two chihlien quite a dis tance from the building. The boy and girl, about five and seven years old, were insensible and in a danger ous condition from their wounds when last heard from, while the mother was scarcely better off, owing to her delicate condition. Next in the course of destruction cade the stone building of Mrs. George Tuin. in which she lived and kept store and the post-office. She and her chil dren, and T. B. Boyle, her clerk, stayed in the house until the win dows blew in, when they ran out and lay on the grass. They had scarcely got out when the building was blown to pieces and with all its contents scattered over the prairie. MrS. Tuin is a widow and is rendered destitute by this misfortune. The next house visited by the cyclone was that of Henry Miller, which Was unroofed and the upper part of it blown away with all the clothingj leaving the in mates to the mercy of the elements. Mrs. Miller sustained a very severe shock from fright and prostration. Georo-e Kenner. the oldest resident t - -who lives just south of the bridge, suffered mopt severely from the storm. The house in which he lived and a new one he was erecting were both blown down ahd destroyed. The frame of a carpet loom in an old building which heM up the ailing walls was all that prevented the death of some of its inmates, as under this rude but substantial shelter they crouclied for shelter untd the storm was over. Part of the floor was blown awav and a cow bhmfi into the cellar. The new church of the United Brethren, standing close by, vtcs na obstacle to the wrath cf the tempest, but was blown to tbe ground; These are all the houses damaged in the vicinitv which the tornado visited. but one or two bowses iii a north and northwesterly direction were unroof ed and further wet, and not far from Carroll a houc had totally disap peared. Two bves were lost It is reported in Benson that a German muiicd Vj'ifp. who liv s northwest of Harenoisa a mile or so, and one child were killed. A dispatch from New Clin, Minnesota, nailer date of the 17th inst., tells of a dread ful tornado that swept over that y'tca on Friday, tbe loth inst. Tbe city is situated on the right bank of the Minnesota river, and on the Winsha and St. Peter railroau. It ia the county seat of Brown county, and contained ".500 inhabitants. It possessed a large number of fine buildings, aiooog them two mills, five public schools, two a:ute niies, three churches, costing from $-5,000 to $-5,000, and the finest public hall in tbe Northwest. Shortly before 5 o'clock on Friday after noon a cyclone of most terrific violenco struck the town, demolishing over 100 building and killing or wounding upwaid of thirty persons. Though other towns in the vcinity were visited by the storm to a greater or less degree of violence, the fell force of the cyclone vented itself here. Two tornadoes met right over the place, and tbe work of destruction was accom plished in less than fifteen minutes. The cyclone struck tbe town, almost destroying it, and then disappeared as suddenly as it came. Its effects' are almost indescribable. Some houses vera struck by lightning, others were lifted up bodily by the violence of the wind, and others were demolished by flying debris from other buildings. Tbe storm was niort destructive in the north end of the city, and whole blocks of frame buildings were swept away. Hardly a barn or a stable escaped, and it is estimated that over one hundred horses and cattle have been killed. J. G. Randolph, Mayor f the city, estimates the total loss at $500,000, and the lowest estimate is $350,000. Aside from the loss of life tbe worst feature of tho calamity is that none of tho property destroyed is insured against accidents of this kind. The large two-story brick meat market of SI. Epple was entirely demolish ed, and D. Weschecke's two-story brick drug store and residence was leveled to tbe ground. Tbe Methodist and Lutheran churches, both substantial brick edifices, have been swept away, and the steeples of three Koman Catholic churches were blown off and tbe buildings gutted. One side of the brick dry goods store of Redman at Schram was blown down and the stock destroyed. The Dakota House, the lead ing hotel, was partially destroyed. The roof of the Court House was lifted bodily into the air and has not been seen since. The handsome residence of Tf iTliam Retch der, ex-State Treasurer, which stands on a bluff somewhat in the resr of the city, was completely gstted, thongb all the inmates escaped unhart. L. Jieringer's furniture store, M. Mailer's hardware store, Poeser's establishment and F. Back's machine shop were all destroyed, besides- a number of others. A sugar factory and two public school buildings are m rains and the re maining school house partly demolished. The lightning struck the depot three times, but made no iir pre union on it. Every liv ery stable in town haa been destroyed. A number of Buildings arrack by lightning caught tire, and the town would have been destroyed re this way bat for the rain, which descended is torrents. The scene during and immediately after tbe storm was fearful to contemplate and beyond the descriptive powers of the most graphic pen. As tbe Tictims of Ibe sad cata.troj hy are scatter. . nn,.rtivelv larse area it la im- Ngmwr- - possible to get an cl ' or the killed and wounded, especially as the cyclone also visited West Newton and caused several deaths. The persons killed as lar as is 13, and the number wounded is .5. CESCRAL ITEMS. . On last Friday night a passenger triia of cars was entered by fieven robbers at Vinston station on the Rock Island EailroaJ. A dispatch says: Seven men boardid the train at Cameron stition. At Winston when tbe train stopped they stood up in tbe aisle of a car with drawn revol vers. One of the bandits advanced with a revolver in each hand toward William Westfall, the conductor, and ordered him to hold up his hands. The conductor was 6low in comply ing with his demands and was shot through the heart by the desperado. One of the other men shot through the head John McCullough, a stone cutter, of Wilton Junction, who turn ed outward from his seat The men then went through the train to the express car and overpowered the United States Express Messenger, Charles Murray, who was iutinndated into opening the safe, from which $5,000 was taken. The desperadoes then went to the engine and told the engineer to start his train. This he could not do on recount of the auto matic lrake, and he was at once fired upon by the robbers. The engineer put out the light in the cab and crawled along the footboard to the pilot, and after extinguishing the headlight laid down in the pilot The robbers made no search for him, but departed. No attempt was made to rob the passengers. The populaco about Winston rose en nanse and armed men are now seeking the des I peradoes. Additional particulars are iimi iwo of the robbers got on the front end of the baggage-car nest to the en gine, three more ou the smoking-car and two on the platform between the baggage-car and the smoker. There were seven men in alL Conductor Westfall had passed nearly through the smoking-car when ho was shot, one ball passing clear through his body. He staggered out on the plat form of the car and fell off into a ditch. John McOulIough, the stone cutter, who was shot through the head, also fell off the car and was found by the side of the dead con ductor. When the robbers entered the express car Charles Murray, the messenger, was looking over some of his papers, and Frank Stamper, bng- gageman, was sitting in a chair near the open door. Both men were im mediately covered with fotir revol vers, and when Murray objected to handinsf over the keys of the safe he was knocked down. It is thought that about fifteen thousand dollars was in the scfe. but the exact amount is not known. The United States Express Company handle all the ex press matter on tii Rock Island Bail road and a train tx ent out last night with what miuo in from the Atchison short run and also from Kansas City and points east as f;ir as ilulfin. After rifling the safe the robbers jtunped from the train and escaped. The train went on to the next side track, where it waited for thepasscn ger train, which took Wesifali's body to Cameron. The Sheriff was noti fied of tbe robbery as socu as possi ble and he immediately started in pursuit with about sixty men, but at the present writing no tidings have been received that he has overtaken the robbers. Great excitement pre vails in the neighborhood and the who community is much agitated 0tr the event J. K. Creat, the ex press agent at Kansas City, said this morning that not much money went from Kansas City, but the impression seems to be that th robbers secured several thousand dollars. The gen erally aweptcd theory out on the road is tliat tho robbers were pro fessionals. One of theni, the tallest one, was sen ii Cameron all day yes terday, and could be identiied by several persons. The men who have been searching for tbe robbers to-day found where they had their horses tied in tho woods, and say that in their hurry to get a-say they did not untie them, but cirt the halters and left them hanging to the trees. Destruction by Floods ia Iowa. Uahenoo, Iowa, July 14. The flood in the Iowa river exceeds that of 1831. The water in the public square is two feet deep and hub deen in tba principal streets, where boats ere running with ease. Scores of fami lies have been driven out of their houses, and great damage has been done to dwellings. The bridges ap proaching this city are gone and travel is suspended. Thousands of acres of land are flooded and tbe crops ruined. The damage in the town and to farms is not less than $2,000,000. The mayor has issued a proclamation warning all who are in exposed situations to seek higher ground. The Iowa river is from two to three nule wide and is still rising. Cedab Rapids, Iowa, July 14. The destruction of railroad, farm and mtv property immediately west of thisj piace i)j me recent storms is unpar alleled in the history of the region, the railroads being the great suffer ers. The damage to the Chicago and Northwestern road by the blockade last winter is yery small compared with what the line is now under going. At Borne points the waters are subsiding, while at others they continue to rise. A large number of west-bound passengers arsr dt-laved here, being unable to make any line which reaches to Council Bluffs. The Burlington, Cedar Rapids and North ern road escaped damage by the first storm, bat the stones and hrgb water on that line on Tuesday night wafhed away several hundred feet of track at Fraerer, on the Pacific Division. The main line of the Burlington, Cedar Rapids and Northern road is baaly damaged and washed out south of Laporte City. Several hundred ft of track being gone and the water suii rising, makes it impossible to repair the break. South and east of this place no damage is reported. The Chicago. Milwaukee and St Pnnl road has suffered yery little damage and trains are running rpnmlarlr- "K., the grade of the new line is badly Lijrhtninir struck the bons f Ttr- Mish, about four miles from Cham bersburg, recently, killing four of his cuildrcn. STATE ITEMS. Whits rats are common in Waiting county. Every bone ia the boJy cf Misa Annie Kerr, tbe young lady who waa killed by bghtninir at Loretto, Cam bria county, oo Thursday last, wm found it is said, to bave been of the consistency of jelly when examined by physicians soon after dcatb. John Stewart, of Bellevernon, WestCsoreland -comfy, accidentally shot and killed Frank MeFall, of the same place, aged 14 years, on Friday last a week. MeFall, was up a tree, and Stewart seeing, the leave move, Ibnnght it was a squirrel. Sotiie tbre9 jeirs ago Tbouias Scott of Bethlehem, got into a difficulty with a fellow employee and bit tbe end of bis nose off SooU left Bethlehem and did1 not return nntil last Saturday; when he was arrested and is now in the Lehigb concty jail awaiting a trial. A lingular accident happened to a (firl in Venango county a few dajs ago. She wes gathering cherries, aod ibe limb ou which she was standing broke. She fell about five feot, when her bead caught in the fork of a limb, leaving her body daogiing in the air thirty feet from the ground. She retained con sciousness, and supported herself by the bands until sbe was rescued. GENERAL ITEMS. Tennor is 41 years of age. Mrs. General Sherman sajs that in thirty-one years tbe Gsoeral bas been bat once late for dinner. A man bas just died in a prison at Odessa, Russia, aged 96 years wbo had tbe reputation of having in tbe course of his long life committed eighty murders. A citizen of Clin too, Iowa, flogged a teamster for flogging bis borse, and received from bis admiring neighbors a cane, suitably inscribed, io recogni tion of bis '-hemane services." Six hundred picnickers from War rensbnrg, Mo., partook of lemonade that had been poisoned. Many of them died. The man that 9old the lemonade has been arrested, and an investigation is to take place. A mob in Dodge county, Missouri, celebrated the glorious Fourth by taking three horse thieves out of jail and ornamenting the tnta m the court hcusS yard with their bodies, hung up by the neck. A novel wager was woo in Vermont last week, when a man who bad made a bet that be could baul his wife in a wagon from Watcrbnrg to St. Johns bury, a distance of fifty-seven miles, io tbree days, trudged into the latter plaoe, having won bis bet, with balf a day to spare. For nine days Dr. Bliss did not take off bis clothe, aod was constantly at the President's side, getting only oc casional snatches of rest on a loange in ao ante rocra. A roof of a church at Sao .Mateo, Mexico, fell in a few days since, killing about city people. J he chorea was being rebuilt, acd one of the workmen fell from tbe roof; all the others rush ed to get off, and tbe roof crashed in npon some thirty worshippers, mostly womn, wbo bad assembled an hour be fore the regular hour of service. Tbese were instantly killed, as were twenty of tbe workmen. A Smooth Complexion can be had by every liJ.y who will use Parker's Ginger Tonic. Regulating the iater nal organs and purifying thu blood it quickly removes pimples and gives a healthy bloom to the cheek. See notice. LtS.nl JMJices. CHARTER 30TICE. TVTOT1CE is hereby given that an apphca J. V tion will be made to lion. B. K. Jun kin at his chambers in the borocgh of Blooin fielri. connty of Perrv on THURSDAY, AUOCST II. 1SSI, at 11 o'cloek A.M., nnder the Act of Assembly of the Cociiuoa walh of Pennsylvania entitled "An Act to provide for the Incorporation and Krgula tiwn of Certain Corporations," approved April 2?, 1874, and the supplements there to, for the charter of an intended corpora tion to be called "The Juniata Valley Mu toal Aid S'Wiety for Unmarried Persons." the character and otij-ct of which is to se cure to its members pecuniary aid by the rujintcnaive ot a society tor beneficial or protective purposes from funds collected therein, the benefits to be secured by aa seisnienta upon the members of the corpo ration in the event of marriage, and thes begin their new relations with sufficient means to insure saicess in business, and for this purpose io have, possess and enjoy all the rights, benefits and privileges conferred by siid Act of Assembly and its supple ments. MASON IRWIN', Attorney for petitioners. July 18, 1881-31 Administrator' Notice. Etta It of David Woodward, dectaud. LETTERS of Administration having been granted to tbe undersigned on ihe r. fate of David Woodward, deceased, late of i uKarora townsnrp, Ju-nale cor.nty, all per sons indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate payment, and those hav ing claims against the same will present them without delav to THOMAS CRKIGHTOS, July 13, 1S81. Administrator. Administrator's fottcf. Eitatt of Sarah Stilzer, deceased. LETTERS of Administration on the es tate of Sarah Stitzer, late of Fayette township, Juniata connty, Pa., deceased, have been granted to J. H. McAlister, resid ing in Mitllintown, Juniata connty, Penn'a., to whom all persons indebted to said estate are requested to nuke payment, and those having claims or demands, will make known the same without delay. Address, J. II. McALISTEK, Adm'r., Mitllintown, Juniata Co., Pa. July 13, 1881. ORPHANS' COURT SALE OF VALUABLE RE Air ESTATE. THK undersigned, Administrator ot the estate of Samuel S. Megaughy, late of Tnscarora township, Juniata county. Pa., deceased, by virtue of an order of tbe Or phans' Court of Juniata connty, win expose to public sale, on the premises, at I o'clock' r. ax ., oo SATURDAY, AtGUST 20.1881. the following described real estate, to wit- & r i i . . . " ' " siiuaiea in Tuvarora town ship, bounded by lands of William Kidd, Hngh R. Palm, John Woodward, James Kidd, Jesse Rice and others, containing 10 Acres and SO Perches, more or less, and having thereon erected a LOU HOUSE. weather-hArrtl c...n about 50 acres of which are clear, and tie TEftMfl or Sai r si - -"v-ivui ui vi iuv par chase money to be pail on confirmation of sale by tbe Coiirt - niu.riK .i day of April, 188-i, when deeI will be de- Z. K,K8'0 Riven; the balance on tbe 1st dav of Anril ixua im s. . from April 1st, 1882, and to be secured by JOSIAH WATERS. June:T!88T.0r0r5,W',S-nEh9J-- Specuii .Vorvet. PIMPLEST . I will mail (Free) tho recipe roc. Tl'JrraBLS Balm that will teem.. FKECKLE?. PIMPLES and .. '. leaving the skin aott, clear aul hZli .1... i,.t,nori..n. r... .....i . '"S growth of hair on a ball bead or to!!!1 face Address, inclosing kc stanmi. r l Co., 5 He. kmao St., X y VasDrir TO CONSUMPTIVES. lueaiuniisiT naving oecn perma, cured of that dread diiesxe. CoasaZT' by a siitfyl" remedy, is anxions to Vl. known to h! fe!!ow-utferers the nvjr" ..... t .ii a...;... :. k ,rrKS' t .. - ... ....v. tie Knnv nf thH nreju'rtnfiiin naA charge.) with the diret tiohj roT'Dr. and asinjr the same, which they will Jm srax Ccat for Co; itprios, A.tha,bW chit!, fcc. Parties wishing the rnt tion, will please sdt'ress, Kev. h. A. WILSOV 1? Penn St., Willia:nD.:tg. X.'T GKNTS WASTES. Big PTLte Steady Kn:p!..,meit. IT 1. Work. cles free. Address. X.. L. BYKvVJj A lr.i I i.r. iniierefl int r. from Nervous BEBIUTY, PhfiMifrsJ rvT.' ' , v ..wt .11 th. (?'..... ..r . . : . rr . r- XT v. . t- discretion, will for the sake of suifer-it at uiinitr. send free to all wbo next it tk. cipe and directions for miking th nSBl remedy by which he was cured. Suffer waning io proui yy me auvernseri np, .!. ttmn tilt in Ktf aiIrtpBwiri0 m ... , ... .- rTTOC! connaence. JOHN B.OGDE.V 4 i Cedar S t., New Tort Jaa 26, 1881. c i OS 5 cr " O c rs t- cn 3 9 - C H B JUNIATA VALLEY BANK or jiirruiTOHn, pa. wrrn BRANCH AT PORT ROYAL Stockholders Individually Liable. J. NEVIS' POYESOV. Pr,-id.r.t. T. VAN IliWIN, Co4irr. DisKcroas : J. Serin Pornerov. Josenb Kothrock. (eorze Jacobs. Philip M. Keener. Amos G. BonsaJI, I.nuis E. Atkinson. W. C. Ponieroy, ST"C&HoLir as J. Nevin Pouieror R. E. Psrker, Philip M. r- epuer, Sd:n'l Hcrr's Heirs; Joseph Rotbrock, (Jeorge J.icubs, L. E. Atkinson, V. C. I'uieroy, J.tr:s II. Irwin, Mary Kurn. Samuel X. Kurtz, J. lloluiei Irwin, T. V. irwitl. F. B. Prow. Joh.l iiertzler. Amos fr. ?i..u-i!!, Nojh flertzler, Charlotte Snyder, "C- Interest allowed at the rate of 2 pet cent, on o months certificates, 3 per ceaLoe u tuonms certificates. f iaiiL'.j, 13T-tf BSOXS OUT IN A NEW PLAGE Tin and Sheet-Iron Manufactory, Main Street, MiinUmn, Pa. CLARK WRIGHT & SON, Would most respectfully inform the p lie that they bave started a branch of Patterson Tin and Sheet-Ironware U lUhment in the Thomas room, lormerly oc cupied by M. L. Littletleld, where they v prepared to manufacture and repair everj thing in their line. Their stock will be found to embracs complete assortment of Tinware, Japaosed ware, CooKing Utensils, &c, which will kept fully up to the times in variety, arjle, quality and price. As one of the firm will be constantly st work in the shop, the public mav depend os having all kinds of JOBBING with 1 they may favor us, executed in the prompt est and most workmanlike mtuner, aid st the loKtst rates. TIN KoOKISGand SPOUTING pat os new and repaired in a workmanlike mam and at lowest rates. Manufacture of stove-pipe and fittings of stoves a specialty. By strict attention to business, f0 work and moderate charges, they bop" merit and receive a fair share of public p4'" ronage. OJSTERS, FISH, Ac. A3 Kinds of Oysters, Fresh Fi.-h, fcc season, supplied to families on shorted tice. All order left at tho 'hop U1 promptly attended to. MUHintown, April 27, 18I-tf KENEDY &1)0IY, (Successors to Buyers 4. Kennedy,) DEALERS I.N COAL. IsUMHEA CEMENT. Calcined Plaster, Land Plastflfr SEEDS, SALT, C. We buy Grain, to be delivered at Jti town or Mexico. We are prepared to furnish SalttolI!, at reasonable rates. KENNEDY VCR April 21, 1879-tf dC n tfirtfl per day at home. SampJ $3 IU wortn j.-, free. Address eoit A Co., Portland, Maine. 01 J, l Eeatinel and Bepublxaj ' ' ' " " " ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' " " " " " " ' " 1 ' " 1 " 1 H-J J l.: " L