Mil ght cuaricttian PUDLISDED EVERY SATURDAY, AT OVE DOLLAR PER z 3 zl, tI PA. VA BLE IH ADVARCE. 'ICE in CrulPs Row,—Second Story— tont street, five doors blow Mrs. Flurfe Marietta, Lancaster County, Penn's. ascriptions be delayed beyond 3 months, i : if not paid until the expiration of the $1.50 will be charged: rscription received for a less period than loathe, and no paper will be discontin mlil all arrearages are paid, unless at iption of the publisher. A failure to no a discontinuance at the expiration of-the i subscribed for, will be considered a new rgement. ?mon sending us nvg new subscribers have p sixth copy for his trouble. mono BATES : One square (12 lines, is) 60 cents for the first insertion and 26 3for each subsequent insertion. Profes al and Business cards, of six lines or less 3 per annum. Notices in the reading :runs, five cents a-line. Marriages and ths, the simple announcement, FAEE j for any additional lines, five cents a-line. rare 3 mouths, $2.60; 6 Months, $3.60; ir, $5. Two squares, 3 months, $3 : artier, $5; 1 year, $7. Bid-a-column, mths, $8; 6 months, $l2; 1 year, $2O. ..column, 6 months, $2O; 1 year, $3O. 3 •., Having recently added a large lot of new Son f ^ AND CAUD TYPE, we are prepared to do all i : .,,i' kinds of PLAIN AND FANCY PIIINTING, , i. Witch as Large Posters, with Outs, 4 Rale hills of all kinds, Ball Tickets, , . Circulars, Cards, Programmes, Arc., he. " Everything in the Job Printing line will be done with neatness and dispatch, and at the lowest possible rates. SABBATH EVENING. DV' REV. U. A. GUILD. The stilly Sabbath eve has come— • Slow sinks the sun to rest; White purple clouds, all tinged with gold, Lie thick along the west, Tho merry warblers, cease their song, And seek their leafy beds, While grey night's mantling curtain falls, And soft the twilight spreads. The silent dew steals o'er the mead, And gems the sleeping dowers ; While hushed in stillness riot a leaf Moves on the rosy bowers; The moon unveils her lovely face, And pours a mellow light Over the earth, and glistening stars Bosnia the vault d night. (heat God! we praise thee for this day Of glad and welcome rest— A respite from our weekly toils, From care and woe opprest. let us at the parting hour Of this, Thy hallowed.day, Render the grateful tribute due, And heart-felt homage pay. Let us with all creation join, To sing and praise Thy name ; And may Thy spirit still our hearts To calm and peaceful ,frame. Muy this blest day our hearts revive, And cheer us on our way, Up to the Sabbath in the skies, That never-ending day. Fag " TUE MARZEITTIAIP.I Political and Social Infidelity. What can be expected from a weak, degen erate, nod corrupted populace, When highborn and manly minded nobles, Would barter freedom for a great man's feast, And sell their country for a smile." Infidelity in high placos—whether civ il or military—has, without a doubt, boon exorcising a most blighting influ ence upon the minds and principles of the masses of all countries under the Sun ; and possibly of no other, to a greater extent than that of our own " United States" of North America.— Unfortunately for the happiness and prosperity of society in general, virtue and intelligence, are not the twin sisters that wo would naturally bo led to sup pose, nor do they , always travel hand in hand. A moral laxity 'prevades the whole face of society to a most alarming extent everywhere—but more particu larly in the Southern States—and espec ially in its politico/fic/c/ity. The masses of Southern men excuse or justify them selves in the most culpable and dishon orable note, mainly booting° a'few of the "high-born and influential and wealthy among them, have recklessly and vin dictively cast their influence on the side of treason. Unfortunately , too for man kind, the habit is too prevalent every whore, for what aro termed the lower and middle classes, to bo taking note of what are termed the upper classes—and in' shaping their course and conduct in life by the practice of these—or by what scems,to be their practices. There seems to be great difficulty in inculcating, practically, the great • doctrine, that, "The sins of the father shall net be up on the head of tho son, nor •the sins of the son upon the head of the father, but the soul that sinneth it shall die," and yet until this doctrine is appreciated and noted out in daily life, the 'majority of mankind will continue to set up the moral standard of the minority, because ilia minority happeng to be intelligent. Anent, or influential. There Are hon orable exceptions to this demoralizing rule, but in many cases those exceptions utterly fail to gain any credit for politi oul or social adolity in their own coun try. For the past six months or more, men have been clothed with political powers and responsibilities in a section of our country, who have violated with impunity their most solemn obligations to maintain with integrity .the constitu tion and laws of that country, and have boon recreant to all the• most sacred trusts reposed in their hands. Every naturalized foreigner—every officer of the United States government from the ?resident down to the. lowest subfunc tionary in the official roll—every officer in the army and navy, as wall as every private—every officer of the state gov ernment from.the Governor-down to the lowest municipal agent: has taken an ectth, to support the Cionstitution of,the • n. vM`~~. * .nl~.\~v.n^+hM.~.v.~~.~n~.~..~.l'~.Nl~i.n~i~n~.\~.~l'~~.l V ~M.~~.wv~~..~+N~.' W \.~~ P -1 .. Proprietor. VOL. 8. United States, as well as of his native or resident State; and how a man can take up arms against the Government established under that Constitution, or how he can afford aid and comfort to, or sympathise with those who are in re bellion against that governmeet, with out being guilty, by act or implication, of the grossest forms of treason or mis t prison of treason; is a mystery that cannot be satisfactorily solved by any mortal upon this earth now. In fact every citizen of the United States who heretofore bas claimed protection under its laws—or who now claims protection and the guaronteos of " life liberty and the pursuit of happiness," is impliedly under a solemn obligation to support the Constitution and laws of his state and of the United States. Nor can any man disengage himself from that obliga tion, so long as he reclaim!, in the coun try and claims or exercises the rights of citizenship therein. Where the spirit of a government is republican, or where its genius dictates the freedom of person, of property, and of speech, and all its laws usages and privileges are by mutu al consent controled by a-constitutional majority of its members ; any departure from that principle, clandestinely, or by any loss number, in proportion to the whole, than the number that originally established it, is, to say the least of it, a piece of consummate meanness, that must ultimately bring—if not a worse retribution—the blush of shame upon the cheeks of those who contemplate, or who carry such an iniquity into success , fal opperation. If " there is honor a ' mong thieves," there ought at least to be as much among those who claim to be honorable men-, and it is even a matter of doubt whether a thief could violate .a single law in the doubtful code that binds him to his deluded associate, with out bringing upon himself a merited and lasting disgrace. Be could not do so if he would, and he would not if he could. That enviable piece of conduct has boon reserved for men in high and ' distinguished positions at the present day—now who could not have acted mote unwise, more treacherous, and more morally and politically insane, if they had started out in life with the ex press object of developing the meanest phase of character they possibly could. The legitimate march of morality, of in telligence, of political and social pro groes, and of material prosperity, is essen tially upward and onward ; anything therefore that indicates a retrograde or downward and backward movement, ap proximates to wickedness, ignorance, intolerance, tyranny, and ultimate pover ty and adversity, causing infidelity in all the relations and obligations of life.— All necessary rebellion and revolution, ought to be characterized by a progres sion, from a lower to a higher state of moral political and intellectual freedom, and when this is not clearly and distinct ly the case, the success of such a rebel lion or revolution must - be the heaviest woo that could possibly be inflicted upon the human family. Whenever a people revolt against good wholesome and equitable. laws, and by their over throw seek to establish others of an op posite nature ; ofwhorever an attempt is made to wrest from the bands of the many, the powers that have been dele gated to them by the genius of the gov ernment under which they live, and to concentrate it in the hands of the few— no matter how: moral; intelligent or op ulent that few may be—in ninety-nine cases in a hundred such movements are retrograde, and are incapable of center ing any good upon the human race. It is only a violation of political and social fidelity, and an exhibition of the selfish and grasping disposition that evil men have manifested ie all ages of the world. When these things are calmly contem plated, and with forethought determined upon by the "high born" and the opu lent—by the intellectual and the hypo critically moral, what can be expected from the " low-born" and the indigent— from the seemingly wicked ? If there was not such a proneness on the . part of the latter to imitate the vices of the former, and if genuine intelligence was more 'fully diffused 'among them, they would be safer depositaries of all those powers and functions that inure to the welfare and freedom of a country than. the former; because, they are - generally true to the interests of the masses, and in proportion to their numbers, there has been less political and social infidel ity among `them. Whenever 'the great body of a people, at the behest of the few, attempt to overthrow those institutions NtigOttit pumitiania Alm! for tit fag Grya MARTETTA, OCTOBER 5. 1861. which have tended to eecure to them the equality and common-rights that are the distinguishing" characteristics of a free government—from any cause whatever—it may be safely inferred that that people is deluded, or that they have never been instructed in, and conse quently have no appreciation of- the sacred rights of freemen. With such a people there Can be no reliable fideli ty to the established form under which they may have lived and prospered.— Totally disregarding all equality of rights, and solely influenced by ideas of disorganization and self agrandizement, they are ready to break down, or break through, nil the restraints and forms that have hitherto guarded and promoted the common liberties which they themselves have enjoyed. Being but another form of that spirit of insubordination, discon tent and jealousy, that would "rather rule in hell than serve in heaven," there fore, the sacred nature of no obligation, prestige, or historical recollection- or precedent, has any binding effect what ever on the minds and cooeciences of such men ; and should they eventually succeed in seperating themselves from those with whom they had hitherto been associated, and in forming a new .gov ornmental combination ; as soon as any restraint to their innate selfishness. or pride was attempted to be exercised, oven for their own good, they could be ready again to engage in "growling mu tiny or bold revolt." Sacred truths and trusts once violated, lessons a people in their own moral estimation, and there; fore when once fallen from a state of fi delity, .a subsequent and a lower .fall is only according to a law of sequence that in nine times oat of ten is almost cer tain to follow. Generally speaking it is the learned and the affluent that give tone and char acter to the morals of a community ; and when these are corrupt, profligate, and infidel, little else can be expected from the masses that compose that commu nity, especially if moral intelligence has not been disseminated and cultivated among thorn. Not that the masses, or the illiterate and unlearned, are neaessa, ray wicked and corrupt; for these— without the evil example of the "high born" among them—are ofton frpgal, peaceful, industrious, honest and kind ; but that such is the corrupting effect of infidelity in high places, that its baleful influence contaminates or destroys every thing within the sphere of its power.— The example of one evil or corrupt man in a community who is backed by wealth and ,intelligence. will more than out weigh the example of ten good men, who aro illiterate and indigent ; and the loose example of a high public function ary, will loosen the Moral and political obligations,• and hence more or less im pair the fidelity of all who are under him, if their numbers should be tens, or hund reds. The morals of a wholo communi ty are often effected by the dishonest and duplicated practices of a single in dividual of influential position in it.— There seems to be an out-going sphere from such mon, that injures morally and socially, all who come in contact with it. Man, in a merely natural and unregener ate state, and especially when that state is farther darkened by the clouds of igno rance—is in a condition very little eleVa ted above monkeyish imitativeness.— About , the first faculty that a child be gins to cultivate and to exercise is that of imitation, and this, through the vari ous stages of youth, adolescence, and ma ture age; is never entirely foregone. In telligence and experience may modify it, but the faculty becomes too much fossil ized even to be entirely obliterated, and if rationally exercised it is not desirable. that it should be. But, as the tenden cies`of all 'mon to evil; are as" prone as the smoke to go upward," so are their in clinations to go wrong—through the fa culty, of imitation as a sensuous plane of influx—and that wrong-going perse vered in, finally leads to unfaithfulness, infidelity, dishonesty, conspiracy and treason, to all the obligations, trusts and functions that have been committed to their keeping. How often are evil and Unwise things done by men surrendering their individuality, and acting against their better judgment, merely hemline some , other individual high in power and public confidence has furnished a stim nlent to the faculty of imitation. They suffered the example alone, withoutta • word of pursuasion, to give tone and quality to their actions ; without reflect ing perhaps, how much it violated the lavni, obligations, and usages of society, or the government under which they have lived, The serpeant beguiled the \ woman, and the woman tempted tho man, and thus infidelity to the injunc tions of Deity, lost an Eden and brought on the World a woe, in the earliest be kinings of society. That first law of Deity is unrepealed and immutable, and infidelity and treason in the last as in the first age of the world, will meet with a commensurate reward. A. GALLANT OFFlCElL—Lientenant Chaplin, who commands the Valley City, is the gallant young officer who behaved so nobly at Mathias Point, on the 27th of June, when Commander Ward lost his life. During the hottest of the enemy's fire, Lieutenant Chaplin, who was the last to leave the beach, was swimming to one of the boats, while the bullets from the concealed enemy were flying as thickly as hail around him.— Jack Williams, the coxswain, :who had received a severe wound in the thigh, while the American ensign behind him was riddled and the staff shot in two, called out to Ihe swimming officer to throw away his cap, which had already perforated with the enemy's bullets.— lusted of doing so, Lieutenant Chaplin turned on his back, and attached the cap to a portion of hie dress, again turn ed over, and swam for the' boat. On his way he found a sailor struggling in the water, and almost exhausted. Taking the Irian on his back—though the delay exposed him to an extra shower of bul lets--the gallant officer reached the boat and both the sailor and his pre server reached the deck of the Freeborn in safety, For this heroic feat Lieu tenant Chaplin received a spoicial let ter of commendation from the Navy De partment, and his appointment to the Valley City is a gracefuLtributo to his bravery. OP.AFOUY OF Mx. JOSEPH. nom—Hori Joseph Holt, late of the Post-office and War Department, delivered one of those eloquent Union speeches for which he is so distinguished, at Irving Hall, in New York, on the evening of the 3d inst. Robt, J. Walker once remarked in our presence, that Mr. Holt was "the most elo quent man in the world." "Governor," said we, "that is saying a great deal."— "I know ibis," replied Mr. Walker, "but it is true nevertheless." We never heard a public sneaker, not excepting Henry Ward Beecher, who produced a more thrilling. effect upon an audience than Mr. Holt. The grand secret of this is that both those orators speak from the heart. The influence which Judge Bolt is everywhere exerting upon the. Union cause is very powerful. By the way, all our living exyostmasters- Generals, as far back as we-can remem ber, are savagely down on rebellion, namely Hon. C. A. Wickliffe, Hon. Cave Johnson, Judges Colarner and Hall, Mr. Holt, and Hon.-Horatio King. We need hardly add the name of the present worthy head of the Department, as one of the most devoted and vigilant champions of the Union cause, with which the country is now honored.— Holbrook's United States A LADY REDIMENT.—The Springfield Republican reports that the "Di Vernon Phalanx," an enterprising and charming company of ladies at Pittsfield, was re cently disbanded by dissensions among the Officers, resulting from marked at tentions paid to some in the ranks by prepossessing young , gentlemen, who ought to have looked higher. At sever al " tea fights " in, the village where the Phalanx was quaftered, it seems that not only cap but hair-pulling was the order of the day, and of course no military organization can exist when such practices prevail. The unfortunate demoralization of the entire body is re ported as being greater than that of our troops at Bull Run. AN ETHIOPIAN Isvesramr.—An aged colored woman, who indarly:life was a slave in Virginia, and who' has been a servant 113 one of our most respectable families for twenty years, called at one of the Pittsburg banking. houses 'with $1.50 in silver coins, some of which were old 'Spanish dollard, and none bere a later date than .1.853. This sum was the accumulated saving of more than thirty years. After exchanging her sliver for gold, she called on Mr. Hannay and took $1.50 in Government 7-30 stock. At St - Louis, on Saturday, the oath of allegiance` was adimnlstered to thir teen hundra-sewing women in the em ploy of the (liyarument. Ab,ent fifty • declined to tako it, end were diocharged, fit t it. Term .pie IDollar a Year_ ANCIENT SITMEITITION VS, MODERN SURSCE.-Six hundred years ago it was belived that scrofula could bo cured by the touch of a king, and that the fever of a wound was abated by salving tho weapon that caused it! These, and fif ty other similar absurdities, of which we read in tracing the progress of the heal ing art, now only excite a contemptuous smile ; but, even in this enlightened era, ,prejudice and egotism sometimes strug gle to perpetuate error, and venture to question the most palpable ane self-evi dent truths. Thus, when Holloway, after long years of study and experiment, ushered his all powerful remedies before the world in their present perfect state, their efficacy was denied by many jolous practitioners. These men were the slaves of formula; persons who believed that tenth moved in a circle like a blind horse in a mill track. They regard Holloway as an in novator ; and so ho was. His innova tions have astonished—nay, more, they have convinced and delighted the world. The most formidable ulcerous and erup tive maladies, with which science has heretofore waged an unequal combat, are now subdued by the penetrating Ointment for the cure of external dis eases and injuries, and his famine Pills are 'administered - with marvellous suc cess for many dangerous internal dis orders. We have not arrived at this conclu sion hastily. It is the duty of the press to investigate before it approves. Pub lic opinion is, to a °edit' extent, based upon its statements, and in all matters which concern the health and life of man, it cannot be too cautious or too scrupulous. But it is also the province of the press to give the widest notoriety to important facts, and to render justice to great benefactors. The testimony in favor of Professor Holloway's remedies emanates from all classes and from every quarter of the globe. It is enthusiastic, voluminous, and consistent. To deny it, would be to fly in the face of the laws of evidence, and would evince stupidity, not caution. . If there is anything in which the judg ment of a human being may be relied upon, it ;is the effect which a remedy produces upon him when sick. No one can be self-deceived as to the relief of pain, the renewal of strength, the recov ery of health and cheerfulness ; and when tons of thousands of individuals, 'spontaneously and without pre-concert, unite in ascribing the same beneficent results to the same causes, their corn blued declarations as imperatively de mend credence as a mathematical de monstration. Upon this basis rests the world-wide reputation Of Professor MA loway's Ointment and Pills. 'Willie P. Mangum, of North Caro lina, died at his residence in Orange county, in that state, on Saturday, Sept. 11, a,t the ago of sixty-nine years. For some years he had suffered with paralisis, and it is probable that the recent death of his only son, from a wound received on the field of Manassas, depressed his spirit to a point from which- he could not again rally. tie was born in Orange county, North Carolina, in 1792, and graduated at the university of that state in 1815. He studied law, rose to emi nence in his profession, engaged in poli tics, and was elected to the House of Commons in his state in 1818. In 1819 he was' elected a Judge of the Superior Court of North Carolina ; and from 1823 to 1826 served' as a representative in Congress. lle was elected a, United States Senator in 1831, re-elected in 1841, and for a third term in 1848. In 1837 North Carolina gave him her' eleven electoral votes for the Presidency of the Unfon, and during .I) , ler's administra tion ho was President of the., United States Senate. His political preference favored the whig party, but since. 1863 ho has entirely abandoned the political arena and lived in retirement, ATTEMPT TO COMMIT SITIOIDE.---ROOollt ly a stranger, supposed to be a volun teer from Camp Curtin, evidently labor ing under an attack of delirium tromens, attempted to commit suicide about three miles north of• Harrisburg, Pa., by filling his mouth with gunpowder and then setting fire to it, He 'bled very pro fasely at the mouth, and has probably received soma internal injury that will cause his death. w Thu loyal men of Maryland are doing their share for the support of the govermaent, Two fall regiments,of eafleak troops have already boen raised , in that eta% and a third ono is fomalug. Ifehtit h)0 its i'lcasul•as ot. DiscqsJ, at ifs 300ohies. HOLLOWAY'S PILLS. Nervous Disorders: What is more fearful than the breokiii, , ,. down of the nervous systeitil l'o'be excite:, ble or nervous in a small degree is most di;- , tressing, for where can a remedy he found ?- There is one :—drink but little wide, beer,-4,1 spirits, or far better, none; take no coffee,- weak toe being preferable; get all the frer.: air you can ; take tree Or four Pills every night , • eat plenty of solids, avoiding the use of slope, and if these golden rules are followed, yon+ will be happy in mind and strongib body, ans forget you have any nerves. If there is one thing more than another ft wLich these Pills are so famous it is their puri fying properties,- especially ° their power of the blood from impurities, all.l removing dangerous and suspended secretion!. Universally adopted as the one grand remedy for female complaints, they never fail, nevci .weaken the system, and always bring slam what is required. NO. 10. These feelings which so sadden us, most fr-c' quently arise from annoyances or trouble, free!. obstructed perspiration, Or from eating and drinking what is unfit for us, thus' disorderim. the liver and stomach: Them organs must hey regulated if you wish tote well:. The Pills, ix taken according to the printed instrui.ie - ns-,. will quickly restore a healthy action tos liver and stomach, whence follow as Wean-no , Consequence, a good appetite and a clear head_ In the East and West ladies scarcely any meet medicine is over used for these disordersa Disorders of Me Kidneys. In all diseases - effecting these organs; Whet., •er they secrete too much or toe ltttie watei or w.hethor thel' be afilicted with facile or grave or with aches and: pains- settled in the loin,- over- the regions- of the kidneys, these Pill . should be taken' according to the printed direr tions, and the Ointment should ho well rubbe.l into the small - of the back at bed time. This; treatment will give almost itonsethato when all other means have failed. Stomachs. out of order. 12No medicine will so effectually improve the tone of the stomach asthese Pills; they remove all acidity, occasioned either by intemperance or impreper diet. They teach' the live and reduce' it to a healthy action; they at.. wonderfully efficacious in case of spasna,—b. fact they never fail in curing all disorders the liver and Stomach: Holloway's Pills are thebest remedy knotoje in the world for the following diseases. Ague, Dropsy,' Inflammation,. Asthma. Dysentery ; Jaundice, Bilious Complaints, Erympelas, Liver Corn- Blotches - on the Female It- plaints, Skin, ' regularities, Lumbago ; Bowel Complaints, Fevers of all Piles, Colies, -kinds; Rheumatisrff ; Constipation of the Fits, Retention of Bowels, Gout- Urine, Consumption Head -abbe, Scrofula, or Debility, indigestion, King Evil. Stone and Grave; Tumours, Sore Throat, Secondary Symp' Ulcers, Venereal A - - toms, Worms of all fectiontr. Tic-Doulonreux ; kinds; Weakness,&r. CAtriox:—None ore genuine unless the words -'llor.r.owAy, NSW' Yong A ND Los - Dow," are discernible as a Watsr-mark in every leaf of the book of directions arourict eaph pot or box; the same maybe plainly seen by hotel Ong the leaf to the light. A handsome rewanll will be given to any one rendering such infor motion as may lead to the detection' of any party or parties counterfeitin gthc medicines vending the same, knowing them to be Bpt, Sold at the Manufactory of Professor llor . LOWAY. SO Maiden Lane, New York ? and In all respectable Druggists and Dealers in Med; eine, throughout the civilized world, iu hem,' at 25 cents, 62 cents and $1 each. 11:3? - There is considerable saving by taking' the huger sizes. , 14 . J.—Directions for the guidance of patients n every disorder are affixed to each box. frillE subscriber having purchased the pro party lately occupied by • CLARK & ZELL. would most respectfully call the ' 1 : - attention of hisold friends and customers O.; Willie fact that ho is now prepared to sell LUMBER AM COAL at the very ipvvest figures by Hoat-load, Car load, or otherwise. His Stock of Lumber be selected from one of the best manufactories and cannot fair to give satisfaction. He is also prepared to supply "13xLc ererr at short notice and at low prices. will consist of Shamokin, Red and White Asi r Baltimore Company, Lykens Valley, &c., all of which he will fall by the Boat . load, Car-load, or by the SINGLE TON. ' Ito will as continue tho receiving of Coal a very low hguxes. 4t • IL L..* E. J.Zitint e rri s Ini ESPECWULLY inform Mei' c ) l itelf ~ Ktfriends and the public thaithel \'47l , ` , ' still continue the WATCH; CLOCis , ;',l-,,i7 AND JEWELRY business at the ott. stand, North-west Corner, of North Queen street and Center Square, Laridaster,rD A full assortment of goods in outline of bust nese always an hand and for sale at the toisevt cash rates. il::3=• Repairing attended to per &malty by the propristor.s. ' riILIE American Watches are among the bet , " timekeepets now in use, and for durabiliry strength and simplicity far surpass any other watch made in the world. H. L. ,fi• E. J. Z A HO Corner of North Queen-at., and CentreAtitiam Laucaatet, Pa., have then - =for sale at the en lowest rates—every watch accompanicd wit the inanufacturere pat rahtee cntfunfinfge uinenens. EWELII.Y.-41. largo and selected stock “l o jewelry of the latest Patternie TrMn . hest factories in, the country can dm finial:at ,L. & E. J. ZAIIWS. Cor. North Queen st. and Centre Amare, Lan caster, Ph-. Our prices are moderate - and al goods warranted to-be AS represented.. i • PECTACL•ES to snit altWlio, kj can be aided with ginases, can be bought at H. L. 4, .T. ner of North gneen-st., and Center Siloam Lancaster. New glasses refitted in old frinive. at abort notice. [vB-1y ' . , ILCOX , S Celebrated Imperial Es. It: tension Steel Spring Skeleton 'Skirt, win, self-adjustible bustle. The latest and bestin use, for sale cheap at Difienbach's. T UST RECEIVEDEkthe i'En.teirf.se ti 'and Liquoi Store? Mount Xo.y 2 _n superhu article of Champagne and German Wineei ; eiLATHS AND' CASSIMERS.---A ;rely eu. j,,pgricor ,selection•of French and :Gertnal! Clothhilnui'Cassimers, and a variety of beAutii ful Nrestiegoin - riew and fashionable; arrived at Direnbaeles Cheap afore. TO LANDLORDS,! Jest,wash and Trish WHISKI ted pure; at H.: D. 'Benjantities. BOXES Sweet Moaaina Oa Zijarod for iaale at Wolfe'z."X' PARS and . Chewhi toltiacco, is and goatvariety at J.- M? dl MEW STELE et re . T. CROIN AND NEW ENG.4I.. for culinary purposeg, warrant 111 . . D. 13ettiastan C(''s• Choose between them I Mothers• and . Daughters.: Bich Ireadachcs and want of Appetite. ffefn ITAtinbet anb co a l No: MS STOOK OF 00AL THOMAS ZELL.