Zlit . patirttian. None shall with impunity soil these sacred sym bols of our Country's life ; liberty andtpower. F. L. BAKER, EDITOR_ Mil „JLar~Ldia, ;a. SATURDAY, AUGUST 24,1861 JUST AND PATRIOTIC.—}ienry King, a wealthy resident of Allentown, Pa., died a few weeks since, leaving an estate valued at $309,000. He died childless. He was a brother of T. Butler King one of the Commissioners of the Confed erate States, now in Europe. Mr King bad made a will, leaving half of his pro perty to his brother; but, a few weeks before his death, exasperated at the se cession sentiments of his brother, he made a new will, leaving most of his property to his wife, and the remainder to charitable purposes. At ILLlmois FARM.—The largest farm in Illinois is that of Isaac Funk, who re sides near Bloomington, McLean county. The total number of acres occupied and owned by him is 39,900 acres—one farm 27,000 acres, said to be worth $3O per acre, and three pasture fields containing respectively 8,000, 3,900 and 1,900 acres. Ilis great crop is corn, all of which he consumes at home, and is thus able to market about $70.000 worth of cattle per year in New York. His stock on hand of horses, mules, hogs and fat cat tle is stated to be worth $1,000,000. Chicago Times. MUSKETS FOR GEN. EREAIONT.—Mr. Iloey, of Adam's Express Company, on Wednesday last, transported to. St. Lou is twenty thousand Austrian rifled mus kets purchased by Gen. Fremont. They were received .by the Borussa a few weeks ago. Twenty thousand more, arrived by the Saxonia, and are in bond in New York will soon be sent forward. Car The continued alarms about the designs of the insurgents against the capital are now believed, by gentlemen in high cluarters, to be the fabrications of Secession emissaries. Opinions, how ever, are divided on this subject.— Whatever may be the truth respecting it, the Administratiod wants to reinforce and be ready for active operations.— The volunteers, while left in the North ern cities and towns, can do no service; but they can be organized bore and ready for service immediately. Hence the call made on the 19th inst. earbThe Washington Sunday Morning Chronicle says that Major General Kiem and A.djutant General Schaffer, both of Pennsylvania, were recently honorably discharged, their term of service having expired. They were connected with General Patterson's division, and among the most efficient and experienced of his officers. We trust that in these times th'y will not be permitted to remain in private life; gar The report of the death of the Hon. Alex. R. Boteler, late repreSenta five in Congress from the Jefferson dis• trict of Virginia, is not correct. It, was his son, bearing the same name, who was wounded in the foot at Bull Run, and died of lockjaw. Mr. Boteler himself, it is stated, has been arrested by the federal troops at his residence near Sheperdstown, and taken to the head quarters of Gen. Banks, near Sandy Hook in Maryland. Cir The Germantown Telegraph, one of the highest toned papers in the State of Pennsylvania, in speaking of the com plaints, made against the Secretaries of the Navy and War, says : "Mr. Welles is said to lack energy and practical qualifications; while in addition to a want of energy and capaci ty, Mr. Cameron subotdinates everything to his own personal asperations. We know nothing about the charges against the Secretary of the Navy ; but with re spect to the Secretary of War, we never had a grain of confidence in him any way." fir Martial Law is working wonders in Washington city. All passes, safe conducts, and permits heretofore given, to enter or go beyond the lines of the United States army on the Virginia side of the Potomac, are to be deemed revok ed, and all such passes will eminate only from the War Department, the head quarters of the United States army, or from the Provost Marshall at Washing ton. This cancels the prepetual pass which General Patterson gave to. Mrs, Faulkner. ar There is a classic neatness and an impressiveness in the following, which commend it to the interest and admira tion Of,,the reader. It furnishes a text for a page in our future history. We like it much "At the President's dinner of Prince Napoleon, Gen. Scott entered the re ception room leaning upon the arm of Gen. McClellan. It was six feet four • •, leaning upon five feet eight ! Seventy five upon thirt-five I history waiting upon prophecy—mempry upon hope !" PAY IF POSSIBLE.—We hear com plaints abroad of a disposition upon the part of those well able to pay as they go, to avail themselves of the plausible ex cuse of dull times to avoid the prompt payment of little bills pie to tradesmen, mechanics ond others. This is: s l,o be re gretted. Nothing so contributes to waken confidence and -press business activity as to withdraw from the retail trade of any business its just due, in tidies like the present, and we hold that the man who would urge the present troubles as an excuse for not paying small bills, when he can pay as well at one time as another, is guilty of one of the worst of the moral wrongs attendant upon business operation in a season of general depression. Never hoard up money, when nothing can be gained by it, more especially when you have debts which are over due to parties dependent upon their earnings to sustain themselves and their families, Pay, if possible. - ANECDOTE OF VALLANDIaIiAIII.—Previ- CMS to the attack on Sumpter, the no torious dirt-eater of Ohio made a boast that the first regiment that left Ohio to tight the South; would have to march over his dead body. It so happened that the Ist Ohio regiment went from his district, and marched past his house. When close upon it the regiment halted and the Colonel said : "You are now to pass the dead body of Vallandigham: let ever man hold on to his—nose, which they did till all had passed. trir Col. Israel P. Richardson, who supersedes Col. Miles of the Fourth Brigade, is a son of Israel Putnam Richardson nepew of Gen. Israel Put nam, of Revolutionary memory. Re is a graduate of West Point, and served about 20 years on the western frontier. For services in Mexico he was promoted to. the rank of Major. At the com mencement of the rebellion he took com mand of a Michigan regiment, and re ceived his present appointment forcour age and valor at Bull's Run. Cr George N. Sanders, late navy agent in the city of New York, has been declared a defaulter to the extent of $21,000, and the United States Distrrct Attorney has issued a process against his sureties to respond in accordance with their bonds. The sureties are the Hon. Robt. J. Walker, ex-Secretary of the TreaSury and ex-Governor of Kan sas, and Zeno Senor, Esq., of BrOoklyn. Cr A woolen manufacturing firm in Enfield, (Mass.,) is making knit uniforms for the Connecticut volunteers, of dur able material and proper color, repre sented to be serviceable for summer or winter wear, which is furnished per uni form—jacket, vest, and pantaloons—for three dollars. This is what we want for our volunteers. tir The government has determined to arrest all persons in the free States who'hold unlawful communications with the rebels. Certain secession democrats in the northern cities are closely watch ed. The governinent will exert its whole power to purlish treason in the loyal States. rigrb It is reported that Mr. Russell, the correspondent of the London Times, will not be permitted to cross the Po tomac again, on the ground that; his let ters do not fairly represent the condition of affairs here, and nave a tendency to create injurious - impressions abroad. gar The Easton Sentinel, a paper ad vocating p eac e and compromise, has been gutted by a mob. Col. Philip Johnson, member of Congress elect from that district, has been burded in effigy, and made to show his colors. There is much excitement, and the riot is still progressing. er On Friday last a young man nam ed John Dunn, a member of a volunteer company attached' to colonel Chan try's regiment, encamped at Cameo's Woods, near Philadelphia, fell off a fence, and dislocated his neck. He died almost instantly. The deceased belonged to Silver Springs, Lancaster county. Ili The rebel loss of staff and regi mental officers at the Bull Run battle, is as follows : Two Generals, one Brig adier General;seven Colonels, and two Lieutenant Colonels. The Federal offi cers killed were but one Colonel and one Lieutenant Colonel. Cr Peter Ritner, a brother of the ea- Governor, died in Cass county, Ind., on the 10th inst., at the age 0r67 years.-L The papers of that county speak of him as an active business man and useful citizen and deplore his death as a gen eral loss to their community. ow Judge Catron of the United States Supreme Court, has been expelled from Nashville, Tennessee, by a vigilance committee, for refusing to resign his Judgeship. He was compelled to leave his sick wife there. . 1r The testimony and report of the Commissioners appointed by Gov. Curt in to investigate the army frauds, is now in the hands of the State printer, and will soon be made public. • J. w. Denver, late Goveimor of Kan sas, has received the appointment of • Brigadier General in the 1 - ?ederal army. Forney,•in a letter to the Press, says , that. a son .of Senator Breckinridgtifl4 l -, the Southern army. VIOLATION OF THE POSTAGE. LAW.- Notwithstanding the cheap= postage as adopted in this country,,there are many who try to evade its payment by sending gloves, collars, handkerchiefs, seeds, &c., labelled as newspapers. So loosely have the the affairs of the Post office been managed for a few years, that but few of these little delinquencies have been detected. The other day a pack age marked "one newspaper," paid, was addressed to a produce dealer in New England. Upon examination at the Chicago Post office it was found to con tain two samples of flour, with orders how to sell and at what price. The sam ples weigh less than six ounces, and would only have cost six cents in an en velope ; but the desire to save a half dime is likely to entail disgrace and a heavy fine from the government on the perpetrators of this little transaction. • er B. W. Barnwell, in a letter from Oharlottesville, Va., dated Aug. 12, says "The supplies of clothing for the army are not sufficient. The .destitution of our army in clothing and food is terrible. Many applicationi are made to us, by well men who wish toti escape sickness, for extra pair of drawers, or socks, or un der-shirts. It will require every nerve to be strained by you at home and ours selves here to meet the exigences of the fall and winter, should the war last so long." ' Forney's Press, the leading daily in Philadelphia, and . among the ablest and most enterprising ,newspapers in this county, is now printing on one of Hoe's last fast feur-cylinder presses.— This was made necessary to accommo date the increasing edition of the paper. Col. Forney has himself to thank for the prosperity of his enterprise. It is his own energy, ability and industry which gives life, vigor and ability to the Press. tgr The Charleston Courier has a let ter dated Richmond, Aug. 14th, saying: "There is a great deal of sickness in our army. • It is said that at Charlottesville and Culpepper, there are over 3,000 ill. A great many have been brought sick to this city, and at Norfolk and York town there is more disease than with us The measles have swept and are sweep ing through every division of the army/ The Eicess of Expendituree for carrying the ,United States mails in the Southern States, over the ,amount re ceived from postage in the same, States, from the first of January to the 31St . of December, 1860, was .$3,584,356 12. The little State of Delaware is the only one of all the:said States in which there was an, excess of receipts over expend itures during said period. The, excess of receipts in that State was $73,160.71. Car On Monday Marshal Millwood, by order of the Secretary of War, arrest ed Pierce Butler Esq., of Philadelphia. Mr. Butler sympathises with the Rebels and is said to be implicated in shipping arms to the South. ar Thomas S.,Serrill, a noted traitor from New Orleans, has been arrested at New York, on his arrival from Europe, with,X,45,000 in Bank of England notes, the proceeds of .a rebel loan. gar William Ford, of Maine, hay.,ing lost his way, was starved to death in a New Jersey forest last week. Berries and wild fruit were too light a diet for him, and wasting away to 40 pounds, he died. ' ittir Some of the soldier& in Washing ton city, when they g 4 ." hard up for funds," sell their overcoats to hackmen• The Quartermaster's Department have issued an order to re-claim all such clothing. Cr Every soldier who loses•his grin, whether in cowardly throwing it away on the field of battle or through neglect, is to have twelve dollars, the price of the gun, deducted from his pay. c e r The skeleton reginients-in:Ybila delphia will compose an army of nearly ten thousand men. Besides these, the home guard compose another large forge, a great portion of which will at once of fer their services. tilir The War Department has an nouneed that there was already an no due proportion of commissaries, quarter masters and paymasters for the army. Frysinger, the editor of the Lew istown True Democrat, and an advocate of the election of Breckihridge for. the Presidency, has been removed from a clerkship in Washington. dir Jeff Davis has issued a proclama tion ordering all Union men in the south to depart within forty days, on pain of punishment as alien enemies. ar Gen. Lyon's body has been care fully laid out, and will be embalmed and sent to his friends in Connecticut. er The rebels have released the chap lains of several of our regiments, captor. ed at Manassas. Cr An attack upon Fortress Monroe is said to be contemplated within a week. Imo` The official statement of tbe rebel army in the south makes it 210,000 men. , 067 , Flogging in the army was abolish ed at the late session of Congress. WAR AND OTHER NEWS SCRAPS A sarcophagus, intended for the mau soleum at Frogrnore, has arrived in Lon don. It will enclose the coffins contain ing the remains of her late Royal High ness the Duchess of Kent, and is of blue marble of very fine quality. The prin cipal part is formed from a block of some six tons in weight, hollowed out to the requisite depth entirely by the chisel.— On one end there in a monogram of the letters Alpha and Omega, encircled by a serpent, executed in the early Chris tian symbolic style, on the bevel of the top, on one side an inscription in Eng lish, setting forth the tities,'age, &c., of her late Royal Highness, an inscription in German occupying the other side. The'gi and jury of the U. S. Circuit Court at New York have presented as nuisances the Journal of Commerce,• Daily News,Day Book,Freeman's Journ al and Brboklyn Eagle, for syinpathy with the rebels, and ask the advice of the. court, saying that they will be glad to learn that the conductors of these papers' are liable to indicment and condign pun= ishment. Private letters from Gen. Fremont speak of the great assistance which his wife, '! Jessie," well rerndinbered in the campaign of 1836, is rendering him in this most serious contest. She acts as his private secretary, writing many of his most important business letters, and taking notes of his conversation with of ficers on matters of moment. , L. J. Stevens, late chairman of the Breckinridge National Committee, suc ceeds James Cameron as Colonel of the 'l9th N. Y. Regiment. We would all the Breckinridge men followed the Col onel's example in striking squarely, with out equivocation or ifs or ands, for the Government. Mr. Faulkner, who is under arrest in Washington, received information from the War Department on Thursday last the he was detained as a hostage forthe return of Messrs. Harris and Magraw, who went to the Confederate camp for the purpose of recovering the body of the late Colonel Cameron. General Pactllellan was born in Wood stock, Connecticut, near the Putnam Wolf Den. His father was an eminent physician and moved to Philadelphia during the boyhood of his now more em inent son. Woodstock is an adjoining town to . Eastford, where General Lyons was born. The Boston Journal states that Mr. John B. Hasler, of Webster, left on Wednesday night for Missouri, with'the intention of bringing the body of Gen. Lyon to his native town (142,astford, Ct.) for burial. Mr. Hasler's wife is a sister of the fallen hero. A bill is before the rebel congress which looks to the confiscation of all southern bonds and evidences of south ern state indebtedness which are not reg istered by a certain date as the property of citizens of the ecnfederato states, or of citizens of nations at peace with them. =IIMMI The Treasury Department announces that the states of New York and Penn sylvania will be reimbursed for the sums of money advanced for the equipments of regiments for the war. The money will be paid in drafts on New York and Philadelphia. It is reported that evidence has been discovered showing that before Jeff. Davis resigned his seat in the United States'Sen ate he'roade out a list of men Who were to be made officers in the reb el army. General Edwin C. Wilson, of Erie, Pa., (late,Adjutant General of State of Pennsylvania,) has been appointed . a Brigadier Quarteimaster of volunteers, United States Army, with rank Captain. A special dispatch from Washington states that the body of Col. Cameron has been properly interred by the enemy in the graveyard of a Methodist church near Stone Bridge. Large quantities of ordinance, ammu nition and army stores are constantly go ing forward to Washington. Twenty to thirty tons of shot are often sent from New York city in a single day. By order of Gen. McClellan, the en tire Pennsylvania reserve will be placed under command of Gen. McCall; Elev en thousand men been already sent ,for ward. ,Jeff: Davis' government., it is said, will now take anything in aid of the Confed erate loan, from a bale of cotton to a bundle of hoop poles. • Alexander R. Boteler, late 'a member df Cengress from Virginia, has died &Om lockjaw, produced by a bullet wound re ceived at the batt'e of Stone Btidge. Gen. Scott pronounced Gen McClel lan to be'the only man in the 'Federal army capable of manoeuvering one hun dred thouiand.soldiers in the field. A letter from Minister Fogg states that Garibaldi said ,to If your war is for freedom, I am with you with 20,000 men." At one time during the bottle of Bull Run, Gen. Lee, orthe Rebels, threw down his sword, and declared the battle lost. Evening Star has a dispatch de nying that Bbri McCullough was billed in'tlie battle near Springfield. Cr The Chicago Tribune, the leading Republican paper of Illinois, contains the following: ARMY CONTRACT FRAT:Dq.—The spec ial Committee of the House on the frauds in the army contracts has asked and obtained the fullest extension of its power, so as not only to include con tracts that have been made but any that may be hereafter, in any department of the service connected with the war.— Mr. Van Wyck, the chairman, says "the committee find that in the past two months there has been an amount of fraud in Mr. Cameron's department un paralelled in the history of the country." We have no doubt of it. .And when their report shall be made to Congress next winter, it will cover with a cloak. of comparative respectability the bold est 'exploits of Mr. Cameron's prede cessor in office. Mr. Floyd ought to feel deeply grateful :to the Pennsylvania Secretary for the services he has render ed his reputation iu this respect, unless, indeed, he should feel jealous of him. This is pretty strong ground for a Re publican paper to assume ; and in con sequence of this fact alone, the assertion of Mr. Van Wyck places Old Circum bendibus Cameron in a bad position.— Simon has always been noted far look ing out.for number one ; but in this in stance, the immense field of operations opened to his peculiar range of talent,may have made him overreach himself. Let the committee followthis corruption to its fountain head; and let the responsi bility be attached where it' belongs Lancaster Inquirer. DETERMINED SUICIDE.-A foreigner, named Frank Howard, who seems to have had na relations in this country, perpetrated a most desperate suicide near Eaton, Ohio, on the 31st ultimo.— He went to the barn set it on fire, and, after the fire had gat a fairdiart with the intention of removing every trace of himself, be cut his throat with his razor, and immedietly threw himself into the fire. But loss of blood did not assuage the pain of burning, Human nature could not endure it, and, with his clothes burned off and his flesh literally on fire, he jumped into a well that drowning might take the place of burning. In this Condition his dead body was found. Tux Loss AT BULL BON.—We have at last the official account of the losses at the battle of Bull Bun, which is em braced in the official report of that bat tle from Gen. McDowell, the command ing General, and is as follows; Killed-19 officers, and 462 non-com missioned officers and privates. Wound ed-64 officers, and 947 non-commission officers,and privates. Total, 1409 killed and wounded. The missing, prisoners and otherwise amount to about 1400. Although the total loss is considerable, yet it is satisfactorily ascertained to be much below that of the rebels, who, five or six days after the battle admitted to a loss of 600 in killed, and in ' wounded 2500. SPRIGHTLY OLD LADY.—Mrs. ldah Blair, of Gloucester, entered upon her 98th year on the 7th inst. Mrs. Blair lost her husband in the gale of 1821 ; she was left with a family of small child ren, to' look: for support. Since that Aims she has performed all the labor on a farm of 90 acres, with 30 or 40 head of cattle upon it, without the aid of a man. Four or her children died before reach ing maturity, and the' other two died teething. She cut , and sold last year 73 tons of hay, besides 8 fat beeves and two tons of butter from the farm. All this labor she performed -without assist ance. It may well ba doubted whether the country can show another, such in stance of vigor. ATT.E,MI!T T 9, KILL, HAS MASTER.- , -On Thursday of last week Dr. A. J. Smoot, of Charles county, Md. had occasion to reprimand one of his slaves. The doc tor did not strike him, but simply threat ened him with punishment. The negro appeared very submissive and apologis ed for his conduct, but when his master turned from him he siezed a gun near at hand and struck the doctor a deadly blow on the head, shivering the gun 'to pieces. The doctor fell from the effects of the , blow, when the negro . ran off, and has not, since been heard from. The doctoiiitiot hurt further than'a severe scalp wound. UrAn Edglisli shipmaster with a car go of coffee is believed to have purpose ly wrecked his vessel upon the southern coast. The coffee. was saved, and 'sold to the rebels at a price' much above its value. By way of encouraging similar orie : tations in future, the rebels paid for the coffee, and treated the captain with marked consideration. 1r A body of Illinois Union troops, numbering only 250, defeated an insur gent force .of 750 men at Charlestown, Mo., on Monday night,lilling forty and taking seventeen prisoners, with a loss of only one man. lir William Lyon lliackerqie, the leader of the Canadian rebellion in 1837, has been seriously ill for the past three months, and at last accounts there were no hopes of his recovery. iHr The Convention of Western.yir ginia has concluded to attempt to erect a new State, to be called Kanawha. A. _ LARK THESE FACTSV -o-- THE TESTIMOSY of the WHOLE WORLD' HOLLOWAY'S OINTMENT. Bad Legs, Bad Breasts, Sores and Ulcers All description of sores are remediable by the proper and diligent use of this inestimable preparation. To attempt to cure bad legs by plastering the edges of the wound together is ts. folly ; for should the skin unite, a beisKy dis— eased condition remains underneath to break out with tenfold fury in a few days. Theon rational and successful treatment, as indicated. by nature, is to reduce the inflammation in and about the wound and to soothe the neighboring' parts by rubbing in plenty of the. Ointment as. salt is forced into meat. Diptheria, Ulcerated Sore Throat. and Scarlet and other Fevers Any of the above diseases may be cured by well rubbing the Ointment three times a day into the chest, throat and neck of the patient; it will soon penetrate, and give immediate re lief. Medicine taken by the month must over. me upon the whole system ere its influence can, be felt in'any local part, whereas the Oint ment will do its work at once. Wkoeeertriesi the unguent in the above maniocs for the dis eases named, or any sititilar disorders affecting - - he chest and throat, will . find themselves re— lieved as by a.charro. Piles, Fistulas, Strictures. The above class of complaints will be remove by nightly fomenting the parts with warm water, and then by most effectually tabbing in, the Ointment. Perilous suffering from these direful complaints should lose not a moment im arresting their progress It should be under— stood that it is not sufficient merely to sinearr the Ointment on the affected parts, but it must be well rubbed in for some considerable time. two of three times a day, that it may be taken., into the system, whence it will remove any hidden sore or wound as effectually as though• palpable to the eye. There again bread and Water poultices, after the rubbing in of the Ointment, will do great service. This is the only sure treatment for female cases of cancer in the stomach, or where there may be a gen eral bearing down. Indiscretions of:Youth; Sores: and Ulcers. Blotches, as also swellings, can, with ter tainty, be radically cured it the Ointment be used freely . , and the Pins be-takeif night and morning as recommended in the printed in , structions. Wh,en treated in any other way they colly dry up tit one place to bneak out in another; whereas, this Ointment will remove the humour from the system, and leave the pa tient a vigorous and - healthy being. It will require time with the use of the Pills to ensure a lasting cure. Dropsical Swellings, Paralysis and Stijl" Joinos. Although the above complaints differ widely iu their origin and nature, yet - they all require. local treatment. Many of the worst cases, of such diseases, will yield in a cOmparatively short space of time when this Ointment is dili - gently rubbed into the parts affected, even after every other moans have failed. In all serious maladies the Pills should be taken according to the printed directions accompanying each box. Both the Ointment and Pills should be used: in the foll Owing cases: Bad Legs, Chiego-foot, Fistulas, Bad Breasts, Chilblains, Gout, • Burns, Chapped Hands,Glandular Bunions, Corns (Soft.) - Swellings, Bite of Mos- Cancers, Lumbago, chetoes and Contracted and Piles. Sand-Flies, Stiff Joints, Rheumatisro,. Coco bay, Elephantiasis, Scalds, Skin Diseases, Scurvy Sore Nipples, Tumors, U leers, ' Sore-throates, Wounds, . Yaws, Sore-heads. CA °nos . !—None are „genuine unless the. words "Ho.t.towA v, New YORK' AND 'Loa- DON," are discernable as a Water-mark .ira every leaf of the book of directions, around each pot or box; the same may: be plainly seen by holding the !eaf to the fight . . A hand some reward will be giyen to any one rendering such information as may lead to the detection of any party or parties counterfeiting the med icines or vending the same, knowing them to be spurious. Sold at the Manufactory of Professor ROL:- LOWA Y, SO Maiden Lane, New York and by all respectable Druggists and Dealers in Medi- , eine throughout the civilized world, in pots,.ar 2dc., 6.10. and $1 each. LThere is a considerable saving by taking. OP larger sizes. N. 8.---Directions for the guidance of pa- News, in every disorder, are affixed to each box, HENRY LANDIS, M. D. ppEas his professional: services to, the I U/citizens of Marietta And vicinity Can be found at his Ding Store, formerly Dr. Plink le , s; at all times° when. not elsewhie.re professionally engaged. Too ri IC FRI EN Ds: Having been called to a position in the U. S. Navy, I hereby resign my profession to the care and'ittention of Dr. Henry.:Landis, in whom .1 have-every ma fidence, having had ample opportunity of lAA certaining his ability to till my place. F. HINKLE,. M. DA The Peoples' Hat and Cap Store. StifJ_LTZ BROTIJER, No. 20 NORTH QUEEN STREET, Practical Hatters, Manufacturers, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN HATS AND CAPS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. WE have now in Store the largest and must complete assortment of 'S p r i n g St yl e HATS 4r CAPE ever kept in this city. We are now manufacturing four new and elegant varieties of Spring-style'Silk and Cast simer Hats. A splendid Silk Hal . FOR THREE DOLLARS' AND A SUPERIOR. ARTICLE P,OR FOUR / FELT HATS.. New and elegant styles of Spring and Srmer Felt Hats, from the finest beaver to the commonest wool, ranging in, prices from $5.00 to 50 cents. We are. amply prepated to. "job" all goods in our line to Dealers at the most reason able rates. They will find - it to their advant age to call and examine our large and•superi or stock. To those friends, who, during the past, have steadfastly continued their very liberal patropage,we return our sincere thanks, arid trust, by strict attention to business; fair dealing and low prides, combined with the superior exellence ofour goods, to merit a con tinuance of past favors. 1&' Shipping Furs bought and the higheit price paid. in cash. . JOHN A..SILULTZ, HENRY A. SHULTZ. LANCASTER, APRIL 13, 1861, Great Discovery: T have made a discovery of the utmost iportance to every married perion Of either sex, and will send the full particulars concern ing it to any one en receipt of a fl . tanip to pax return postage; Addreta Da. T. H. MARTELL, • 7-39-iswly.l A/fred, Maine. REMOVAL ,10'• .; MJ. TRAIN - Eli, ' Having removed her Millinery establishm.ent to Pules nein building, near Market Square, INTHERE she hopes to meet her friends and old customers, a' d merit and receive a continuation of 'the libenil patronage here ofore ex4pded tiz. her. A GENER ASSORTMENT OF o Hammered and Rolled Iron, Li- S. Bars, Norway, Nail Rods, American ' and German Spring and Cast Steel, Wagon Boxes, Iron Axles, Springs, &c., for smiths. STARRETT CO. MO LANDLORDS! Just received, Scotch and Irish WHISKIES, warran ted pure, at H. D. Benjamain's. MMI