, , . , , 1, . . . ... , . . .., .. . - ......—.... .. , . ••• , gl,lit ill uttitait . , L 3 %-..." t +. + 1 . IS 11 ED EVE . 1.• SATL [MAY, AT . [ E il ill. f. I': it "Nit it iVi ilitial, , PA y.\Br.r.: iv DVANCE.II . 11 11 . . . • k. in CrulFs 1 ow,—Second Story— .. • t street, five do, r., below Mrs. Flury's *etta, Lances er County, Penn'a. I '' :outs be dela, ect beyond 3 months, , f - f not paid un 1 the expiration of the 17U.will be ch rged. • 4 . * , tion receive for a less period than , i::, hs, and no p all arrear n of the pub , ontinuance kcribed for, 'ent. 1.0 ,ti iim sending u: Trva new subscribers ve a sixth c. py for his trouble. Setae RATES One square (12 lines, ) 50 cents for he first insertion and 25 reach subse uent insertion. Profes and Busines cards, of six lines or less per annum. Notices in the reading s, fire cent a-line. Marriages and , the simpl• announcement, FREE; any iltiditiO al lines, five cents a- line. re 3 mouths $2.00; 6 months, $3.50; , $5. Tw squares, 3 months, $3: ths, $5; i ear, $7. Half-a-column, ths, SS; 6 onths, $l2; 1 year, $2O. tolumn, limiluiths, $2O ; 1 year, $3O. cent'? MANd a large lot of new JOB VD Tlipti, we are prepared to do all PLA IrN AND FANCY PRINTCNO, rge hosiers, with Outs, Ills o all kind.v, Ball Tickets, euiar Cards, Programmes, ¢c., Ste. mg in the Job Printing line will be with n stness and dispatch, and at the possi le rates. WIFE TO TEE WOOER, since scorn has fail'd to cure you press so blindly, ,ur reasons endure, rex follies kindly: t you ; more fair and gay wince to some ntay be 4 40,:r501f, when he's away, to me! o}—titen or. for whether or no glair, he's so to ms =ay wreathe ~ .'srriles and gladness; " , ;tiot,ften, only breathe , ub 'And the sadness— !It° sweet a trust to truth, I'hat coti6denca of care! joi:pne grief of his to soothe Thsri,lip your bliss to share. }ten ..g(4then go ; for whether or no He gr4Ces, 'tis bliss to shale! .3r.thtl6*eari meet or leave ,thered4ontent without me ; ks a hot snares neglect may wave— itot.teitii,e'en to doubt toe. ! jealous cares are poor respect; ite , k flows icy heart, my guide, !,1 what you deem is to neglect, feel is to confide; ngotlarn go: for whether or no 11 think In: does confide. you say, can sternly look, Actirries speak aevetely ; eyes, you vow, could ne'er rebuke— whispers breathe austerely. P.! ef the coining cares it, C Par kr 4VI I S .ion P City I lls eyes foresee? 'cute his temper wears or mine and me! di go: for whet her or no 1., sautes for me t. to others gives denies me; in youth to live, 'irt to prize tee! rent rose be shed, on the stern. Ii The, love can ne'er be dead, ventiStled to them. ta go //is rival? No: es in them. r QUESSION.—We to the fact that a bold; •!'o ile by the fashionable fe'i 14 do away entirely "t The Empress Eu! ril r ;‘, ,tio RI lee , .utgiti , 111.1 s , 3 ow. be so sex a be,ccm ti the v will may bat She be a to f v, Dm that og prod 1 1 that bet . i vie eyeB quaff toe° bind to at per will be discoritiri es are paid, unless at slier. A failure to no , t the expiration of the , ill be considered a new scam: months sin. who is also a spec . has made up her without hoops, and led ladies 'who sun at hoops, are exceel case of fire, and h \ade all the sex fro use of them. Bu their proscription opinion, that it wil ;ter to convince th world that hoops a until they are cony .11 that may be said fire arising from thei but very little. Q is or that, if they pl • gone by when qu ld of fashions as wel 'which they are Kipp ding deities, FashioiA allegiance to the pd i ina become independent .self. She declars hoop ig and graceful adden ity. And, voila, hoops fashion shall have decl ig else is still more cha more graceful. Mark. A, WORK RSE:--The 'altnrall Society requ\ smium work horse shall and sixteen lands hit tars ; broad between rrel ; short loins ; well deep chest ; sgul Legs ; short between Atm and hook paste, under him ; speed - eqt. in hoar on the road, at at the plow ;• with suL ipsnre spirit and end lI,LIARDS.-7.-4 yosski 13 ~,a, sawed Charles VT et\ dude a ru,n of live thosp. , 11, :Nati alty.one poiste. tr I. 1 _ 33 alK.er, Proprietor_ Mil VOL. 8. TILE ART OF CATCHING THE IlonsE.—.A. correspondent of the Valley Farmer tru ly remarks that there few things more aggravating than to be in a hurry to go to some place and have a great trouble to catch a horse. I have sometimes made the assertion that a horse, which I raise will never be hard to catch un less some one else spoils him. The way I manage is to keep them gentle from colts, handling them as often as conven ient. When young horses are running to grass give them salt occasionally, and let them fondle about you, making as little show of trying to get hold of them as possible. There is nothing surer to spoil a horse forever than to ran as if trying to hem him in, and yel ling authoritatively, or scolding, when he can see, just as well as you know. that he is out of your reach. To put on the cap sheaf, whip him severely for causing - trouble, and my word for it, the next time you want to catch him he "will not listen to the voice of your charming, charm you never so wisely." Horses learn a great deal by signs.-:- in beginning t ) teach them to be caught, go toward them on the near side slowly and cautiously, making no demonstra tions at all. If the animal begins to walk off, stop 'and whistle, or otherwise manifest'indifference until he becomes quiet again, then approach as before.— When you are so close as to Fie confi dent he will not escape you- again, then speak kindly and hold up your right hand, and be ready to touch him on the withers, and thence pass it along the neck until you can get hold of his head, but do not seize him with a grab, as this tends to excite fear afterwards By practicing this course, using the sign, viz : holding up the hand when you are a little further away each time, a horse may be taught to stop and be caught, even when in considerable glee, (play ing) simply by holding up the hand and Asitig some familiar phrase, such as whoa , boy, c. By way of caution, however, watch his actions and intentions closely during his tutoring, and if at any time or from any cause you see that be is going to run, do not by any means say anything or hold up your hand, as the sign given and disobeyed a few times wil almost in evitably prevent your making anything out of it in future. HOW A MAN FEELS WHEN SHOT.—We take the following from a letter written by one of the lowa volunteers, who fought in the battle near Springfield, I was standing, or rather kneeling, behind a little bush, re-loading my mus ket, just before the rebels engaged in this close work retreated. Suddenly I felt a sharp pain in my shoulder, and fell to the ground. Jumping up, one Of our boys asked me if I was hurt? I re plied that I' thought not, and drew up my musket to fire, when he said : "Yes, you are shot right through the shotilder." I think it was the remark more than the wound, which caused the field, all at once, to commence whirling around. me ili a very strange manner. I started to. ve it, with a half . ounce Musket ball in shoulder, and once or twice fell dow or 'th dizziness ; but in a short time v e t o .sufficiently to be able to walk r b e a c c o k g s , afield nine miles where the • ball was talt A Tim have ab 03 war papers c corresP says .-- 1' reach, compan at the for it fiagain.) H e cut the throat of the and then engaged Lieutenant -Shernal., a a hand-to-hand conflict with ,sabres. After a ten minutes' fight—both being ccomplished swordsmen --he severed `herman's head from his body in one i 1.. ilow.' , We - bairn pleasant conversation with , ' 'en. Sherman in our office on Monday ast, and be.did no‘appear to be aware bat be'-had been. beheaded. At •any ate, he didnot allude to the somewhat ute l irting 4vent. _Possibly, however; i m emory may have been affectedlay operation, for we cannot suppose I b 'outhern parson would exaggerate. vidence Journal. 4 . t will talo three years from the August to build -the new opera Paris, mad 8,000,000 f• to pay afakvillait Vamsgmuia courlrnl for tlt intik &tit. MARIETTA, SEPTEMBER 28, 1861. John A. Waihington [From the Troy Daily Times, Sept. 14 . 1 While a party of rebel officers were "observing" our pickets near Elkwater, Virginia, yesterday, a "vagrom" bullet, hurling into their midst, perforated the uniform of Col. John A. Washington, somewhere in the region of the disphra gee, and instaneonsly terminated the mil itary and mortal career of that famous individual. Famous on two accounts— first, that he was a roundabout descend ant of the great patriot whose illustrious name lends honor to everything with which it is even remotely connected ; and, secondly, that he once had the un speakable pleasure of being bone up in execrable wood-cuts as one of the indi viduals to whom John Brown and his terrible army gave such a nightmare of apprehension. When the old partisan burst upon the sleepy denizens of Harper's Ferry, and disturbed their ,equanimity so seriously, Col. Washington was one whom they visited. His two hundred and eighteen pounds avoirdupois were comfortable disposed upon a feather bed, over which hung one of the swords of the immortal patriot—one that he had swung on many a battle-field and never sheathed with dishonor. As John Brown pounced in to his room, the Colonel raised his night cap tremblingly, gasped convulsively, and covered his head with the quilts in continently, while old Osssawottmie reached out his bony fingers, clutched the sword and bore it off: When Brown and his fanatics were fighting like tigers in the arsenal, Col. Washington was traveling in an oppo site direction ; but when Brown was standing chained and haltered upon the scafold, Col. Washington was there on a big black horse, wearing a red sash and looking as brave and martial as one of the paletots. By some means the sword of the Pater Pattie was carried away with those who escaped, and when old Brown was buried, atnid 4he stony hills of North Elba, it lay upon his coff in. The family were magnanimous aid honorable enough, however, to restore it to its owner. Colonel John A. re ceived it hung it up once more . on the pegs over the bedstead, and it is to be hoped slept as sweetly and snored as loudly as ever, with no dread fears of "nigger insurrections" .to disturb his dreams. When conspiracy assumed the form of rebellion, and the Government was threatened with overthrow,Colonel John A. took down his sword, not to defend the institutions his great .ances tor had given theftabors of his life to create and establish, not to preserve the constitution he had helped to frame, not to sustain the government of which he was the first Chief Magistrate—not for those purposes, but to aid the criminal wickedness of those who seek to efface all the principles Washington lived to establish ; who declared that he and the other fathers "were mistaken, and in corporated a michievous error into their theory of politics :" Col. John A. was a brilliant man ; a good, hearty eater ; a viliant and mighty champion at wine suppers ; a plesant companion in a story telling circle; a fine looking 'personage in uniffirm—but unfortunatly he was not bullet-proof, else we should not be call ed upon to publish his obitUary. One if those painful casulties which so seri ously interfere with the prosecution of little schemes like that in which himself and his fellow rebels were engaged, has - removed him from the theatre of opera tions. We need not say that we regret the fact—for will all his peculiarities, the history of Harper's Ferry does not show that Col. Washington was a brave man, and it is not pleasant to record the de •ased of a coward under such circum les. A hero balances life against ',he s\ bt C it was probably Cadmus, brought letters into Greece, iller - r - no--C)rie Dollar a -Y-ea,r.. ' 501IING WITTE A. BARBER.—Stopping .for a day'or two at a village a short way -from Boston, Jeems went to :a barber's to get shaved. .On entering, and casting his eyes about the room, he perceived that the barber drove a double trade of 'tonsor and small grocer. " Shave, sir ?" said the barber to his customer, whose face sufficiently indica ted the object of his visit. Jeems made no reply, but drawing himself up to a lofty height, proceeded, in the attorney fashion, to interrogate the barber as follows : " Sir, you are a barber ?" " Yes, sir ; have a shave ?" "And do you also keep this oyster cellar ?" " Yes, sir ; have any oysters " ell, sir, this occupation of yours gives rise to the most horrible suspicions. It is a serious thing to submit one's head to the manipulations of a stranger; but if you can answer a couple of ques tions to my satisfaction I should like to be shaved." The barber said be would try. " Well, sir," said Jeems solemnly, "do you shave with your oyster-knife ?" " No, sir," said the barber, smiling " One question more," continued the interrogator, "and remember that yon are under an oath, or rather, recollect that this is a serious business (the bar ber started) one question more ; do you never open oysters with your razor ?" " No, sir!" exclaimed the barber, in dignantly, amid, a roar of laughter from the bystanders. " Then shave me," said Jeems, throw ing himself into the the chair, and un tying his neck cloth with the air of a man who has unshaken confidence in human nature. THEM PERTATERS.—MaIIy of our read ers have no doubt read the folloWing rich anecdote. It is old, but like good wine, it will bear repetition. Those who have never " read it," will thank us for reviving it from the oblivion into which it was fast falling : Several legis lative gentlemen were dining at a Bos ton hotel rone of them asked Mr. D., a gentleman who sat opposite "Can you reach them pertaters, sir ?" Mr. D. extending his arm towards the dish, and satisfying himself that he could reach the " pertaters," answered Yes, sir." The legislator was taken aback with the unexpected rebuff from the wag, but presentlY recovering himself, he asked : "Will you stick my fork into one of 'em, then." Mr. D. took the fork, and very coolly plunged it into a finely-cooked potato, and left it there. The company roared, as they took the joke, and the victim looked more foolish than before; but suddenly an idea struck him, and rising to his feet, he exclaimed, with an air of conscious triumph "Now, Mr. D., I will trouble you for the fork." Mr. D. rose to his feet, and with the most imperturbable gravity, pulled the fork out of the potato, and returned it, amidst an unconquerable thunder-storm of laughter, to the utter discomfiture of the gentleman from B.—. New Yorl Mer cury. THE POOE AND THE COMING WINTER.- In view of the , approach of winter, and the scarcity of employment, a cotetnpo rary gives the following advice : Let every man, woman and child save now ; let them even pinch themselves and fam ilies now to prepare for darker times ahead. The winter is rapidly ad•ancing, when the want of warm clothing, com fortable fires, unbroken shoes and a host of other necessaries will be severely felt, if unprovided for now. Every shilling HOW squandered in dissipation or unnec essarily wasted, robs your fainily of some comfort. Every hour of idleness, when work may be obtained, is a crime. Look to it, men with• wives and little ones, that when' the hoar of gloom and dis treiss shall arrive, you shall have saved, even thottgh'it may be bat a few ddllars, for thatlime of need. He who neglects this plain duty is worse than unwise— be is wicked. Cr Recruiting in Ohio is , reduced to a system : which is said to work admirab ly. A committee of prominent citizens is appointed in each Congressional Dis trict, and these Committees appointet Camp Committees who receive recruits, enrol and muster them into service at once, and clothe them. When ftfty•are ,mustered they are assigned to a regi ent, 'and officers are detailed from ng them to recruit each company to inirrent number. NO. 9. LARGE Pamir:in.—ln reading an ac count of the riches of patriarchal princes of ancient times, or of eastern countries, we are struck by the vast number of retainers by whom they were surround ed. Even Abraham, the father of the faithful, did not hesitate to arm his own household—three hundred and eighteen trained male servants, born in his house —to go out by night and attack the army of four kings, who had taken cap tive his kinsman, Lot. According to the modern rate of calculation, four wc. man and children, or one woman and three children, to each male adult, the household of Abraham could not have been less than fifteen hundred and nine ty. The wealth of such men was calcu lated in cattle. Job, in the days of his prosperity, had fourteen hundred sheep, and six thousand camels, and one thous and.yoke of oxen, and one thousand she asses. Indeed the original Latin word for money, petunia, whence our word " pecuniary," means cattle as well as. money., and is most probably derived from the Latin word pecus, sheep. We read in ancient history of rich, patriarchal farmers and shepherds feed ing whole armies on their passage from one country to another. We read in English history of the Earl of Warwick entertaining, at his different manors, thirty thousand people every day. The old feudal barons had large halls, and whole sheep and oxen were 'roasted daily to feed their households ; and Thomas a'Becket was so very hospitable that, not having seats enough for the numerous guests that frequented his table, he strewed the floor of his hall with clean hay or rushes, for the knights and squires to sit down upon and regale themselves, without soiling their clothes or catching rheumatics, in their extre mities. Westminster Hall was the usu al dining-room of William Rufus,; and Dr. Pocock informs us that he has seen an Arabian chief dine in the streets of a town where be had come to sell his cattle, and invite all passers, even com mon beggars, to sit down and partake of his banquet. TIIE INDIAN SUMMER.—What a habit the poets have 'of praising the Indian Summer ! And yet how few recognize that season when it really coineet Most men imagine it visits us about a month earlier than it actually makes its appear ance, and so they worship the Bost of that delicious period which we all look to enjoy before the rude voice of Win ter bid the Autumn hence, and closes the almanac upon, all but his own pro gramme of entertainment. The Indian Summer always seems to us like the gorgeous sunset of the year— its hectic flush is so brief and yet so beautiful. The consumptive year seems, at that time, to put forth all its vital en ergies anew, to array itself in its more coquettish costume, and with its warm, passionate breath, seek fondly to con vince us of its hope of a long and proud existence. But we knowjtoo well how illusory arc such gay dreams of a brilliant future.— The proxystn once over, the inspiration once gone, the dying year yields up its cherished anticipations. It sadly gath ers together its garment of withered leaves, coughs through the long Decein ber nights its wasted life away, and is buried in the white snow-shroud that its mother, Nature, wraps with tears about the icy fortnof the departed. tar 11..1. Blondon's lauds are challeng ed by a lady, who successfully crossed the Thames the other lay, or would have done so, but that some speculative -coin mercial scoundrels cut away the lead weights which served to steady the guy ropes. As it was, the "lady" accomplish ed two-thirds of her transit with perfect ease, and, finding her" further progress marred by . the circumstance we have mentioned, quietly lowered herself into a boat and was rowed ashore. NOT A BIT. OF IT.--1.10 Sunday Dis putclksays that " hoops are a nuisance, at home or abroad." We dont, believe it. There is not a man who grumbles about hoops, who would not ridicule any woman who should appear in the streets without them, unless she wore skirts enough Co ruhrher health and cost four times the amount that hoops do. It's all folly to talk otherwise, men do like hoops and think theii wearers are im proved by them. ' or A. promising young man may do very well perhaps—a paying ono much better. . tz' :Drett plainly the thinnest ioap bubbles wear the gandiest'colors. DR. MOTT'S CHALYBEATE . RESTORATIVE PILLS OF IRON An Aperient and Stomachic preparation of , cr on purified of • Oxygen and Carbon h.i iumbustion in tlydrogen. Sanctioned by tle• highest Medical Authorities, both in Europe and the United States, and prescribed in thei practice. The experience of thousands daily proves that no preparation of Iron can be compate•li with it. Impurities of the blood, depressiot , ; of vital energy, pale and otherwise sickly complexions, indicate its necessity in EthriOt every Conceivable case. Innoxious in all maladies in- which•it has: been tried, it has proved absolutely curative Ira each of the following complaints, viz : In Debility, Nervous A f fections, Emaciation, Dyspepsia, Constipation, Diarrheea, Dysente— ry, Incipient Consumption, Scrofulous Tubur culosis, Salt Rheum, Mismenstruation, Chlo— rosis,Whites,Liver Clentplains ' Chronic Head': aches, Rheumatism., Intermitten t Fevers, Plin- pies on the face, 4-c. In cases of General Debility, whether the ie. - sult of acute disease, or of the continued Motion of nervous and muscular energy from chronic complaints, one trial of this restorative! his proved successful to an extent which nn description nor written attestation won Id rend;- er credible. Invalids so long bed-ridden as to have become forgotten in their own neighbor hoods, have suddenly re. appeared In the busy world as if just returned from protracted travel in a distant land. Some very signal instances of this kind are attested of female Sufferers,. emaciated victims of apparent marasmus, sane: guineous exhaustion, crittical changes, and that complication of nervous and dyspepti- - aversidn to air and exercise for which the phy- - sician has no name. In iyerrous Affections of all kinds, and for` reasons familiar to medical men, the operation:: of this p,reparation of iron must necessarily he' salutary, tor, unlike the old oxides, it is vizo rously tonic, without being exciting and over beatink ; and gently; regularly aperient, even. , in the most obstinate cases of costiveness with out ever being a gastric purgative, or inflicting: a disagreeable sensation. It is this latter property,. among otheßv which makes it So remarkably effectual unit: permanent'a remedy for Piles, upon which it also appears to exert a distinct - and specific , action, by dispersing the local tendency which: forms them. I o Dlspepsia, innumerable as are'its causes,. a single box of theSe Chalybeate Pills has often sufficed for the most habitual cases, including the attendeut Costiveness. In unchecked Diarr lmo, event when ad- . vaneed to Dysentery, don finned, emaciating,• and apparently malignant, the effects , have' beep equally decisive and astonishing. In the local pains, loss of flesh and strength, debilitating cough, and remitten, hectic, whith generally indicate Incipient Consumpttoni this remedy has allayed the alarm of Inends and, physicians, in several very gratifying. and in— teresting instances. In Scrofulous TuberculosiS, this- medicate& iron has had far more than the good effect of the most cautiously balanced preparations of iodine, without any of their well known hair bilities. The attention of females cannot be too con , - fidently invited to this remedy and restorative,• in the cases peculiarly affecting them. In Rheumatism, both chronic and inflamma tory—in the latter, however, more decidedly— it has been invariably well reported, both ac alleviating pain and rechicing the swellings and stiffness of The joints and muscles. In Intermittent Fevers it m nit necessarily be a great remedy and energetic restorative, and its progress in the new settlements of the West, will probably be one of high renown and use fulness. No remedy has ever been discovered in the whole history of medicine, which exerts such. prompt, happy, and fully restorative efects.- - Good appetite, complete digestion; rapid acqui sition of strength; with an unusual disposition. for active and cheerful exercise, immediately follow its use. .Put up in neat flat metal boxes-containing. :30 pills, price *5O cents per box; for sale by druggists and dealers: Wilt be seat free for any address 0/1 , receipt of the price. AU let- - ters, orders, etc., should be addressed to 11. B. LUCK E';.t CO., General Agents, 20• Cedar-st., N. V. HOWARD ASSOCIATION, Philadelphia. A Benevolent Institution established by special endowment, for the Relief of the Sick and Distressed, afflicted with Virulent and Epidermis Diseases, and especiallyfor the cure of Diseasei of the Sexual , organs. , Medical advice given gratis, by the Acting Surgeon, to all who apply by letter, with a cleseriptiottel their condition, (age, occupation, habits of -life, &c.,) and in cases of extreme poverty inctlicineS furnished free of charge.- ' Valuable Reports- on Spermatorrhcea, and other Diseases of the Sexual Organs, and on the New' Remedies employed in the Dispensary sent to the afflicted- in sealed letter envelopes, free of charge. Two or three postage stamps will be acceptable to pre-pay postage. Address,-Dat, SKILL.sn Iletycwro-rv, Acting Surgeon,: lloward Association-. No. 2-South 9th st., Philadelphia. By order of the Directors. EZRA D. IfEARTW LL, President: GEMIGE FAIRC IL D, Secretary. T HE GLATZ FERRY . , Faraterla Keesey's. The undersigned having leased the above named old-established Ferry and Hotel, iu Hell= Township, York county, opposite the borough of Marietta, where he is prepared to entertain the public at his bar and table with. the best the market affords. He would very respectfully inform the traveling.public that having obtained First class Ferry. Boats; and efficient ferrymen, and is now fully pnepa - red to accommodate persons wishing , to cross the Susquehanna with vehicles or otherwise without delay or detention. JOHN NOEL.. Marielta, August 3, IS6I-1-it CNEW MISS' LOCK S—Good Time Keepers, for One Dollar. Clocks, Watches and Jewelry carefully re p ired and charges moderate, at WOLFE'S. T) R AT E GBOCE R. E ;—Rio, Javamnd Laguira Callbe ; Crushed, Pulverized and Brown Sugar; Superior Green and Black-Tea; Rice, Cheese and Spices; Syrup and prime ba king ;Molasses; Excellent Pearl Barley at J. R. DIITENBACRPS. TNIESH II )\ GROUND SPICt'S AT r ANDERSON' S ! Attention. Butchers and Houskeepers. Having a great demand for nur famed SPICES, I have concluded to con tinue,to keep ttcnnstantsupply of Ground Pep per. Ground Corriunder, and Sweet Alarjpram. A Lt l A P e t have ,lust e ju w st x re o c rk ei a v n el anotl e ) tssu p F- p ll- 1:: W from the Philadelphia manufactories. Purchase's can rely upon the newest stvlea; which will be sold unusually low at J. it. Diffenbach,S. r . BARRELS Monongahela Whisk - jus ,Gd i•J received, which tvill be sold at the low est matket rates by the barrel• or gallon at thew Enterprise Wine Sr,- Liquor Store. A. Di REESE, Mount Joy. CI RASE'S CONCENTR4YED Z Y E, su perior to .any no« in 11Se, cam-be , had at the Cheap Store' of Dijjrlw T - 1 4 , GOODWI N 'S& 1111.0's: Plantation tine V cut Chewitiz Tobactsu. The best in the world. For sale at WOLFE'S. UGGY an d• Ii'LANKETS of Varioith JUll styles and! at muck lower prices thalik the same sqlii:st .Sotungler Patterson. - ix - A , • M1D4.411.A WINEMuII botlieti athtfru s itYy, att. the "- Enterpthie Store." I! REESE, Mount Joy. - 1 FT NEW SPItING st, LE HAT; A•P' UL L S, Isio. 92. litrorke--.Slreet, Illtsrietha, Pa., R ANlMEB2—Allihands—guar ranted'. to he I j genuine. • .• Ben itinpiA RIED F12.1,11'1' note clag) at 1/11WEN1LICH'S.: UP)O3 - 011. COAL 4111.--2.3 .Its a ily,a,t kj at Dr. Grove's 1..11,k1; Zitofe. El