! (- Olt Illatitttian YS PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY, AT ONE COLLAR PER MUM, ==! 44 - ,PFICE in Crull's Row,—teo2 r d s. Story— Frontpiu rs y, • . : Marietta, street, five Lancaster nc d a o s o t r e s r bceo lo u it ty, Penn's. *subscriptions be delayed beyond 3 months, „101.25 : if not paid until the expiration of the Wear, $1.50 will be charged. :IN subscription received for a less period than .74, six months, and no paper will be discontin •:,;'',', ued until all arrearages are paid, unless at E , ;v:' the option of the publisher. A failure to no , s tify a discontinuance at the expiration of the term subscribed for, will be considered a new .. ; ::ti engagement. eArly person sending us FIVE new subscribers . 41,1 shall have a sixth copy for his trouble. ~:Ci*DVERTISING RATES : One square (12 lines, 1 or less) .50 cents for the first insertion and 25 .4; ' cents for each subsequent insertion. Profes sional 'itns3 per annum. Notices in the reading -columns, five cents a-line. Marriages and • Deaths, the simple announcement, FREE; 4 ,lbut for any additional lines, five cents a-line. l'i Square 3 months, $2.00; 6 months, $3.50; •,, 1 year, $5. Two squares, 3 months, $3: N 1 months, $5; 1 year, $7. Half-a-column, !'''3 months, $8; 6 months, $l2; 1 year, $2O. One column, 6 months, $2O ; 1 year, $3O. • „. i, a wing recently added a large lot of new Jon ' ND CARD TYPE, we are prepared to do all Inds of PLAIN AND FANCY PRINTING, as Large Posters, with Cuts, . q Sa le Bills of all kinds, Ball Tickets, I , Circuiars, Cards, Programmes, s c., s te. ~j erything in the Job Printing line will be . 1 '41.:': done with neatness and dispatch, and at the •i 4% lowest possible rates. a , P t , \ -, i. • :t' , DOING GOOD. , :k . ' 1 1 'Tis never too late to do good; '. ;t`l, We all have our time to improve ; j r . , , ?Tis doing no more than we should, Progressively onward to move. .P 3 Tis folly to lornfully grieve ; tt: , ~.4, Be hopeful and you w:11 be wise, ';.: ' The lower the station we leave, 1 1, The greater the merit to rise. .J.`':: We all might be better—in fact, ' l'St> More loving--more friendly--mote kind; . : i With a little more feeling—more tact— ;' i: To manage the heart and the mind. ? ', r3 Tis noble to earnestly strive ' ••11 By labor or learning to rise; . •t 4, :' ?..' The gem-seeker deeply must dive, , , t‘, 'f .-T l'i Or never look out for a prize. t ' :;...ii: How A MAN FEELS UNDER FIRE: Ikit'' hiladelphia American thus relates how `:•,"% soldier soldier feels during a battle 1 ,4 We yesterday stumbled upon a volun "niteer on furlough, who first smelt powder V 0 1 k i ' Pat Bull Run. During an hour's chat ' With him, he gave us a very good goner- Oal idea of the way in which a man feels ''i: when under an'enemy's gun. Our friend ' c '.did'ut claim to be especially courageous. .'; IHe placed due value upon the integrity ;' 'of the American eagle, but enlisted 1.. , i 010)4 because he ead no other employ went at the time. He did camp duty :, faithfully, and endured the hardships of long marches without any special gram i• Ming. That he dreaded to confront the titi .. enemy he freely admits, While willing at any time to kick a bigger man than himself under justifiable provocation, he 1 ; disliked the idea of the sudden sensation imparted by a bayonet thrust in the ab domen, while only second to this was his horror of being cut down with a rifle bull like an unsuspected squirrel. When his regiment was drawn up in line, he ', admits his teeth chatted and his knee puns rattled like a pot closet in a Mini cane. Many of his comrades were simi larly affected, and some of thew would have laid down had they dared to do so. When the first volley had been inter changed, our friend informs us every I f trace of these feelings passed away from :, him. A reaction took place, and he be q came almost savage from excitement.— 1.; Balls whistled all about him, and a can f non shot cut in half a companion at his ; side. Another was struck by some ex '. plosive that spattered his brains over the clothes of our informant, but so far from intimidation, all these things nerved up his resolution. The hitherto quaking ~ civilian in half an hour became a veteran. Pis record shows he bayoneted two of ': his enemies, and discharged eight rounds 'i of his piece with as decisive an aim as 4 though he had selected a turkey for his , " mark. Could the entire line of an army i,•i' ~, .come at the same time into collision, he 4' r ., says there would be no running except E, q after hopeless defeat. The men who played the runaway at Bull Run were i!, „ men who had not participated in the uction to any extent, and who became i .: panic stricken where, if once smelling IF powder in the manner above described, ni 4, they would have been abundantly yid°. 1 rious. In the roar of musketry and the 1, thundering discharge of artillery there is a music that banishes even innate cowardice. The sight of men struggling together, the clash of sabres, the tramp of cavalry, the gore stained grass of the battle field, and the coming charge of the enemy dimly visible through the battle smoke—all these, says our intel ' ligent informant, dispel every particle of fear, and the veriest coward in the ranks , o '. perhaps becomes the most tiger-like. WASH YOUR Plos.—Pigs are not dirty (when they have any encouragement to ibe clean. Ours are washed every week warm soap and water, and well scrub- Pod laelund the ears and everywhere, to their great ease and comfort. A highly ,ecouoroical remark of my man about this part.of his work was, that he scrub bed the pig on washing day, because the soapsuds 4id just as well for manure after the pig had done with them, and that, said he, makes the soap serve threc times over:" There are two sorts of, people whose statements shonld be taken with caution lovers, when speaking of the objects of their affections, And grandmas,. whop speaking of their goachildren. P_ i-J. Baler, Proprietor_ VOL. 8. REBEL WOMEN IN PADUOLIA, KY.-A correspondent of the Chicago Tribune, writing from Paducah, Ky., says : On the day of our arrival, one of the most handsome, gallant and dashing of oar young majors was galloping along the street past a house where two Seces sion beauties were in the window, when one of them shook her fist so spitefully at him as to attract his attention. A few evenings after, a friend took the major to the selfsame house to spend.the evening, and the selfsame beauty enter tained him most delightfully, and de clared the next morning that if she could only make a Southern man of him her happiness would be complete. I opine that if we stay here long, that many of such changes may take place. The day of our arrival, Col. Wagner was riding along the street, when oue of the "strong minded" ladies, running from the sidewalk with extended hands, he very politely reined up his charger, tipped his cap, and extended his hand for a cordial greeting, when she broke out on him : " What business have you with those troops? By what authority are you invading our town ?" To which the Colonel, with his most graceful bow, and in his politest manner, replied :-- " It's node of your business, madam."— " yes, it is my business," said she, " for I ant a decendant of Washington, and when you look upon me, you look upon the blood of Washington, sir !" Col. Wagner—" Madam, much obliged ; hap py to see the blood of Washington; I fight for the flag Washington spilled his blood for. Good day, madam," and off the Colonel rode, bowing and waving his hand most gracefully. DR. RAPHAEL ON GUN SHOT WOUNDS: Professor Raphael delivered a course of lectures in New York to medical men who desired to enter the army. Re de livered one on gun shot wounds, during which he said that a wound resembling a bullet wound might be produced by a discharge of small shot from an ordi nary shot gun, when fired close to the person, the small shot not separating, but entering the wound en masse.— Wounds were aggravated by the en trance of extraneous substances, such as pieces of clothing, coins, etc. Sur geons should be careful in examining the clothing around the wound after ex tracting the bullet—which should in all cases be done, except when the injury caused by the extraction of the ball would be greater than were it allowed to remain in the wound. A great dif ference existed between the round and conical projectile in the disposition of the ball when in the body. The round ball, on entering a wound, would be de flected from its coarse should it strike a bone, and instances were common where the ball had made a complete circuit, even where it has come out of the same wound it made on entering. The coni cal ball, however, passed directly through whatever part of the body it happened to strike, shattering every thing in its passage. BF.NTON'S MOTHER : How touching the tribute of Hon. T. Benton to his mother's influence : "My mother asked me never to use tobacco. I have never used it from that time to the present day. She asked me not to game, and I cannot tell who is winning and who is losing in games that can be played. She admonished me, too, against hard drinking ; and whatever capacity for endurance I have at present, and whatever usefulness I may attain in life, I have attributed to having complied with her pious and cor rect wishes. When I was seven years of age she asked me not to drink, and I made a resolution of total abstinence at a time when I was sole constituent member of my own body; and that I have adhered to it through all time, I owe to my mother." A SUBSTHUTE FOR OILCLOTH.—An in genious inventor in England has dis covered a substitute for the oilcloth which is so much used for halls, passages, &c. It is composed of an intimate mixture of cork and India rubber. Up to a recent time this mixture has been known by the name of "Kamptqlicon," but, acting on a hint thrown out in a recent number of the Cornhill Mag azine, the manufacturer, Mr. Treloar, has adopted the more expressive, al though less fine, designation of cork flooring.. It is made of different thick nesses, frompne-eight, or even thinner,, to a quartbr of an inch, thick,, and, is beautifully soft to the feet. Ut girt. alukpriikitt Vatmlimula liounrat for fijt s,ani4 MARIETTA, OCTOBER 12.1861. CURIOUS FACTS DISCOVERED.—The French census recently taken discloses some curious facts. Among these is an excess of marriages in the large towns and cities of France over those in the country, proportionately to population. It also appears that but abOut seven widows in every hundred marry again, while twice that ratio of widowers re enter the connubial state. A majority of male children are shown to be born of parents of nearly the same age. The average duration of wedded life, in 1856, was twenty-five years, against twenty three years and two months in 1836 One third of the men and about one half of the women yearly married are un able to sign their names- This proposi tion, however, does , not hold in'the de partment of the Seine, where only one man in nineteen and one woman in six are unable to write. In the same de partment, also, the proportion of child ren born out of wedlock and legitimated by the subsequent marriage' of their parents, is much greater than in the provincial towns, and is smallest of all in the rural districts. WHERE THE LAUGH COMES IN.—Some years ago a countryman came into a lawyer's in Court Square, and said : "Squire, Nat Streeter shaved me dreadfully yesterday, I want to come up with him," "State your case," said D—, " Waal, I asked him how much he would charge me for a horse to go to Dedham. He said three dollars. I took the horse and went. When I come back I paid him three dollars, and he said he wanted another three dollars for coming hack and made me pay it." D-- gave him some legal advice, which the client immediately acted upon as follows. He went to Streeter and said : " How much will you charge me for a horse to go to Salem ?" Streeter replied : " Three dollars." " Harness him up." Client went to Salem, came back by railroad, and went to the stabler, saying: " Here's your Money," paying him three dollars. "Where is my horse ?" says Streeter. "He is at Salem," says client, "I . only hired him to go to Salem !" Streeter, who was well known as a practical joker, acknowledged the grain and paid the penalty. A WETTER IF NOT A BETTER MAN . .—A man in La Crosse, Wis., a few days ago, rushed to the river swearing that he would drown himself. When he had waded in to the depth of his waist, his wife, who had followed him, seized him by the hair, and then, as a local editor describes it, she "led him back till they reached a place where the water was two feet deep, where she pulled him over backward, soused him under, and pulled his head up again. 'Drown yourself'— (down he went)—'leave me to father the brats'—(another plunge)—'get drunk'— (another souse)—'and start for the river' —(another dip)—`better use water in stead of rot gut'—(another dip and shake of his head)—q.'ll larn ye to leave me a widow, and all the men gone to war !" After sousing him to her heart's content, she let him out a wetter if not a better man, and escorted him into the house, and closed the door, TILE FIFTH CommiornmENT.—An old school-master said one day to a minister who had come to examine his school : " I believe the children know the Catechism word for word." " Bnt do they understand it, that is the question ?" said the minister. The schoolmaster only bowed respect fully, and the examination began. A little boy had repeated the fifth commandment—Honor thy father and thy mother—and he was desired to ex plain it. "Yesterday I showed some strange gentlemen over the mountain. The sharp stones cut my feet, and the gentle men saw they were bleeding, and they gave me some money to buy shoes. I gave it to my mother, for she had no shoes either, and I thought I could go barefooted better than she could." GOT WHAT HE CALLED FOIL—The Cali fornia Christian Advocate states that a Secessionist recently entered an eating house at Martinez, and called for a "first rate Seff'. Davis meal." In due course of time the waiter placed before him a large covered dish—" only that and nothing more." On removing the cover, Secesh found snugly coiled up a hempen rape, with a slip-noose at one end. He left—had no appetite. Tittti;l + FREQUENCY AND TIMES OF EATING- Systematic recurrences is the order of nature, observed every-where, alike in the timing of melodious sounds, the rhythmic beats of the heart, tne measur ed respirations, the coming and going of light, the ocean's ebb and flow, season al revolutions, and planetary periodici ties. The arrangement of regular times for meals harmonizes, therefore, with the universal policy of nature, and is, more over, of the highest social convenience. Yet it is impossible to subject all to the same regulations of time. Dr. Combe remarks : "The grand rule in fixing the number and periods of oar meals is, to propor tion them to the real wants of the system , as modified by age, sex, health, and man ner of life, and as indicated by the true returns of appetite." As the blood is usually most impover ished after the eight or ten hours' fast of the night, breakfast should be early. The stomach is usually vacated of its nutritive contents in about four hours after eating, but it may be an hour or two later before the blood begins to call upon it for a renewed supply. Persons engaged in active labor, in which bodily expenditure is rapid, of course require to eat oftner than the indolent and the sedentary : and children need nourish ment oftner than adults. But too long abstinence, especially if the digestive power be not strong, sharpens the appe tite, so that there arises danger of ex cessive eating. Some avoid luncheon for fear of "spoiling the dinner," whereas the thing they most need is to have it spoiled,— When the intervals between the meals are so long as to produce pressing hun ger, something should be taken between them to stay the appetite and prevent over eating. Late and hearty suppers are to he reprobated. Active digestion and sleep mutually disturb each other, as at night the exhalation of carbonic gas is slowest, and tissue changes most retarded, the over-loaded blood is not relieved, and invades the repose of the brain, producing heavy, disordered dreams and head-ache and ill humor in the morning. Still there is the oppo site extreme, of sitting up late, and go ing to bed wearied, hungry, and with an "indefinable sense of sinking," followed by restless, nn refreshing sleep. A little light nourishment in such cases may prevent these unpleasant effects. Cus tom has fixed the daily number of meals at from three to five; probably three is the smaller number that consists with well sustained vigor of the system ; four or five may be unobjectionable, the amount of nourishment taken each time being less The essential thing is, reg ularity in each case, in order that the digestive glands may have time to pre pare their secretions. We should not take our meals whet tired oat, or much fatigued. The stom ach participates with the other parts of the system in the - eihaustion, and is thus unfitted for the preformance of its proper and active duties.. If there has been severe exercise, either of body or mind, a short intreval should be allowed for repose, or half an hour may be ap propriated to any light occupation, such as dressing, before sitting down to din ner. It is questionable if much exer cise before breakfast be generally pro per. When we rise in the morning the system has passed the longest interval without food, andis at the lowest diur nal point of weakness from want of nourishment. It is well understood that the body is more susceptible to the morbid influences of colds, miasms and all noxious agencies, in the morning be fore eating, than at any other time, and those exposed to the open air before getting anything to eat, in aguish re gions, are infinitely more liable to be affected than those who have been forti fied by a comfortable breakfast. Cases may be quoted, undoubtedly, in which early exercise has produced no injurious results--perhaps even the contrary.— Yet in most instances, especially if the constitution be not strong, breakfast should follow shortly after rising and dressing, before serious tasks are at tempted. Dr Combe justly observes, that in "boarding schools for young and growing, who require plenty of sub stance, and are often obliged to rise early; an early breakfast is almost an in dispensable condition of health. " .114 brethren," said Swift, in a sermon, " there are three sorts of pride : of birth, of riches, of talents. I shall not speak , of the latter, none of you being liable to that abominable vice.', Terms----©iiellar a Year_ Mrs. H. B. Stowe in Europe, makss the following sensible remarks about the comparative beauty of the women of England and America: A lady asked me the other evening what I thought of the beauty of the English aristocracy; she was a Scotch lady, by-the-by, so that the question was a fair one. I replied that certainly report had not exaggerated their charms. Then came a home question—how the ladies of England compared with those or America? "Now for it, patriotism,' said Ito myself, and invoking to my aid certain fair saints of my own country, whose faces I distinctly remembered, I atsured her that I had never seen more beautiful women than I bad in Ameri ca. Grieved was Ito add, "but your ladies keep their beauty much longer." This fact stares one in the face in every company; one meets ladies past fifty, glowing, radiant and blooming, with a freshness of complexion and fullness of outline refreshing to contemplate. What can be the reason? Tell us Muses and Graces, what can it be ? Is it the con servative power of sea-fog and coal smoke, the same which keeps the turf green, and makes the ivy and holly flour ish? How comes it that our married ladies dwindle, fade, and grow thin, that their noses incline to sharpness, and that elbows to angularity, just at the time of life when their island sisters round out, into a comfortable and be coming amplitude and fullness ? If it is the coal and sea-fog, why then I am afraid we shall never come up with them. But perhaps there may be other causes why a country which starts some of the most beautiful girls, in the world, produce so few beautiful women. Have not our close, stove-heated rooms some thing to do with it ? Above all, has not our climate, with its alternate extremes of heat and cold, a tendency to induce habits of indolence ? Climate, certain ly has a great deal to do with it ; ours is evidently more trying and more ex hausting, and because it is so, we should not pile upon its back errors of dress and diet which are avoided by our neighbors. They keep their beauty be cause they keep their health. It has been as remarkable to me as anything, since I have been here, that I do not constantly, as at home, hear one and another spoken of as in miserable health, very delicate, 85c. Health seems to be the rule, and not the exception. For my part I must say the most favorable omen I know of for female beauty in America is the multiplication of water cure esta'alishments, where our ladies, if they get nothing else, do gain some ideas as to the necessity of fresh air, regular exercise, simple diet, and the laws of hygienp in general. GOOD RETORT.-A Presbyterian cler gyman, while walking the deck of a steamer at St. Johns, N. 8., where se cessionism has considerable footing, no ticing,the American flag flying from the masthead of a ship, tauntingly said to Col. .Favor : "Why don't you take a slice off that flag, since you have lost a portion of your country ?" Yankee like, the Colonel quickly replied : "Why don't you tear a leaf from your Bible because a part of your church have fall en from grace ?" The clergyman had no more to say on that subject. THE WEEDING OUT PROCESS.-A Washington letter says : " Disloyal men continue to be dropped from the different departments. Some two dozen got their walking papers in the Treasu ry department last week. Others, whose loyalty is not doubted, followed in the same direction. These latter gentlemen were discharged because they Seemed to think that after taking the oath they might do as they liked, regardless of the requirements of their office." 40- It is said that a Paris physician has ascertained that a,, , ..0.ck of electri city will restore a.,p, lug from the effect of chloroforh, ar He who A world will not be too bashful, au Ate who knows him self will never be impudent. OW Lord Byron says that the truest way to pronounce a Polish name is to sneeze three times and say ski. Ur A curse is like a stone thrown up toward heaven, and most likely to return on the head of him that sent it. car Air is a dish one feeds on every minute,` and, therefore,it need be good. er Women never tire talking about babies, and men about horses. NO. 11. EA ELY DECAY OE AMERICAN WOMEN- in her book of travels BCERHAVE'S HOLLAND BITTERS THE CELEBRATED HOLLAND REMEDY FOR DTSPEPSIL, DISEASE OF THE KIDNEYS, LIVER COMPLAINT, WEAKNESS OF ANY KIND, FEVER AND AGUE, And the nations affections consequent upon a disordered STOMACH OR LIVER, Such as Indigestion, Acidity of the Stomach, Cn!hky Pains, Heartburn, Loss of Appetite, Despondency, Costiveness, Blind and Bleeding Piles. In all Ner vous, Rheumatic, and Neuralgic Affections, it has in numerous instances proved highly beneficial, and in others effected a decided cure. This is a purely vegetable compound, prepared on strictly scientific principles, after the manner of the celebrated Holland Professor, Boerhave. Its reputation at home produced its introduction here, the demand commencing with those of the Fatherland scattered over the face of this mighty country, many of whom brought with- them and handed down the tradition of its value, It' is now offered to the American intl.4'c, knowing that its fringe wonder/1A 'medicinal virtues, must be adenowledgecl: It is particularly recommended to those persons whose constitutions may have been impaired by the continuous use of ardent spirits, or other forms of dissipation. Generally instantaneous in -effect, it linda its way directly to the seat of life, thrilling and quirk ening every nerve, raising up the drooping spirit, and, in fact, infusing new health and vigor in the system. NOTlCE—Whoever expects to End this a beverage Will be disappointed; but to the sick, weak and low spirited, it will prove a grateful aromatic cordial, pos. sassed of singular , emetlial properties,. READ CAREFULLY t The Genuine highly concentrated Dcerhave's Mol land flitter, is put up in half-pint bottles only, and retailed at ONE Doman per bottle, or six bottles for FIVE DOLLARS. Tile great demand for this truly cele brated Medicine has induced many imitations, which the public should guard against purchasing. 4141 , 92eirart of Imposition. See that our name is on the label of every bottle you buy. Bold by Druggists generally. It can be for-. warded by Express to most points. SOLE PROPRIETORS, BENJAMIN PAGE, JR■ & CO. = parmartuffsis and 011umists, PITTSBURGH, PA. For sale at Dr. T. H. Grove's Drug Store IGlarkL•et Street, Marietta, Pa.. trap irath)bei- g 0 Cog Ijoi). HE subscriber having ; purchased the pro - i perty lately occupied by CLARK & ZELL. would most respectfully call the attention of his old friends and customers to to the fact that he is now prepared to sell LUMBER AND COAL at the very lowest figures by Boat-load, Car load, or otherwise. . the. Stock of Lumber will be selected from one of the best manufactories and cannot fail to eve satisfaction. He is also prepared to.supply "BiLL STurr" at shore notice and at low prices. HIS STOCK or COAL will consist of Shamokin, Red and White Ash, Baltimore Company, Lyk ens Valley, &e., all of which he will sell by the Boat load, Car-load, or by the SINGLE TON. He will als continue the receiving of Coal at very low figures. _ _ THOMAS ZELL H. 1.. & E. J. ZAHN! -RESPE.CI FULLY inform their friends and the public that they ....1 e; still continue the WATCH, CLOCK ;Ate - - ,1 4 7 AND JEWELRY business at the old stand, North-west Corner of North itueen street and Center Square,..Lancaster, Pa A full assortment of goods-in our line of busi ness always en hand and - for sale at the lowest cash rates. 3:13• Repairing attended to per sonally by the proprietors. /TIRE American. Watches are among the best k timekeepers now in use, and for durability strength and simplicity far surpass any other watch made in the world. H. L. 4 E. J. Z A HM Corner of North Queen-st., and Centre Square Lancaster, Pa., have them for sale at the yery lowest rates—every watch accompanied with the manufacturers guarrantee to ensure its gen uineness. T EWEI,B.Y.—A large and selected stock of t y fine jewelry of the latest patterns from the best factories in the country can be found at H. L. & E. J. ZAHM'S. Cor. North Queen st. and Centre Square, Lan caster, Pa. Our prices are moderate and all goods warranted to be as represented. SPECTACLES to suit all who can be aided with glasses, can be bought at IL L. 8; E. J. ZAHMS, Cor ner of North Queen-st., and Center Square, Lancaster. New glasses refitted in old frames, at short notice. [v6-13c CLOTH'S AND CASSIMERS.—A very su perior selection of French and German Cloths, and Cassimers, and a variety of beauti ful Vestings, a new and fashionable lot, just arrived at Difenbadds Cheap bore. KNIVES & FORKS, Britainia and Silver plated Spoons, Brass, Copper, Plain and Enameled Iron Kettle and Housekeeping goods generally. Sterrett 8j Co. WI LCOX' S Celebrated Imperial Ex tension Steel Spring Skeleton Skirt, with self-adjustible angle. The latest and best in use, for sale cheap at Difenbach's. ASUPERIOR COOK STOVE, very plain style, each one warranted to per form to the entire satisfaction of the purchaser. STERRETT & CO. ACHOICE Lot of Books for children called indistructable Pleasure Books; School and other Books, Stationary, Pens, Pen holders, &c., &c. For sale at Dr. Hinkle's. Tj - ICKORY & Oak Wood, .60 Cords each, 1 - 1 Hickory and Oak Wood. Orders must be accompanied with the cash when they will be promptly filled. Spangler & Patterson. THE Largest and best assortment of Fancy Cloth & Cassimeres and vesting ever offered in this market and will be sold at prices which defy competition by J. R. Diffenbach. JUST RECEIVED at the "Enterprise Wine and Liquor Store," Mount Toy, a superun article of Champagne and German Wines. STORE ROOM TO LET.—The Room lately occupied by Miss Margaret Trainer as ,a Millinery. Apply to BARR SPANGLER. ; O LANDLORDS! Just receive'ti;SciitUit T and Irish WHISICIES;:warraIi ted pure, at H. D. BtVamain's. - El j GOODWIN'S & BRO's. Plantation fine cut Chewing- Tobacco. The best in the world. For sale at WOLFE'S. Q . T. CROIX AND NEW ENGLAND RUM L for culinary purposes, warranted genuine A at H. D. Benjamin & Co's. . G ENTS NEW STYLE CAPS, AT CR CILL'
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers