The Mariettian. (Marietta [Pa.]) 1861-18??, December 20, 1862, Image 2

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SATURDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1862.
11.1 Messrs. MATITER & ABBOTT, No. 335
Broadway, New-York, are duly authorized to
act for us in soliciting advertisments, &c., and
receipt for the same.
ti' There are now fifty-one iron-clad
war vessels in the service of the United
States and in the processor construction.
Twenty-one of these are of light draught
and in the Western waters. The Dun
derberg is over 5000 tons capacity, four
are over 3000 tons, and thirteen are over
1000 tons. Ten carry over ten grins in
their armament, while others like the
Monitor, which carry only two guns,
are mounted with pieces of extraordina
ry calibre. This is but the begining of
what we propose to do, and we are jus
tified in announcing the purpose of. the
Government to be the establishment of
the largest navy ,upon the sea. We
have now, as a beginning, nearly two
hundred gnus clothed and in iron armor.
Neither England nor France can say as
much.
At length Gen. Burnside, being
all ready, essayed on Thursday of last
week, directly in front of the city of
Fredericksburg, and in the very teeth of
the rebel army, to cross the Rappahan
nock—and he succeeded. Our troops
showed the most determined bravery—
and perhaps no other troops in the
world would have succeeded under the
same circumstances. Considering the
magnitude of the movement, the loss on
our side was inconsiderable. The cross
ing of our army was finally made upon
five pontoon bridges—three directly in
front of the city, and two, three miles
below.
lEr Immense supplies are being made
from day to.day for the supply of the
army with the munitions of war. The
Ordance Department have contracts for
the year 1863 for 750,000 small arms.—
Eight hundred muskets are turned out
daily at the Springfield Arsenal, and the
Government claims that these are the
best muskets in the world. The amount
of saltpetre now on hand and controlled
by. the Government is 600,000 pounds,
or just twice as much as when the war
began.
sr The Tribune, Herald, and Even
ing Post of New • York, have increased
the price of their newspapers to three
cents per eupy. The paper on which
the Tribune is printed, a year ago cost
eight cents per, pound, now it costs
twenty cents with a prospect of a still
further rise in price. All the daily and
many of the weekly papers will be com
pelled to advance their subscription
price, or go to wall.
47 General Etaßeck was lately guilty
of giving expression to the following
bon mot : Col Wyman, the comtnandent
at Rolla, on being ordered by General
Curtiss to join him with his regiment,
telegraphed to St. Louis for instructions
as to what he should do with his post, as
there was no one to relieve him of his
command. In • reply to his message,
Geo. rralleck sent him the following.
"Stick the post in the ground, and go on."
A soldier in the rebel army wri
ting about the food, says :
"We get a subsistance for soup called
preserved vegetables. It looks a good
deal like a big plug of tobacco in shape
and solidity composed in part of pota
toes, onions, beans, garlic, parsley, par
snips, carrots, &. I alknowledge eating
two large tin plates full and I can now
speak the German language with-fluency.
fir Nearly, all the bpsiness part of
Fredericksburg—directly on the river—
was fired and burnt by our shells. Tay
the last census the town had a popula
tion of 5,622. It contained 6 churches,
2 orphan asylums, 2 seminaries, 3 news
paper offices, and 2 banks. It is located
on. the Rappahannock, at the head of
tide-water, and is bisty-five miles by
railroad north of Richmond.
ar The troops having all left Camps
Simmons and M'Clellan, Harrisburg,
both were abandoned on Friday last and
'the commandants relieved. There are
no State camps now in existence.—
Camp Curtain will be kept up by the
United States military authorities as a
geueral rendezvous for recruits and cap
tured deserters,
411lir The court martial in the case of
Major McKinstry, sitting at St. Louis,_
declined, on the . 9th inst., to summon
Gen. McClellan as a witness for the ac
cused. Major McKinstry then asked
leave to file certain inteirogaiories to
Gon. - McClellan and ex-Secrotary Cam
ellia.. Pending the decision of this
application' the court adjourned.
car James Gorden Bennett goes out
of the Herald• on the first of January
next, and is.eucceeded by his son, who
takes the whole business. The son is
flames Gorden Bennett, Jr.
SUOCRING Ccims.—ln Philadelphia,
on Tuesday, a midwife named Madame
Rossner, was arrested for causing abor
tion. On the examination, there were
present five different females, all of
whom had been patients, and all had
been robbed of the responsibilities of
maternity. Nothing that was ever told
of the notorious Madame Restell, or any
of the sisterhood of child murderers,
equals in atrocity the allegations con
cerning this woman. Even the detect
ives, who, by hardened experience, be
come indifferent to such crime, admit
that the business of this woman was ex
tensive beyond all their previous expe
rience. The hearing occupied two
hours. The details were utterly unfft
for publication. The hearing ended in
the commitment of the woman without
bail, and all the women who testified
were obliged to give security for their
fofthcomiug when the case was brought
to court. The detectives actually ,dis
interred the bodies of children freshly
buried in the woman's yard.
Max KILLED. --On Tuesday of last
week, a colored man named John Wil
liams, who bad been working in Altoona,
got upon a westward bound frieght
train, with the intention of riding to
Pittsburg, and being intoxicated, he
was unable to keep hie position on the
bombers, and fell from them to the
track, in the vicinity of Kittaning- Point,
and was horribly mangled, several cars
passing over him, He was taken back
to Altoona, and interred the next day,
lie was a young man, about twenty-two
years of age, and his home was at Har
ria6urg.
FROZEN TO DEATH.-0 . 0 Sunday morn
ing n week, the body of a man named
Jeremiah Nieman, a resident of Potts
town, Montgomery county, was found
in one of the back streets of that bo
rough, entirely dead and frozen stiff.—
The deceased had been gunning the day
before, and returning after nightfall, bad
probably fallen by the roadside before
he reached his home, and unable to rise,
perished in the cold of the bitterly in
clement night. Efe was an excellent
mechanic, and leaves a wife and family.
A DrETERENce.—The annual pay of au
English soldier averages $lOO, and that
of the French $5O. A - French colonel
(full pay) has $1,500, and an English
$6,000. In France a vice-admiral has
$B,OOO, in England $12,000. The
French rear-admiral receives $6,000.
Few of our army and naval officers man
age to Hie as cheaply as the French
naval lieutenant, who has to find his
own uniform and food out of 120 francs
a month, or less than $3OO a year.
WHAT IT EixaNs.-T-People have some
times wondered why Democratic jour
nals placed a rooster at the head of their
pages as an emblem of victory, but rer
an Brawnlow fully explains the matter
as follows:
"As the crowing of the cock followed
the betrayal of Christ by Peter, so again
the cock crows after the Democrats have
attempted to betray the government and
place it in the power of its enemies,"
COUNTERFEIT - POSTAGE OUR REN OF
We are informed that connterfet fifty
cents postage notes are in circulation.
The front side is not a good imitation
of the genuine, and on the reverse the
figures "50" are upside down. The "50"
in the corner of the front side have been
stamped on separately, and the green
ink used strikes through to the back and
shows on white paper.
CURE FOR DIPTIIERIA..--A number of
cases of diptheria having lately occurred
in this town and vicinity, parents should
be prepared with proper remedies for
its cure. It is said that Sve cents worth
of and ore of iron, and a little turpen
tine, will in almost every case stop the
disease if used in time. Swab the throat
with the tincture, and rub the turpen
tine on the outside, frequently.
A HINT TO OYSTER,EATERS..---W ben
too many oysters have been incautiously
eaten, and are felt lying cold and heavy
in the e'tomnch, we hive an infallible
remedy in hot milk, of which half a pint
may be drank, and It will quickly dis
solve the oysters into a bland, cream
jelly.—Excharrge.
tar The newspapers in the West of
Ireland are agitating, the question of
flax culture in that quarter as a means
of improving the country and turning
the soil to more advantage than at pre
sent.
Ifir The reported wounding of Gener
al Meagher is a mistake. His horse
fell upon him, bat he was only alighly
injured, and is still in command of
what remains of his brigade.
,gir Governor Edward Stanley has is
sued his proclamation for an election
for a Representative to Congress from
North Carolina. The election will be
held on the first of January, 1863.
gir The Robinson arms manufactory,
at Richmond, is at work night and day
—carting cannon, manufacturing Sharp's
rifles and other arms, large and small,
for the Confederate Government.
Cr The President has decided to hang
thirty of the three hundred Indians con
victed recently in . Minnesota for taking
part in the masattere - ,of-the white people
,of that State,
c-s, LI 4.
PEN. PASTE AND SCISSORS.
It is intimated that the bill for the
admission of the state of West Virginia
into the Union, will not be immediately
acted upon by the President,
The rebel Governor Vance, of North
Carolina, has sent in his message to' the
Legislature of that State. It is printed
in the Newbern papers of Bth, and ad
mits much suffering among the people
and soldiers.
A bill has been prepared, and will
shortly be introduced into the House
providing for the emancipation of slaves
in Missouri, and the owners to be com
pensated in United States bonds having
thirty years to run.
Gen. Burnside's Army is, being rein•
forced to extent of the power of the Gov
ernment. Indeed every energy is being
stretched to opposite so gigantic a force,
to the enemy as shall overwhelm him.
There must-. be no doubt of the success
of the advance movements this time.
Richmond must fall and the whole army
be overthrown, or driven back to their
caverns in the cotton States.
Gen. Dix has issued a proclamation
for an election for a representative for
Congress from the second district of
eastern Virginia, to take place on the
22d instant. All who are entitled to
vote and decline to do so', will be con
sidered as enemies of the gOvernment
and treated accordingly.
A classification of the members re
turned to the next Missouri Legislature
shows fifty-nine emancip4i6nisti and
thirty-eight conservatives. This secures
to the State the election of two Eman
cipation United States Senators, and
the adoption of measures which,mnat 're
lieve the State of the burden of slavery.
A memorial, signed by a large number
of Congressmen, will be presented to the
President in a few days praying for the
appointment of Eli Thud as Military
Governor of Florida.
The colored people of Boston are ma
king great preparations for the celebra
tion of the Ist of January, 1863, as a day
of jubilee. One or two meetings bays
been held, and committees .appointed
to perfect arrangements for the celebra
tion. •Frederick. Douglass is to deliver
the oration. ' .
Gen. Spinner, 'United States Treas
urer, has heard nothing of the stolen
certificates, but states that it is his opin
ion that the parties purloining them
burnt the evidence of their crime. Such
is also the opinion of the police. Jo no
case, however, can they be used.
A large deputation of clergymen of
the Reformed Presbyterian Chinch
have visited the President 'recently.--
The were introduced by Hon. Mc. Bing
ham, of Ohio, and urged the President
to uphold his emancipation proclama
tion. Mr. Lincoln receivedthem kind
ly, and intimidated that no restraCtion
would be made by, him unless it became
evidently necessary for the good of the
country.
Seventeen •snits have been commenc
ed at Norfolk against the Wise family,
consisting of henry A., John J. H. Geo.
D., and 0. Jennings, for- the recovery
of debts varying in amounts from two'
hundred and fifty to one thousand dol
lars.
Among the contributors to the Union
loving Poor of England, we see the
name of Gerrit Smith, $lOOO ; Tharlow
Weed, $lOOO, and so on—all "Black Re
publicans," it seems.
Sixteen. German editors of Bait Penn
sylvania, have resolved to raise the price
of their newspapers, from $1 to VIA a
year in advance.
William M. Breslin, Editor of the
Lebanon Advertiser, is a candidate For
the Democratic nomination of clerk of
the Bowe of Representatives.
There will be thirteen editors in the
next Legislature of Wise - eosin. Better
be engaged in • making laws than print
ing newspapers on trust, with paper at
twenty-five cents per pound.
A child of shun° or' poverty was left
at a door step in -Towanda, and when
found an arm of the poor thing was
frozen 1
The bill to admit Western Virginia
as a Free State, passed the House 96
to 55.
The Raliegh papers ,express them
selves as sick of the war.
Robert G. Harper, .the accomplished
,and veteran editor of the Adams Senti
nel, has been editor and publisher of
that •paper since Nov. 1816—a. period
of forty-six years. Previous to that
time, it was issued by his father, from
its commencement, in November, 1800,
at Gettysburg, Adams county„Pa.
Gen. Robert Patterson superintended
the burial of his son, Gen. Frank E. Pat.
terson, in Philadelphia. The American
flag was not displayed on the coffiu.--
There was no hypocrasy, at any rate, in
the man who lost us the Bull Run first
fight.
J, Wesley Greene, who told that
wonderful tale of negotiations through
him between President Lincoln and
Jeff, Davis, in the Chicago Times, has
been arrested in that city on cliargis
of obtaining goods by' false proteuces.
gar A distinguished character has
withdrawn from public life. Mr. Tom
Sayers, the hero of Farnborough heath,
whose bout with Heenan resulted in a
drawn game, announces his intention
"never again to fight, or second any man
who may fight." Reposing upon his
laurels, Mr. Torn Sayers relinquishes the
further pursuit of fame, subsides into
the quiet but respectable vocation of
keeper of a tavern, and declares himself
forever out of the "ring." Battered in
many hard contests, damaged as to nose
and eyes in the noble art of self-defence
which is the Briton's pride and boast,
and considerably disfigured in general
personal appearance in consequence of
his devotion to his peculiar pastime, be
no longer threatens the "champion of
America," and there is no reason to ap
prehend the recurrence of an "interna
tional fight" with all its disgusting but
popular adjuncts.
,Thomes Wendell, Esq., died at
Farmington, Me., November 18th, in
the 93d year of hie age. Mr, W. was
born at Marblehead, July 13, 1770.
Soon after, however, his father removed
to Salem. In I'7Bo, during the war of
the American Revolution, he shipped
as a cabin-boy on board the ship Puns
a privateer, commanded by Capt. John
Cairnes, and owned by Hon. Richard
Derby, a wealthy merchant of Salem,
which vessel took many prizes. His
father died in 1777, in a British prison
ship. In 1789 he removed to Maine, and
has been a resident of Farmington for
- 76 years. He was, says the Farmington
paper from which we condense the ac
count, undoubtedly the last of-that pa
triotic band who constituted 'the officers
and_ crew on the ship Ports, as a,priva
teer, who - with stout arms and valliant
hearts, contributed so large a share in
achieving our independence.
gr Private Lunt deserted from our
forces at Fernandina, Florida, in April
last. He was returned to our lines by
the rebels, and, having been tried by a
court-martiO, was found guilty and sen
tenced to death. The sentence was ap
proved by the President, and carried•
into effect at Raton IJoad, south Caro•
Tina, on : the Ist inst. The prisoner pro
tested his innocence, and met his death
with a strong composure. He •Warned
his companions against bad company,
to which he attributed his sad end. The
wretched man fell pierced by eleven•
balls, causing instant death.
I An, amendment the Internal
Revenue Law has-just passed the House
and, will of course, pass the IT. S. Sen
ate, which will be quite a relief to hotel
keepers. It is as follows :
"Hotels, inns, or taver_ns, and eating
houses, having taken out license provi
ded therefor, shall not be required to
pay any other license for the sale of any
articles furnished by hotels, inns, or ta
verns, and eating houses, and not pro
hibited by the laws of any State or Ter
ritory where.the same may be located,
pr in violation. thereof.
JohnCarbaugh, Esq., of Frank
lin. ,
township, Adams comity, was frozen
to death on'Satniday night a week in a
field near his residence. He was in
Gettysburg to see his son off in the cars
in the afternoon; who was a drafted sol
dier. He went in a buggy with a friend
to Hilltown and thence started across
the fields to his residence, and from the
inclemency . of the night perished. He
was not found until . SundaY evening.
Ca- Many men have releived them
selves of dyspepsia by not drinking any
thing, not even water,•' during their
meals. No animtl,- except -man, ever
drinks in connection with its food. Men
ought not to, Try this, dyspectics; and
you will not wash down mechanically
that which ought to be masticated and
ensalivated before it is swollowed.
KW Gen. McClellan has thrown him.
self completely to the enmies of the Ad.
ministration. . He is now at Washington
in attendance is a witness on the. Mc-
Dowell Court Martial, and is dined and
winectand made a lion of by each ,eemi
traitors:as Vallandigham, Cox igc Co.
it is reliably assorted that a very
large proportion of tilt> substitutes who
have been - hired to take the place of
drafted man, in Milirankee, have deser
ted from Camp Washburn°, and have
thns far'succeeded in making their es
caPe: :
It seems to be settled that Caleb
B. Smith will shortly resign hie position
as Secretary of the Interior, to accept
the vacant District Judgeship in Indiana.
The" change will occur probably on the
Ist of January.
W At a recent term of the Supreme
Judicial Caen, held at Concord, a man
named Davis belonging in Manchester,
was divorced from. his wife This was
the third similar affliction he had to un
dergo.
OW In the second half of the fifteenth
century, Russia was but 18,000 square
miles in extent. Now it covers 392,000
square miles. In 1772 the population
of the empire was 14,000,000; now it is
65,000,000.
"Chopping trees," to deliver to•
the families of soldiers in the field a sup.>.
ply• of•wood-for the winter, are all the
.rage in. lowa.
sir Gen. McNiel, whom Jefferson Da
vis has threatened, by public proclama
tion to bang. if caught by any of rebel
troops, has arrived at St. Louis. He
learns that General Curtis has received
information that the demand for his sur
render has arrived inside the Union
lines, and he is awaiting its receipts be
fore communicating any answer. It
is understood the matter will be referred
to General Halleck. The Confederate
authorities have no claim on the United
States for the acts of General McNiel,
and if they had, the fact that the men
whom he caused to be shot had all vio
lated their paroles sufficient justification
for the deed. Gen. McNiel is about to
write an open letter to the President,
showing the efficacy of his severe policy,
as demonstrated by actual results. His
his course has been endorsed by hosts
of the best Union men in North Missou
ri, and the Democratic tory press will
do well to spare their censure until they
know what they are about.
Gar The Lindell Hotel, St. Louis is
finished, and is the largest in the world.
It is equivalent to eight stories high ;
contains five hundred and fifteen rooms,
twenty-one parlors, twenty-seven acres
of plastering, seven acres of flooring,
thirty-two miles of bell-wire, nine and a
half miles of baseboard, twelve miles of
gas, steam, and water pipe, one and one
eight miles or one thousand nine hun
dred and ten windows, and fourteen
thousand feet of painted imitation of
cornice. The quantity of bricks used
in the building is eight million. 'ln the
basement there is a railroad running the
entire length, for the transportation of
heavy articles, and above are two steam
elevators for lifting fuel and baggage
from the ground to the floors above.
ear Gen. Webb, our minister to Bra
zil, has been exerting himself to effect a
treaty by which all free negroes of our
country shall be translated to the region
of the Amazon, at the expense of the
United States, and there endowed with
land, gratuitously, by Brazil, and at the
termination of a term of years become
citizens of Brazil, with all the rights
privileges of the free negro population of
the empire, all of whom, by the consti
tution, are the recognized equals of the
white man, and equally eligible with
him to the highest•offices of the empire,
and where already, the social distinc
tions between the white and black races,
which once existed there, have been
nearly eradicated.
gpr Arrangements will soon be made
for the exchange of common postage
stamps, which have been used as cur
rency, and are no longer fit for their
proper use. It is said that half a mil
lion of the new postage currency will
be required. It will probably be nec
essary for holders here and elsewhere to
send them to New York for redemption
done up in packages according to the
denomination, marking the amount on
the outside, with the name and address
of the owner. The work will commence
as soon as the requisite amount of new
'currency can be prepared.
LIBERAL OFFER.—The publishers of
the Sunday School Times are prepared
to-furnish specimens copies of their pa.
per, with very liberal inducements to
Superintendents, Teachers, and others,
who will aid them in extending its cir
culation during the coming year. This
opportunity should not pass unimproved.
Now is the time to act. Address J. 0
Garrigues & -Co., 148 S. 4th Street,
Philadelphia, Penna.
ow The Sunday School Teachers Mini.
ature Diary and Alamanac for 1863, this
convenient and' beautiful little Annual
is sent FREE to any Superintendent or
Teacher in the United States, on receipt
of a stamp to prepay the postage. It is
something new, useful and attractive;
and no teacher should be without it.
Send for a copy to J. C. Garrigues &
Co., 148 S. 4th Street Philadelphia,
Penna.
eir Capt. Watermen who has retura
ed from the wreck of thesteamer Golden
Gate reports the Mexicans residing in
the neighborhood had saved $152,000 in
treasure. Other treasure boxes were
doubtless buried in the sand below the
low water mark, and may be found by
chance, rather than an intelligent search.
The employees of the wrecking company
are continuing at work with their diving
apparatus..
ar Robert Dale Owen, the ablest
Democrat in the West, has written a
letter strongly advocating the abolition
of slavery. He considers the destruc
tion of slavery essential to peace and to
a permanent restoration of the. Union.
The fact is, the ablest Democrats of the
North are fast becoming Abolitionists.
ar The frauds recently discovered in
the New York Custom House, were
committed by clerks appointed years
ago under a Democratic Administration,
and kept in place through the mistaken
generosity of Republicans towards poli
tical opponents.
l Diarrhea & Dysentery will deci
mate the Volunteers far more than the
bullets of the enemy, therefore let every
man see to it that he carries with him a
fully supply of Holloway's Pills. Their
use. in India and the Crimea saved thous
ands of British Soldies. Only 25 eta.
per Box. ' 213
lir Gen. Grant has issued an order
respecting Kentucky, saying that as the
State has fulfilled the requirements of
the Constitution of the United States,
and laws of Congress, by choosing loyal
men to fill all the State offices and
execute the laws, military authority is
prohibited from any interference, and
not to be used, except to suppress riots
and mobs in resistance to the laws.—
All civil authority, where it can be ex
ecuted at military posts, will be premit
ted.
eir The Burlington (Vt) Times is in
formed that there are aggregatled at
Rouse's Point about 14,000 muskets,
250 sword; 500 large revolvers, 5 000-
000 caps, and eleven tons of powder,
which were shipped from New-York,
and undoubtedly intended for the rebels
to be obtained by way of their friends,
the British. The lot is valued at $2BO
- The New-York sympathisers stop
at nothing in assisting the rebels to de
stroy the country.
ea - The rebels, before evacuating
Fredericksburg, threw a large quantity
of tobacco into the Rappahannock,
which, when our boys crossed over, they
eagerly plunged into the river to recov
er. As their supply of "the weed" bad
been exhausted for a long time, the
boys were delighted with their hard
earned prize.
tar The terrible malady of diptheria
seems to be again making its appear
ance all over the country. A number
of deaths have already occurred from it
in various portions of Chester county.—
'ln East Nantmeal township one of the
public schools has closed, the pupils
nearly all having diptheria.
Gir An old man, Pearson by name,
was atrociously murdered in Griggsville,
Illinois., last week, by three boys. The
murderers have been arrested, and their
confessions implicate the murdered man a
wife and daughter, and wife's brother,
as the instigators of the deed.
W Gen. Bayard, who was killed at
the battle of Fredericksburg, was to
have been married on the 18th instant
to a daughter of Colonel Bowman, of
West roiut,and niece of the late Bishop
Bowman. •
Gir The battle of Saturday near Fred
ericksburg is said to have raged for a
long while in the immediate vicinity of
the tomb of the mother of Washington,
which is situated in the outskirts of the
city.
Three regiments lolemth i k,rafted
men at Philadelphia have already left
for the seat of war, leaving about two
thousand men in camp there now.
tgr,Douveld,NlcKtt,y, the noted ship
builder, arrived home from Europe iu
the Arabia. The Government has se
cured his services.
sEir Several dranken or crazy persons
were frozen during the late cold spell,
and some have expired.
0 I E U.
On Thursday morning last, at the residence of
her father, Mr. Samuel S. Grosh, in the
village of Maytown, Mrs. MARY, wife of
Jacob S. Reath, of the same village, but now
in the 45th Regimept, Pennsylvania Voluu
teem, in the 29th-year-of her'age.
13plaivQeliiqg Niigfeh I
NOW IS THE TIME TO PREPARE FOR THE
Cold_ .Sea.sc)3a._
SPANGLER & PATTERSON-
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Embracing the best 'styles of *. '
Coating Cloths, CassimeTes Sf Vestings,
Youth's Ca.ssirneres
IN NEW AND EXCELLENT DESIGNS,
Superior Fancy and other Dress Silks; every
shade of French Merino; plain and wool
DeLaines in colors; beautiful designs of
Mixed De Laines, Coburgs, Aipaccas and
Lavellas ; Cloak and Sack Cloths-; Rich and
Grave Colored Balmoral Skirts,
Latest Improved Spring Skirts; Fine, Medium
and Common Shawls, Nubia Scarfs, Son
tags and. Hoods ; Gauntletts, Gloves,
and Hosiery; Muslims, Counter
panes and Tickinga; Checks,
Flannels and Linens.
Floor amd Table Oil Cloths,
Ingrain, Venetian and Rag Carpet, Wall Pa
per, Linen, Cotton, and Woolen Carpet chain.
CRODEERT IN DESIRABLE BETTS.
New Mackerel in small and
),(01AMIR large packages. All of which
we are now selling at prices below the present
City rates.
SPANGLER PATTERSON.
Marietta, November 8, 1862.
WINES . & LIQUORS.
11. D. BENJAMIN,
DEAR IN
WINES Sc LIQUORS,
Picot Building, Marietta, Pa.
SEGS leave to inform the public that ho
will continue the WINE & LIQUOR busi
ness, in all its branches. He will constantly
keep on hand all kinds of
Brandies, TVines, Gins, Irish and Scotch
Whiskey, Cordials, Bitter; 6-c.,
BENJAMIN'S
Justly Celebrated Rose Whisky,
ALWAYS ON HAND.
A very [inferior OLD RYE WHISKEY
uat received, which is warranted pure.
rfr All H. D. B. now asks of the punt;
is a careful examination of his stock and pri
ces, which will, he is confident, result in Ho
tel keepers and others finding it to their ad
vantage to make their purchases from
A FINE HOLLIDAY GIFT. One of these
beautiful PhotoggrapPh• .Albuma, for Car,l
He Visitta, at ,DELLINGEIV.Y.