line ktittiettiitit, ...A t zsiettn, Ofa,, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 81,1863. ltd Messrs. MATHZR & ABBOTT, No. 936 Broadway, New-York, are duly authorized to act for Us in soliciting advertisments, &c., and receipt for the same. CONSCIENTIOUS SCRUPLES.--A bill Will shortly be reported by the Senate Judi cars Committee, providing for the pay meat of an equivalent for services by those who were exempt from the draft under the clause of the Constitution of this State, which provides that those Who conscientiously scruple t'a wear arms shall not be compelled to do so, but shall pay an equivalent for personal services. Many were exempted under this clause, but the "equivalent" bad never been fixed or any officer appoint, ed to receive it. By the new bill the equivalent will be graduated by the 4bility to pay, ranging from $6O to $6OO. ar A. strange mistake in the Internal Tax bill has just come to light, It has been discovered that the sugars known to refiners as A, B, and C sugars have not been mentioned in the Internal Tax bill, while all other classes have been freely taxed. The loss to the govern ment by this mistake is said to be about $90,000 per annum. Who drew up this particular section of the bill has not yet been made public, but the matter is cer tainly attracting much attention. Or Horace Greeley of the Tribune has been ordered by Judge Bette to find bail in the sum of fifty thousand dollars to answer - the charge of libel preferred against Lim by Postmaster Cook of Chicago. The plaintiff, it will be re membered was postmaster at Chicago ander Buchanan, and was mistaken by Greeley for one of the fraudulent pay masters of the army of the same name. sr it is a well known fact that per sons to whom money is owing, whether in town or country, invariably prefer•be ing paid in the 'greenbacks' to any other notes. The people take the notes of the Government in preference to those of the banks. We mention this signifi cant fact as a strong argument in favor of the uniform currency scheme now be fore Congress. or Judge Lowry, of the Supreme Court, of this State, last week charged a jury in favor of giving damages to the traitor Hodgson, of West Cheater; for the suppression of his paper ; and the jury accordingly awarded him some Elva hundred dollars. Lowry was elec ted as a Democrat to his Judgship, and it seems that he belongs to the Copper head breach of that party. May the Lord have mercy on such a judiciary. er We understand that'preparations will soon be made for the construction of a twenty-inch columbiad ton. This monster piece of ordnance will require for the rough casting between seventy. five and one hundred tons of metal.— The solid shot will weigh one thousand pounds, and the shell probably six hun dred. The gun will be made at the Fort Pitt Works, now the largest can non factory in the world. igigr The Starkville (Miss.) Banner, of January 17, says it has learned from a reliable and authentic source, and ac cords full credence to the report, that Senator Bright's wife, of Indiana, cross• ed Gen. Bragg's lines, in possession of sealed despatches for Jeff. Davie, the contents of which, as announced, solicit the rebel Government to receive into Its confederation the States of Illinois and Indiana, and in fact all the States west of the Mississippi. fir A Republican at Harrisburg, finds fault with the State Administration for retaining Locefoces of doubtful loyalty in office. He says "the School Depart ment, State Library and State Arsenal are under the control of inveterate Lo cofoces. In the Arsenal, twenty-seven men are employed, only two of whom are Republicans." If this be so, the political friends of the Administration have cause for complaint. Au' A Copperhead daily newspaper, to be called the Age, will shortly be issued in Philadelphia. It will be pub lished by A. J. Glossbrenner, of York, Pa., Francis J. Urund, and William H. Welsh, the tatter also from York. It will be out-and-oat pro-slavery and ac cost'. miar Rutoor has it that both Generale Fremont, and Burnside have requested the President to place them at once in isolivei4cvice. Although they do not `.sap tio; it ma d , be inferred that if their requests dre not granted they will re sign and retire , to private life. 00- Madame Catalina was born in the Venetian territory, and acquired her first distinction by •singing in the choir of a convent. She died of cholera, at Par* in 184, in her severktioth year. We A newspaper sheet, known as the The Inquirer, has, for some time, given much offense to the loyal citizens of Leavenworth by Its treasonable course, and threats were made of destrqing the materials with which It was printed.— The proprietor took the precaution to arm a number of his friends and station them about the office, who, without pro vocation, fired upon a citizen who had exerted himself to allay the excitement. A large number of shots were fired, and other innocent citizens as well as the one aimed at, narrowly .escaped being hit. The next day a crowd assembled, when Jennison arrived, and mounting a box, exclaimed s "Yesterday, this es tablishment was a printing office;and I proposed to protect it ; this morning it is a Rebel fore, and I propose to gat it." With this the crowd rushed in and ut terly demolished everything the estab lishment contained, and then burnt the fragments. sr no motto on the Boston Mc- Clellan sword, "pro rege gape, pro pa tria eemper," (for the king sometimes ; for the country always,") bids fair to occupy the critical emelfungi of "the literary emporium," and otherybere, for a long time to come. The Republican papers call it an: "unfortunate inscrip tion," but why is not made very clear. The Boston Manseript tells us that it is the motto of the Vassal family, and is on the Vassal monument in the King's chapel, in Boston, and that it was erected in lii6. the commence ment of the war of the Revolution, John Vassal, who lived in Cambridge, Massachusetts, went to England, and hie house became the headquarters of Washington, and is now occupied by the poet Longfellow. A Mr. Samuel Cornell, of Brook lyn, N. Y., proposes to be one of a cOMpetent body of Volunteers, who are to assemble in Washington City on the fifth day of March, then and there to or ganize as an armed force to march thence to Richmond and finish the War. He proposes, of course, to act in co-op oration with Union armies. The inten tion is to make a short job of it—to go strong enough to overbear all opposition —and to be ready to come hem° within "sixty days." We do not understand that any serious objection is made to this form of "intervention" Let Mr. Cornell go-head. fir Ron. J. J. Crittenden bus written a letter to Gov. Robinson of Kentucky, counseling moderation., Re says:— "Fight the proclamation with resolu tions, and the rebels with bayonets."— Exchange. Such counsel was worthy of the yen .onside statesman of Kentucky, but we are sure that Gov. Robinson did not need it. We will fight the proclama tion with resolutions and in every other constitutional way, but we shall not, in fighting it, go outside of the Constitu tion for weapons or do anything to weak en the righteous warfare waged for the suppression of the rebellion—Louisville Journal. Or George D. Prentice recently In vested $5OOO in a purchase of Bouthern cotton. The bales were seized at Nash ville and used for fortifications; Govern. ment receipts being given for' them.— Prentice, in a letter to Major General Rosecrans, respecting the matter, says "It seems to me that when cotton is so very valuable—a bale being worth, say, one hundred and forty dollars—that cheaper material ought long since 'have been substituted in the fortifications.— The cotton, I am told, is scandalously wasted by the soldiers." air The Washington correspondent of the New New Times says that on Tuesday, Thurlow Weed had a private interview with the President and Sec. rotary of War, and that it was reported that he had been summoned to "aid in the construction of a new Union party to take the place of the present Repub. lican organization ; also that Governor Ourtin, on the new platform, will be re-nowittted for Governor of Penney!. MI a. er Tom Thumb and his wee wife Itud the honor of being received by the Pres ident and his family at the White time, on the evening of the 13th inst. Among those present at the reception were the Secretaries of the Navy, of the Treasury, Generals. Butler and Clay, Messrs. thittende, of Kentucky, and Wilson, of Massachusetts, and many prominent diplomats. The receivers and received were very much amused with each other. sr A. bill has been introduced in the New Jersey Legislature which provides that married women shall be empow ered to make wills and dispose of what ever property it may be their good for tune to possess, in like' manner with the stronger sex. sr Rev. Chauncey Leonard, a colored Baptist minister, sailed from Boston on the sth, (or Monrovia. He is tho first Baptist missionary to Africa from free states. Ho will be followed about the first of May by fifty Baptists, with two or three preachers. If you have a Bolding wife, trust to time-old ago may bring you the blessing of deofnest3. • CP Ms k• t Short Scraps of News from our Exchanges, The Emperor of the French will be in something of a dilemma, supposing him sensitive to American criticism. Mr. Benjamin, of the rebel cabinet, suspects his designs on Texas. Mr. McDougall, in the U. S. Senate, does not fancy his doings in Mexico. Louis Napoleon may be perplexed which party to be of• fended with first, and so, probably, will sagaciously conclude to notice neither. The Custom Homo authorities of Canada having refused to receive Amer. loan money, the Northern Lake Trans portation Company have concluded not to go through the Wellaid Canal during the coming season; but will run their boats to Port Colborne and Buffalo, on Lake Erie, and between Port Dalhousie and Oswego and Ogdensburg, on Late Ontario. The Port Royal New South says the First South Carolina volunteers have been completed, and the regiment turn ed over by Gen. Saxton to the War Department. A second regiment of Maxis will soon be formed, with Cal. Montgomery, of Kansas; as its comman der. The officers of the First, South Carolina have received their commis sions from' Gee. Saxton. A Paris letter says : It is stated that the Imperial Prince'is to be emaneipa ted from petticoat government next month, and placed under the care of a tutor. I am not able to mention the name of the gentleman selected for this responsible position, but it Is said that he is not a bishop. That dreadful scourge, the small-pox, Is raging in Atlanta, Georgia. There are one hundred cases in the city, be sides twice as many more at the small pox hospital. Quarantine is abandoned and the disease has full swing. A gentleman, recently arrived from Canada, states that a fee of $l,BOO was paid to Mari the other day in Quebec, wholly In American silver. He didn't want the stuff, bat was compelled to take It. Poor fellow I The Washington correspondent of the Chicago Tribune says that he is inform ed, by good authority, that the sentence of the court ip case of Major licKinstry is dismissal from the service. A sromau with three arms and hands goes out to do honse•work in l3righton, England. The extra limb is said bo small but perfect from the elbow to the tips.of the fingers: Two hundred and fifty deserters are now sweating trial in the Army of . the Potomao. It Is. understood that the most of them will be sentenced; to death. Tho Commissioners of the Interna tional Exhibition in London have de cided that there will be no pablio cere mony connected with the delivery of the prizes. We learn from the Lewistown papers that work has been commenced on the Mifflin and Centre county railroad, sur veyed from Lewistown to Bellefonte. Fred. Douglass says that since the uttering of the proclamation he has grown taller, felt whiter, and can comb his hair with much less difficulty. • The course of true love with a certain couple in Elmswell, Hoglund, recently terminated Ina happy marriage, after a courtship of twenty-six-years. The Legislature of WisconSin has or dered the Governor's message to be prin ted in the German, Norivegian, Welch and Holland Dutch lauguages. On the 12th inst., Professor Agaslz the eminent naturalist, took the: pFe liminary steps to become a:naturalized citizen of the United States. General Burnside has generously of fered to accept the command of his old division, the ninth army corps, and serve tinder General Hooker. On New Year's, evening, in East Greenwich, Rhode Island, Caesar Clark, aged about 100 was married to Betsy Fry aged about 70. Gold diggings ire reported to have be e n r awly made in Nov Zealand, w hi c h f ar anaa, those of California Zind Australia in richness.- igar: "Toby, what did the Israelites do when they crossed the Red Sear don't know, ma'am, but 'I guess dried . themselves." , Mai Gen. Boatman le strongly urged to become the Emancipation candidate for Governer of Kentucky, at the nest election. The cost of a Major General, including hie star, is computed at $24,000 a year, and that of a Brigadier at $16,000. General Fremont has written a letter to the War Department, asking. to be reinstated in command. General Casey, at the request of the War Department, is preparing a system of tactics for negro soldiers. John O. Heenan, it is said, is to mar ry Miss Stevens, a Now Sirork actress, now playing at Bourcicalt's In London. Postmaster General Blair will Boot Jame an order , requiring all foreign post age to tie paid in coin. Abd-al-Cader has jnet,, started on his - third pilgrinwie to Niece; EDIDALISED Borags.---Some time since, in clearing out the mine of an old chap el in Warwickshire, England, several dead bodies were exhumed, containing the embalmed bodies of Countesses and St. John's, which were buried more than two hundred years ago. The coffin which contained the body of Lady Aud rey Leigh, buried in 1640, was opened, and the body found perfectly embalmed and in entire preservation, her flesh quite plump, as if she were alive, her face very beautiful, her hands exceed ingly small and not wasted ; she was dressed in fine linen, trimmed all over with old point lace, and two rows of lace were laid flat across her forehead. She looked exactly as if she was lying asleep, and seemed not more than six teen years old ;.her beauty was very great, even her eyelashes and eyebrows were quite perfect, and' her eyes were closed ; no part of her face was et all fallen in. GOVERNOLL CUBTIN :—The statement that Governor Curtin, at a recent dinner in Washington, - -held a conversation with Secretary Seward in relation to the formation of a new political party is without any foundation. Nothing took place at that dinner except the exchange of ordinary civilities, and no reference was made to the re-nomination of Gov. Curtin by any such new party. Neither is Governor Curtin acquainted with Thurlow Weed, who Is alleged to be the head of the new party. This diSa vowel is made by authority of Governor Curtin, who does not wish to have his name associated at this momentous cri sis, with any movement calculated to distract the country. He is entirely ignorant of the organization or principles of any new party.---ffarrisburg COULDN'T TRUST HIM I—The other day the renowned T. Jefferson Boyer, the member of the Legislature, whose po litical virtue claims to have rejected a briba of $20,000 for voting for Simon Cameron, applied to one of the officers of the Senate for a few - quires of a cer tain kind' of paper, of a better quality than is furnished the House. The officer said he had no authority to give it. T. J. B. suggested that it was a mere trifle and nobody would know it but them selves. Ob, no, replied the officer, I can't trust' you, fOr-you might blow on me as you did on Gen. Cameron. The virtuous member retired, a wiser if not a better man. vir Poor Boileau has discovered, by this time, what it is to serve tyrants and traitors. The Democracy of Philadel phia have ostracized him. ,The Evening Journal has flung his name from its head Re is persecuted for his frankness in coufassing u . wrong which he was sup posed to have done the government.— If.Boileau has a spark of. manhood left in his heart, he will expose every man who contributed treacon to the columns of,the Journal while it was in his con trol. By such a confession Boileau could "make Rome howl." Has he the courage to give the people facts and names ? it A general court martial has been ordered to convene; and is now in ses sion at Memphis, for the trial of Thos. M. Knox, correspondent of the New York Herald, against whom - Gen. Sher man has preferrod charges of acting as a spy, giving - aid and comfort to the enemy, and violating the 'United States order, prohibiting citizens from accom panying the expedition, issued last month. An account of th 3 expedition, written by Mr. Knox, and published in the Herald, reflected severely upon the oompetency of Gen. Sherman. Aar Godey for. March is on our desk and notwithstanding the high price of printing paper, still presents an undaunt ed front of 100 pages. While almost every other publication in the country has cut down their usual number of pages, or size of their papers,. the• L ady's Book, triumphant over all, still gives 100 pages. Sr What amount of suffering, and disease among the Volunteers would be prevented by the free use of Holloway's Pills & Ointinent. For Wounds, Sores mid Scurvy, the Ointment is a certain cure, and for Bowi Complaints, Fevers, i nv ;:l . Pox, &0., the Pills are the best medicine In ti World. Only 26 eta per Box or. Pot. " 121 In Portland, last week, Mr. Thos. Barns, who had become insane, chased Ms watcher out of the room with a stick of wood. and then escaped to the street, where ho wandered about some fifteen minutee with no other garment on than a shirt—the mercury being below zero. sr The Rev. Mr. Robinson has em braced the tenets of Oath°licisro, and was baptised at Carbondale on Friday lest. The officiating priest, Father Walworth, was formerly a Presbyterian clergyman. eir A. special dispatch from Washing ton to the New York World says that Gen. Fremont has been assigned to the Department of Texas, and that General Butler will return to New Orleans. INT Geo. Casey has been requested by the War Department to prepare a system of tactics for use in the negro min:teats to be , enlisted into the Na. ticual Berries, WANT TO ES PUT TO INoaK.—General McClellan and Gen. Fremont have both applied to the Government for active commands in the field. We trust their application will be promptly granted.— We agree with the New York Times that they are both men of too much ability and too strongly supported by public favor to be in idleness. Let the Government assign them to duties which they are best fitted to perform, and in localities where they can perform them to the best advantage. Both, we can not doubt, will promptly accept what ever positions may be assigned them.— Gen. Fremont has undoubtedly seen the folly of his conduct in throwing up his command because another General was placed over him, and Gen. McClellan has always declared himself ready for service in any field where he . coull make himself useful. Ho must have comple ted, by this' time, his official reports of the'Army of the Potomac, and can post pone; with advantage to himself and the country, any future tours of pleasure through the' Northern States. Before the government creates a host' of fresh Major-Generals, let it bring into active service those who are already, receiving their salaries and doing nothing. PEIRCE OF WALES' ESTATE. - The Prince of Wales has taken possession of his newly acquired estate in Norfolk.— It was purchased from Right Hon. Wm. Cowper, M. P., for $1,100,000. The li brary of the mansion contains 3,000 vol umes. The furniture is nearly all new. There are thirty bed rooms, and a pro portionate number of reception rooms. In the purchase all the timber of the es tate is included, which is some of the fi nest in England. There are also 100 acres of wooded land, and $35,000 a year from rents, which is secure, as the tenants are respectable and well off one tenant alone paying -$5,000 a year. The fishing is excellent; and the shooting, like most shooting in Norfolk, is first rate, including blackcock amongst other game. The railway is within two miles. FRIGUTENED TO DEATIL.---.M113. Root, wife of the township collector of De- Kalb, Illinois, was frightened to death last week by a man dressed iu a white sheet with 13 coat wound around his head. Re knocked at her . door the evening. She gazed for a moment at the horrid figure, and then fell backward to the floor lifeless, The ghostly joker is a merchant of respectable standing. Frightening Individuals in this way and by pointing a gun or pistol at them, as if going to shoOt, are two of the most stupid and dangerous tricks Which can bo practised, and yet there is scarcely a week passes over that the newspapers do not record some death from one or the other cause, The acts are . to fool• ish to be tolerated even in children. GEN. MCCLELLAN'S POCKET PICKED.— On the arrival of General McClellan in Boston, week before last, there was a crowd of people assembled at the Wor cester depot, and notwithstanding the presence of the police, the General and his party with great difficulty reached their carriage. In the confusion and bus tle of the Moment, .some daring member of the light-fingered gentry inserted his digits in thkGeneral's pocket, and ab stracted theiefrom a wallet containing $2OO in money and some valuable papers. The loss was made known to the police, and the detectives succeeded in recover ing the papers and in restoring them to their owner before he left the city. RBI A 0 HUNTERS.—WhiIe General Mc- Clellan was at, dinner at the Massasoit 'louse, on his recent passage through Springfield, two ladies robbed a military cap,which they supposed to be the Goner_ al's, of both its buttons, tearing them out ruthlessly, to be preserved as mementoes. The mortification of their feelings and redness of their faces can be imagined when one of the aids put on the mutila ted cap, and the General put on his own which was intact. Those buttons hav en't been preserved, but the story has, and is told oftener than two ladies wish to hear it. olm Joslin, of Conneaut township, has exhibited a degree of pa triotism worthy of mention. The Gi rard Union says he had two boys wound ed and one killed al Fredericksburg. He has sent all of his five boys to fight for the Union, and offered to go himself pat, could not get into the army on ac count Gr. his age. TIIE LAST QuorA.--Every New Yang land State has furnished its quota of men under the last call, except New Hampshire, which is now raising its last, regiment. Other States are, gen erally speaking, rather behind-hand, and it is said that New York is 35,000 men short of her complement. A GAT PABTY.--At a recent s party in New Oastle, five men were gathered, whose aggregate age reached four hun dred and twenty-six years. They were: Jesse Dushama, eighty-nine ; Geo. Pear son, eighty-six; Robert McGuffin, eigh ty-five; Robert Wallace, eighty-four, and James T. l3oyd, eighty-two. OAT...NORMA JOE.—The San Francisco Daily Herald; sate that ibis renowned sharped , shooter, who won faine•on.the Peninsula, has returned to this State and is now.ansong his old hanuk near weavorvill, Trinty cow ty. THE ANDERSON TRoorAGAIN.—Gov. Curtin has received the most gratifying intelligence from Gen. Itosecrans with regard to the Anderson Cavalry now at Nashville, Tenn. All the members have returned to duty, and the work of re-organization is to be commenced at once. Col. Palmer arrived at Nash ville, and is exerting a good influence. Gen. Rosecrans adds that the regiment contains material to perform deeds that will wipe out the stain of refusal to join their comrades in battle, and exceed the highest expectations and hopes of its many friends. LITTLE RIICIDY.—Who talk. of leaving " , Little Rhody" out of a remodeled Un ion ? Read and be ashamed : Accord ing to the official reports sent to the Rhode Island Legislature, that State has furnished for the defenses of the na tion, by land and sea, sixteen thousand six hundred and sixty men—or thirty percent. more than her quota of three years' men. Little Rhody has also dis bursed $70,000 in the shape of boun ties and extra pay to her soldiers. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD ColoAwv.— From the annual report of this railroad for the last year we learn that its total earnings.amounted to $10,304,290 ; and its total working expenses to $5,431,072. It is 358 miles in length from Philadel. phia to Pittsburgh. The total number of passengers carried over it during the year was 1,143,418; the number of tuna of freight transported upon it was 2,- 223,051, Including 835,146 tuns of coal. INFANTICIDE.-A woman, Hannah Shannon, residing in West (Mester, was arrested charged with infanticide. The near neighbors suspecting she had a child, and fearing violence, caused the sink in the garden to be searched and the dead body of a child was found wrapped up in some clothing. The husband bas been in the war for a year and upwards. HALT I Ile LT I I LIALT!!!—A Cry iron) Washington I ATTENTION I ATTENTION II Wives, Mothers and Sisters, Whose husbands, sons nod brothers tiro ser ving in the Army, cannot put into their knap sacks a more necessary or valuable gift than a few boxes of HOLLOWAY'S PILLS AND OINTMENT. They insure health eTen under tho exposure of a Soldier's life. Only 25 cents a llox or Pot. SoLnrcus , SpEct.ki. Ncricta.! Do your duty to yourselves 1 Protect your Health 1 fa ,- Read the Ist3wlng, Just received this day from Wasldngton Vg.asuracros, D. C. T. liou.owny, M. D DEA, it, &a :---I avail myseifof this oppor tunity to express my grat.tudo for your kind ness in being so prompt in sending ma your valuable Pills and Ointment. Hundreds of poor soldiers have been made comfortable an-t well by the use of your meuicines, and they all can testify to, their healing powers and ca pability of giving instant relief. it bag, with in my own observation, saved many a poor Soldier . from long sickness and much *uttering. Yours truly, D. G. POSE, Washington, D. C. November 4, 1862. [2O-12t 77V13ater G-c)c)clo 1 SPANGLER & PATTERSON, VITE have lately received a thorough as- VY sortment of Woolens am) all other SEASONABLE GOODS, Embracing the best styles of Coating Cloths, Cassimeres 6- V estings Youth's Cassimeres IN NEW AND EXCELLENT DESIGNS, Superior Fancy and other Dress Silks; every shade of French Merino; plain and wool DeLaines in colors; beautiful 4esigns of Mixed De Laines, Coburgs, Alpaccas 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 floods ; Gauntlette, Gloves, and Hosiery; Muslims Counter jranesand Tickin'gs; Checks, Flannels and Linens. Floor amd . Table Oil Cloths,. Ingrain, Venetian and Rag Carpet, Wall Pa per, Linen, Clirton, and Woolen Carpet chain. CR6CKERY IN DREILIZAWAI amp. •New.hiackerel In small and large packages. An of ;which we are now selling at prices below this preserkt City rates. • SPANGLER tir PATTERSON DR. J. Z. HOFFER, 3 Denatit, CF TME BALTIMORE COLLEGE 41 8111 - OF DENTAL SURGERY, LATE OF HARRISBURG _ _ O _ FFICE:—Front street, fourth door from Locust, over Saylor & McDonald's Book store, Columbia. Entrance between the Drug and Book Stores. Columbia, May I, 1862.-Iv. PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS I I .f A fine assortment of Photograph.. A L, 13 TJ M - S ranging in price from 75 cents to Five Dollars. For sale at DELLINGER'S Photo; raph Gal lery, Market street, Marietta. BUFFALO ROBES, Horse Blanket; Harness, Saddles, Whips, &e., A fine ortment DEL now on hand at ass L. • S. NGrEIVS, Market street, Marietta LI. Call and see before purchasing elsewhere. ' 17-3 m ICIIORY & Oak Wood, 50 Cords each, e g_ Hickory and Oak Wood. Orders must , accompanied with the cash when they will be promptly filled. ' Spangler & patterson. B tIGGY and Sleigh BLANTISTqof various, styles and at much lower prices than the same sold last fall Spangler Patterson. O LANDLORDS! Just, received, Scotch endirish FVHISKIES, warraii pure, at 11. D. Benjaniaiwa. NEW CROP. New Orleans 11,Iolassies. This is the.only kind of Molasses that is good for Cake Baking. Juattectived at SPANGLER Si P