Ike (Matiettian. _iltrutZetta, SATURDAY, MARCH 28,186"3, 13" Messrs. MATHER & ABBOTT, No. 335 Broadway, New-York, are duly authorized to act for us in soliciting advertisments, &c., and receipt for the same. Tus NEW COASCAIPTION LAw.—The•ap pointment of provost marshals through out the United States to, carry .out. the enrollment bill will be made as rapidly as poisible. There will be one. Tor ev ery Congressional•district, 'and when the• district is very large two of three will be appointed, as the case may require. In addition for each district, ,there 'will also be one civilian and one surgeon, to be paid as assistant surgeon of cavalry, except the rations, etc., leaving about $ll3 per month. This, will constitute the enrolling board, whose duty it.ia to divide each district into two sub-divid ions, and to appoint for each an enroll ing officer, whose special duty it will be to make the enrollment. Immediately after his appointment, the enrolling officer of each sub-district is to proceed to make the enrollment in such manner that each class shall be enrolled separately, and the age of the person enrolled is to -be set down on the list as it will be on the first day of July succeeding the date of the enroll ment. That is, if any person - is not now twenty, but will be on the first of July next, he is to be rdabed'on the list; or if any married man is not thirty-five now, bat will be :on.the first of July next, he is not to go in the 'first class, but io the second chum; or if any per son liable to duty Limit now forty-five years of. age, but will The on the &it day of July next, he is dot to be placed on the list at all. All persons thus enrolled are to be subject to military duty for two years from the first day of July' after the en rollinent, and if called into the service shall continue during tha rebellion, but not to exceed three years, But the persons oT the second class shall not, in any district, be called into the service of the United States until those of the first class shall have been called.— Whenever the President shall make a requisition, ho is authorized to assign to each district the. number of .men to be furnished, and then the enrolling board ehall Make a draft of the required number, aad fifty per cent. additional ; and i shall Take, a ,complete roll in the order in which the acmes are drawn.— The drafted men are ,to stand on.the same fatting with the three-years vol unteers, in respect to advance pay and bounties as now provided by law ; and the President, in assigning the required number to each district, is authorized to make allowance in respect to the numbers already furnished by sucirdis trict daring the was. After the draft is made each person whose name is drawn is to be notified in writing within ten days, and he is to repair to a designated place of rendez vous ; but before the day of assembling ho may furnish a substitute, or ho may pay to such a person as the Secretary of War shall select, a sum of money, in lieu of`a substitute; which sum is to be made uniform by a general order, and is not to exacted three hundred dollars.-- Every person failing to report in per son, or Or. procuring a subititute, or by paying the stipulated sum, is to be deem ed a deserter. • Many persons are still of the opinion that the Conscription act, as past by the last Ciatgress, is the same at that en forced by the rebels. This is not so, as there is a wide difference. The rebel act takes ay persons between certain ages, leaving none behind, while our bill merely takes the required quota out of the whole number enrolled. Thus, there might be in one district 10,000 persons between the ages of twenty and thirty•five years enrolled liable to mili tary duty, and the quota required might be only two or three thousand, which would still leave the majority at, home. The rebels on...the contrary, take all they can lay hands upon, whether old or young. The Philadelphia Press thinks, that "as Perinsylvanikhad already furnished for the war more troopsthao any other State, and as some attention is new be ing directed to colored enlistments, for which it is stated -the Governor will give due credikiherivis yet hope that, with-''proper exartiens, our State'mny, escape the 'draft, if a Call for more men is issued ! " But the Copperheads, who are, denouncing the conscription , act, show their inconsistency by encouraging desertions and . opposing negro enlist ments. If they don't want the conserip ticiet;ifor9pd, why screen deserters and, oppose LW! enlistment of negroes 7 Tho people should remember that for every man , white or black, whom these tories keep out of the• army a white man will be drafted to' take his place. iskir Somo of our cotemporaries, in making up a statement of affairs in Utah, give the full original dimensions of the Territory, and lead their readers to believe that the Mormons still con trol it. This is a mistake. Nevada territory, as it now stands, takes off the whole of the old territory Utah west of the thirty-eighth meridian of longitude. Colorado territory takes off the old ter ritory east of the thirty-second meridian of longitude, and south of the forty-first parallel of latitude, while the new ter ritory of Idaho includes that portion of Utah which was east of the thirty-second meridian of longitude, and between the forty-first and forty-second-parallels of latitude. Thus all the 'niOst, yell:fable mineral lands known to exist, in the ter ritoryhave been cut off and .put into other organizatioris—seperated forever from all control of Brigham Young and hie satellites. . , iar The Jersey City Statiderd has an account 'of a' singular difficulty which has occarad . at the chemical works in that city. It appears that the greater portion of the 'workmen employed • are foreigners, either naturalized l ior other wise, and that the former made up their minds that the latter, who have enjoyed the blessings and protection of our Go vernments for many years, should not screen thernselves behind their non-citi zenship to avoid , the prospective draft Therefore, "it was insisted• that they should take out papers of natura'ization ; and it being declined, it was•determined by the others to drive them . from the Works. This was immediately put into summary execution, though no violence was used. A. similar course, it is* said, has been pursued at the Zinc Works. lir The War Department lias re ceived the rolls of all the regiments comprising the Army of the United States, with the number of absentees or deserters from the army, which show that there are - upwards of one hundred and twenty-five thousand of this class, most of whom, it is expected, will be brought in by the 'recent - proclamation of the Prakident. Active measures are being taken' to bring" them back. A great many of thee° deserters or absen tees are harbored- thoughtlessly, •but every citizen should . remember that most of these soldiers have accepted a bounty from the Government in addi tion to their pay, and that their now shrinking their duty exposes" every man to conscription to supply . the places of these deserters. er One of the most brutal murders ever perpetrated in the 'city of New York was committed one day last week, in West 40th street. The victim is .a Mrs. Catherine O'Meara. While she was washing in her apartments, her hus band, a soldier in the 31st regiment, en tered the room, came tip softly behind her, and drawing a razor from his pock et,, drew it across her throat, cutting it from ear to ear. The unfortunate wo man fell to the floor 'and expired in about fifteen minutes.- The.poor victim has always borne the reputaticin of being an honest, industrious woman. : The murderer is a morose and brutal look ing man. er Gen. McClellan's Army cost the government sixteen thousand dollars a day for just the one article otquinihe alone, which was used as ,a prophylatie to keep of diarrhea and fevers,_ and whidh was delt out with dailY as a part of their rations all the time they were kept on the Peninsula, and yet more men were lost there by disease•than by the missiles of the enemy. An eminent physician asserts that ail this, and More might have been saved, if, those in au thority had only understood the right system of feeding and treating soldiers when they were well, and of caring for them when sick. tir Mrs. Mary Nell, an Irish woman of New York; discovering that her house was frequented by fairies, presumed Of course that her child was not her own, but had been changed in the cradle. To test the matter she seated the child, who was three years old, on a red hot shovel, expecting that if it Was alairy it . would flyaway. But the poor sufferer, being only a common mortal, was burned so badly that it died in a week. or.We understand that efforts have been made not only in the Department of Gen - arid Banks, but at NeWbern and other places, to induce the nine months troops to reenlist for the war; and ex tra offers in some cases have boeen made. There are but few, howeier, who are willing to forego -the prospect of , a visit to their homes at the end , of their term of service, after which; doubtless, a 'edit siderable number` would be' willing to re join the Union - armies in the field. General Hooker has dismissed with, disgrace from the military service of the United States, Surgeon Levi Ovclrholtzer, 147th Regt, Penn. Yolr; for , disloyalty to the Government:- Overholtzer is said to haie been a res ident:. of Phoenixville,' Chester county, - - . car General - Frorabet has not been assigned to any special .command yet, and there is some doubt I;ihether or not , he-will. He offers his, sword: in any position where he can confront tha ene my. rte- c~THE MAR lETTIAN.€'c Short Scraps of News from our Exchanges. Umbrellas are property The amended internal revenue law provide's that they shall be taxed three per cent. Brown Sheetings are now held in New York at 42 cts per yard by the bale, the usual price before the war being 8 cents• Jeremiah Spencer, of New Hartford Cons.,the last survivor of the Wyoming massacre, attained his 93d year on the sth -inst. Contrabands are flocking in &roves to General GRANT'S army. 400 came in in one day. They work cheerfully, and are of great service., About. $300,0.00 of the treasure lost. ill California steamer Golden Gate has been recovered, and it is expected that about one million dollars altogether will yet be 43ectired. The expediqon to colonize : per/391313 of color has been indefinately postponed by the-President. The amount of money taken from tars at the "Dead Letter Office" will, it is estimated, amount to $BO,OOO for the present year, being some $30,000 more than the average for past years.--This increase is owing chiefly" to the large sums of money being constantly sent home by the soldiers. The other morning in Washington, Brigadier General Buford, after drawing about $1,900 from the Treasury, stepped over to an oyster saloon near by, and while eating a few raw oysters had his pocket picked of the money by some "expert," who had followed him. Several merchants in Cincinnati, de siring to visit Europe on business, ap plied some days Since at the State De partment, for passports, and were-in formed that "orders have been issued that no more passports are to be issue to persons liable to military duty under the law passed at the late session of Congress." From Galveston it. is reported that Jefferson Davis has expelled the French Consul, M. Theron. The reason for this step is not given, but it probably hati reference to the retest intrigues_ of the Frenchman,to take Texas oat, of the Rebel Confederacy and make it an in dependent State, under the protection of Louis Napoleon. ILis stated that the Secretary of 4 'the . . - Treasury has placed in the hands A of the Paymaster Geueral a sufficient amount of money to pay the entire" army up to the first of kirch. Silffleient has also been sent and reached its destinatioi to pay the entirearmy of the West. Our soldiers are to have ,pea soup.— Jacob Amos, of •Syracusg, New York, has just awarded tlie contract for fur nishing tha,Government forty thousand bushels of spilt peas at $2.35 per bushel. Tho Poughkeepsie' Press says : "The beat capital for a young man is a capi tal wife." It is, at least, a sort of.capi tal that is generally "productive,"' a point always considered in making in vestments. The ice dealers of Boston commenced, on. Saturday last, for the first time this winter, to gather ice from the ponde 'in the vicinity of that city, , which is a month later than usual. A full supply of ice, obtained from other sources, and ranging from twelve to eighteen inches in thickness, has been housed for ship ment abroad. That being taken now is for home consumption. The Great Eastern, which has been undergoing repairs in England, recent ly, was to leave Liverpool for New York on the 21st instant. The vessel, it is said, will lie permanently placed , in the trade, between' Liverpool and New York, The Catholics have secured the pas. sage of a.bill:by the Canada, Parliament, by which the population of that faith in Cl)* Cahada, : will have 'super:ate schools for the education of their chil dren. The,lease and furnituriof the Nation al Hotel, - .in_ Washington, - have been sold to hir. H. G. Bepson, of the Ash land House, Philadelphia, for ,$lOO,OOO. ---- ArCaconni of thb•baftlii of Waterloo has been found in the Duke of Welling ton's hand : Vriting, and icie to be pub lished. It refutes 'much that Thiers says on the subject. The banker/for Amsterdam have of fered to loan Mr. Chase the sum of $5O,- 000,000 of speedo, for oar , Governmeot, at moderate interest. Otters from other quarters have been received. • The receipts of gold for duties on imports are rapidly increasing. Gen. Spinner, United States Treasurer,-has refused to receive any ; more on which' interest is to be, paid. The last words of "the lamented Gen eral-Sun:tiler were---" God swim my Coun try, the United States of. Ameriea."--: Thus, in the hour of death, the grave old soldier was true to the patriotic had tinimated him throughout an eventful life, No less than 800,000 hogs were pack . ad in Chicago, and 600,000 in Cincinna, ti, in 1862. - . Godey for April is out ; it is 'a bemitiful spring number. The fashion plate is exquisite and the literary cpn tenttiiiui.uil, of Cho' bighe'st torte. THE D'UTASSY COURT MARTIAL.-T his military court is now in session. The following are the charges preferred against this German adventurer, named Frederick Strasser, alias Colonel Philip D'Utassy : 1. Persuading a sordier to desert. 2. Embezzling mail-bags. 3. Extorting money from sutlers. 4. Obtaining money from officers un der his command on the pretence £hat it was to be used for recruiting pur poses. 5. Selling commissions in his regi ment. 6,' Plotting against officers ender his command - so as to cause them to resign, 7. Slandering his subordinate officers in..official letters. 8. Selling Government horses and stores, and picketing the proceeds. 9. Altering the proceedings of a court martial so. as to cause the dismissal of an officer from his regiment who was never tried. 10. Counterfeiting the signature of Hon. Charles H. Van Wyck, member of Congress from New York, on envoi: open, ; and selling them to soldiers in his regiment for three cents each. 11. Forging pay rolls. 12. Making false musters and receiv ing pay for fictitious officers. 13.. Opening United States mailbags and abstracting._commissions therefrom. QUEER DIVORCE SUIT.--FiOM the fol lowing, from the Lafayette (Ind.) Con rier,"it seems that the course of true love does not ran as smooth as skates on ice with a married couple in Lafayette : "Rumour has it that a divorce case growing out of a pair of skates and the recent skating mania in this city is like ly to engage the attention of the next Common Pleas Court. The facts may lie stated in a few words. The wife having a pretty foot and a well turned ankle, became especially enthusiastic on the subject of skating. The husband didn't see it, but the wife, forgetful of her strict letter of promise to love hon or and obey, bought a pair of skates and joined in the carnival. A rupture grew out of it, resulting in an entire estrange ment, and a bill of divorce, on the ground of incompatibility of temper.— The husband, in other words, concluded to let her. slide." PILOT- BREAD FOR TAE ARIIY.—The pilot bread supplied by New York and Brooklyn to the army of the Potomac, is made of good flour by experienced bakers, and afterwards carefully inspect ed by an agent of the Government, who is a - practical baker. There are about 25 ovens employed, and they bake from 6,000,000 to 8,000,000 pounds per Month. The contract for - this month was made'for 2,512,800 pounds of br . ead, and . was filled by 17 different . firms.— Each barrel'of• flour malies 180 pUunds of hard bread. The parties having con tracts can bake from 50 to 350 barrels every twenty-four hours. eir The iron money safe of the Ad ams Express Company, recently stolen from a Northern Central Railroad train, was found on Saturday near Cockeys ville. The appearance of the safe•indi cated that the lock had been blown open with gunpowder. The . Adams Ex press Company offer a reward of five thousand dollars for the discovery of the certificates of indebtedness and govern ment bends. All efforts to detect the perpetrators of this bold and extensive robbery have •thus far proved fruitless. The is undergoing a thorough investi gation in Baltimore city. Or Gov. Andrew, of Massachusetts, has approved a bill to promote enlipt runts and regulate recruiting, which puts $1,500,000 into his hands for the purpose of raising volunteers. The Ex ecutive of the - State alone can hereafter offer bounties for enlistment, and he is authorized to 'pay a semi not exceeding 'fifty dollars for every new recruit, and twenty-five dollars to such of the Massa chinetts volunteers, now in the service of the United States, as may re-enliat. eir,There has been a speck of.war in IteetQcbunty Indiana. On Friday the 10th - , n'sibiad of soldiers were sent there to arrest Ileserters.. They had captured six, and were-on their wily to the cars, when a hundred mounted Butternuts, armed -with rifles, cants; up and released the prisoners. TWo cninpanien of infaxi trTwere sent from Indianapolis, who re captured the deserters 'and scithered the traitors. Diarrhoea and Dysentery will deal . inate tha Volt r inl,eers far more than the bullets of the enemy , therefore let every man see to .1i that he carries with him a full supply of Bolloway's Pills. Their IMO in 06 India and the Crimea saved thousands of British Soldiers. Only 25 cents per boa. 213 Cr Turkey has just issued postage_ stamps, having lone been the only Pow er iiilEurope that has- not used them. The:ilitamps 7 bear the signature of the Sultan'; the Mahometan religion inter dicting the representation of the face 'or person. 1143 - A sale of property was made in Williamsport, last week says the Gazette which required two hundred and sixty two dollars - and a few cents' worth of revenue stamps to make the -transfer legal. SHARP TRANSACTION.—The New-York correspondent of the Boston Journal tells the following story : Quite a sharp business transaction in a marital way has been done here, if report is true, by one of our successful and most unscrupulous politicians. Having some money, he wanted a wife from a strata in society a little above what he was accustomed to move in, so he sought the hand of one of the fair damsels of Gotham. As his political prospects were quite high, he was referred to "Pa." The old man, with mercantile frankness, laid his child at the disposal of the seeker, on condi tion that he would give his daughter $100;000, secured on the real estate. The man in want of a wife was both able and willing to do so. The matter was thus settled, and the ,wedding prepara tions went onward. An elegant house, in an aristocatic locality, was taken and the good bargain of the fair one was the theme of general com ment.. As the hour drew near when the happy pair were to be made one, the father hinted that the little mercantile transaction preliminary to the marriage should be attended to. "Oh, yes—oh, certainly—certainly ;" the bland poli tician said. But it was not till the af ternoon of the bridal day that the prop er papers in due form were laid before the gratified papa. So the wedding ran along, an account of which gratified New York, and produced a sensation that lasted two days. Upon subsequent ex amination it was found that on the same day, bearing even date with the mar riage settlement, a mortgage• on that same property, duly recorded before the delivery of the said $lOO,OOO to "tear and sharp relative for $95,000, leaving girl with $5OOO. LA,EDEMPTION OF CURRENCY.—As there seems to be some misapprehension in the public mind relative to the rules by which the Treasury Department is go verned in the redemption of mutilated Treasury notes and postage currency, we publish the following - I. Fragments of a note will not be redeemed unless it shall be clearly evi dent that they constitute one half or more of the original note, in which case, notes, however mutilated, will be re deemed in proportion to the whole note, reckoning by fifths._ 11. Mutilations less than one tenth will be disregarded, unless fraudulent; but any mutilation which destroys more than one twat? Will reduce the redemp tion value of the• note-by ono fifth its face value. 111. Mutilated notes presented for redemption must be in- sums not less than three dollars of the original full. face valutb. UNION STATE CONVENTION :- A call has been issued by the Union State Committee, signed by. Cyrus P. Markle, chairman for a Union State Convention, to be held 'at Pittsburg, on the let of July next, for the purpoie of nomina ting a - tandidate for Governor and Su preme Judge. A resolution was adopt ed by the Committee recommending all loyal citizens, without distinction of party, to organize Union Leagues in each election district of the State. THE "SKEDADELERS" TO CANADA,—The immigration statics of Canada show that the number , of "skedaddlers" from the United States, who became fright ened at the prospect of a draft, number ed 1,945. Those persons took with them an average of $l,OOO each in Ame rican silver, making an aggrate of near ly $2,000,000. This accounts, in part, for the plethora of United States coin, of which the Candians make such com plaint. RETURN TO YOUR " REGIMENTS.—In a few days the time given deserters to re turn to their regiments will have expir ed, and all those who do not report by the first will be subjected to all penal ties which desertion entails. The lat eral proclamation of the should not be disregarded.. We .therefore give .this hint to those in this place, if there be any, to report at the rendezvous at Har risburg before the Ist of April. MEDALS OF HoNou.--The President is authorized to cause to be struck from the dies recently prepared at the 11. S. Mint for that purpose, Medals of Honor, additional to those authorized by the act of July 12, 1862, and to present the same to such officers, non-commissioned officers and privates as have most dis tinguished, or who may hereafter most distinguish themselves in action, and $20,000 is appropriated to defray the expenses of the same. Sheriff Hower, of Northampton county, was cheated out of $5O last week, by a sharper at Easton, for whom he changed a $5O greenback. After the rogue left it was discovered that the note had , been altered by the pasting process from $2 to $2. Cr General Burnside, having been assigned to his new Department, will at once assume command. General Parke accompanies him. But where this com mand is, we are not informed at this writing. Most probably it will be in the West. wUp to thiS time the tax from In. ternal revenue has not come up to the figure, estimated by. Commissioner Bout well, in hie report to Congress. ILINNEE TO TIIE lIANTIAN : 4 +II:sISTER. i Secretary Seward gave a dipl,, tuat i e dinner in honor of Col. Bournaio, the first Minister accredited from Hayti to this Government. Beside Col. Ron main, the following Representatives of foreign powers were present : Baron Geralt, Dean of the Diplomatic Corps ; M. De Stoeckel, the Russian Minister, Lord Lyons, the English Minister, and M. Mercier, the French Minister. The other guests were Secretary Chase, Postmaster-General Blair, .Senators Sumner, Harris and Morgan, Judge Ot to, (Assistant Secretary of the Interior,) William Whitting, (Solicitor of War Department, and Judge Goodrich, (Sec retarrof Legation at Brussels. The French Minister had previously entertained the Haytian Minister.— Col. Rounain, who is a native of Hayti, anal is said to be a very inteligent and respectable man, is of African descent, not very dark. . In Europe colored ministers and statesmen have long been received on an equality, a proceeding which, after hesitating to acknowledge the Inde pendence for more than a third of a cen tury, we have at last adopted. Cr An arrival from Hilton Head brings the gratifying news that so far from the negro expedition into Florida being a failure, it is a success. They have taken several important points and many prisoners. They have also captured large quantities of munitions add supplies, and are still driving the enemy before them. MARIETTA MARBLE YARD Michael Gable, Agt., MARBLE MASON AND STONE CUTTER. Opposite the 7bwn Hall Park, Marietta, Pa. —o— Marble business in all its branches, I will be continued at the old place, near the Town Hal/and opposite Punk's Cross Kry:i Tavern, where every description of marble work will be kept on hand or made to order at short notice and at very reasonable prices. Marietta, June 29, 180. 49-Iy Friends & Relatives of the Soldiers & Sailors. TTOLLOWAY'S PILLS AND 011'3T MENT.—All who have Friends turd Relatives in the Army or Navy, should take special care, that they be amply supplied with these Pills nod Ointment; and where the brave Soldiers and Sailors have neglected to provide themselves with them, no better prea ant can be sent them by their ft - tends. They have been proved to be the Soldier's never failing-friend in the hour of need. COUGHS AND COLDS AFFECTING TROOPS. Will be speedily relieved and effectually cured by using these nemirable medicines, and by paying proper attention to the Directions which are attached to each Put or Box. Sick, Head.lche and want of Appetite lacutental to Soldiers ! Those feelings which so sadden us, usually arise from twuble -or annoyan" obstructed prespiration, or eating and drinking whatever is unwholesome, thus disturbing the healthful 'action of the liver sad stomach. These organs must be relieved, if you desire to do well,— ' The Pills, taking according to the printed instructions, will quickly produce a healthy ac tion in both liver and stomach, and as a !lain ' ral consequence a clear head and good appeiite. Weakness and dcbility induced by over Faligue, Will soon disappear by the use of these M. valuable Pills, and the Soldier will quickly acquire additional strength. Never let the bowels be either confined or unduly acted upon. It may seem strange that llolloway , s should be rceommendeA for Llysenter) and Flux, many persons supposing. that then would increase the re'axation. ':his is a great mistake, for these Pills will correct the liver and stomach and thus remove all the acrid humours from the system. This medi cine will give tone and vigor to the whole organic system however deranged, while health and strength follow as a matter of Course. Nothing will stop the relaxation of the Bowels so sure us this famous medicine. VOLUNTEERa ATTENTION ! Sores and Ulcers, Blotches and Swellings can with certainty be radically cured if the Pills are taken night and morning, and the Ointment be freely used us stated in the printed nstructions. If treated in any other manner they dry up in one part to break out in another. Wheless this Ointment will remove the former from the system and leaVe the Patients in vigorous and healthy man. It will require as little perseverance in bad cases to insure a lastng cure. For Wounds either occasioned by the Bayonet Sabre or the Bullet, Sores or Bruises, To which every Soldier and Sailor are liable, there are no medicines so safe, sure and con venient as Holloway's Pills and Ointment The poor wounded and almost dying sufferer might have his wounds dressed immediately, if he would only provide himself with this matchless Ointment, which should be thruss into the wound and smeared all around it, then coyer with a piece of linen from his Knapsack and compressed with a handkerchief., Taking night and morning 6 or S Pills, to cool the system and prevent inflamation. Every Soldier's Knapsack and Seaman's Chest should be provided with these valuable Remedies. IMPORTANT CAUTION !—None are genuine unless the words " HOLLOWAY, NEW YORK and LONDON," are discernible as a Wate?- mark in every leaf of the book of directions, around each pot or boxi the same may. be plainly seen by holding the leaf to the _tight,— A handsome reward will be given to any one rendering such information as may lead td the detection of any party or parties counterfeiting the medicines or vending the same, !mowing them to be spurious; • * * *Sold at the Manufacrory. of Professor HOLLOWAY, 80 Maiden Lane, .New and by all respectable Druggists and Dealers in Medicine throughout the tivilized"world, in pots, at 2fic. 62c. and $1 each. N.l3.—Directions for the guidance of patients in every disorder are affixed to each pot. tom' There is considerable saving , by.tairing the larger sizes. iDtc 2 9:4 ... PRIME G R CSC E- R I E Java' and Laguira Coffee ; Crashed, 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. DIFFENBACR'S. 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. 0 A General Assortment of all kinds of BUILDING HA PIDWARE, . Locirs,- Hinges, Screws, Bolts„ Cellar Grates, Oils, Glass and Putty, ve'ry'clieap. PATTERSON & CO. NEW CROP. New Orleans Molasses: This is the only kind of Molasses that is good for Cake Baking. Justreceived at SPANGLER & PATTERSON: 7AMILY COUG H, SYRUP :—A tough Syrup, fot children and adults hai just been put up. at my. store, which should be in e,yry family this cold weathet.. Da. LANDIS.