Editor aaaci. Pro-pritc)r. VOL. NINE. PUBLISHED wEEELi , AT ONE DOLLAR A YEAR, PAYABLE IN ADVANCE OFFICE on Front Street, a few doors east di Mrs. Flury's Hotel, Marietta, Lancas ter County, Pennsylvania. Minns; One Dollar a year, payable in ad vance, and if subscriptionefbe not paid , within six months $1.26 will be charged, but if de layed until the expiration of the year, $1.60 will be charged. No subscription received for a less period than six months, and no paper will be diacon tinned until all arrearages are paid, unless at the option of the publisher. A failure to noti fy a discontinuance at the expiration of the term subscribed for, will be considered a new engagement. ADVERTISING RATES: One square (12 1 ines, or less) 50 cents for the first insertion and 25 cents for each subsequent insertion. Pro fessional and Business cards, of six lines or less at $3 per annum. Notices in the reading col umns, fi re cents a-line. Marriages and Deaths, the simple announcement, riles ; but for any additional lines, five cents a line. A liberal deduction made to yearly and half yearly advertisers. Jon PIUNTING of every de#cription neatly and expeditiously executed, and at prices to suit the times. THE PARTING, I've said a thousand times my heart, With all its woe, might love no more— That memory ne'er from life could part, Nor love e'er haunt my soul's darkshore ; Yet now I know the ashes gray But waited, ere they sprung to flame, Until thy hand should tune my heart To breathe forever thy dear name. Yes, now I know the years that tied And left my heart a lonely thing, Ilut vanished that, from ashes dead, A fairer bloom might spring. If I might tell thee all I feel, And paint the rainbows in my heart, Then thou would'st know, for woe or weal, I still am thine where'er thou art If I might pluck the fadeless bloom That blossoms in my life for thee, To light thy earth-life's weary gloom, I'd do it though 'twere death to me. If all t e joys I've lost or known, If all the bliss I've hoped might be, If all the maddening raptures flown Were mine, I'd gam them all to thee! If rod • crowned earth and star gemmed sky Their rarest treasures gave to me, And joy would come if I should die, I'd give them all and life to thee. I try to bush my pleading heart, And quell the rising memories there, To let thee quietly depart, And reason triumph o'er despair. And yet a sad, wild, anguished moan Breaks like a maddened ocean wave. A voice that sighs "Alone—alone With memory and a hidden grave." A voice of love across the hush Of woe that locks my shaded breast - A tiny plant no storms may crush, A flower that breathes of peace and rest Forever love's fair fadeless bloom Across my weary life will-creep, A star amid fate's cruel gloom, Until they lay me down to sleep. Ah ! it were madness now to dream Of joys that gild the vanished past, or hopes that shed a transient gleam Too bright, too beautiful to last. For oh I the smiles of fate have flown, And I must say farewell to thee— Must hush my wrung heart's pleading moan, And turn me back to misery I So memory, by night and day, Falls cold and ceaseless on my heart, Nor wears the throbbing pulse away, But whispers e'er how dear thou art ! And rings forever through my brain A mingled song of hope and fear, A note of joy, a cry of pain, A smile of bliss, a scalding tear ; And over thus till life bath past, And ptilseless lie my heart and brain, Thy love a radiant gleams hall cast Across this parting's bitter pain. A meteor o'er my life's dark sky, A blossom on a desert place, Will be the inemmy of thine eye— The memory of thy worshipped face. And when fifes weary task is done, Its pleasures and its sorrows o'er, When earth is past and heaven is won, VII be thine own for evermore! ar A. very sharp thing occurred some time since in Philadelphia, in which the Rev. Dr. Hodgson took au unenvi able part. The story is that a meeting DP iii,:bodists was held in Philadelphia, some time since, „,10 the speeches be ing patriotic, a good deal wa ;,:zaid about the Plag, &c. The Rev. Dr. „Hoaglei: being present was seriously annoyed at all this; and getting the floor, ho sold be was opposed to all this talk about Ae Flag, the Stars and Stripes, &c. Bev. ,Wm. Barnes rose promptly when he remark was made and said "I never knew an Englishman that was not op- Visaed 'to the Stars and Stripee 1" The meeting was Convulsed with laughter, and the Divinity Doctor subsided. iggr The greatest men Bra men of sim ple manners. Parade, show, and a pro fasien pf compliments are the artifices of little minds, made We of to swell them into an appearance of consequence, which nature has denied them. 'Death has nothing terrible iu it but what life has made so. c 'tt4ptitkut VennsAattia 4nuntal: 106.80 i alitics, Yittraturt, agriculture, Betim of tly Dag, otai Ntellifoce, ( THE INSULT. General Waring strode up and down stiffly biting his lips, working his figkers and clenching his teeth from time to time. His eyes were fixed etaringly up on the ground, breath was_ steniorous, his face was flushed almost - purple, and it was evident, in a word, that he was suffering a paroxysm of wrath. From the glances that the general cast about him occasionally, it seemed that he expected some one. Very soon a tall, grave-looking man scrupulously neat and military in his bearing and at tire, appeared. The general took no notice of his salute, but blurted out, im petously : "Colonel Carey, your regiment left its post, on the railroad, yesterday, against my order, and lost fifty-thousand dollars worth of stores for us. Why was that, sir ?" "I know notbing about it, general.— I was away the whole time, on engineer service. Lieutenant Colonel Carter was in command." "Carter? I don't know—let me see— why, , he's dead." "Carter dead ?" "Yes. Who is your major ?" "Major Godfrey." "Ali I Send him bore." Colonel Carey, not altogether pleased with the interview, took his time, and finally sent edjutant to find out who commanded the regiment, the day pre vious. Sure enough„ the lieutenant colonel had been killed in the early morning, and the command had devolv ed upon Major Godfrey, quite a young man. The - Colonel informed this officer that General Waring wished to see him, hinted that there were charges to be made. "Keep your temper," said be, "and don't be bullied. You know .what you may expect." Major Godfrey sought the presence of the irate general, and stood some mo ments awaiting his word. "Who are you !" asked Waring, pre coiving that the young man was await- "Godfrey, sir; Major of the Six teenth." "0 ! You are the man that ran away from the supply-depot yesterday. shall have you cashiered, sir. I want no cowards at the head of my regiments." Major Godfrey measured his superior officer from head to foot with a cold, ex pressionless stare—about the most im pertinent thing one can do, in a quiet way. Then, shrugging his broad, man ly baek full on the astonished comman der, and walked away without a single word of reply. The general of the division in which was General Waring's brigade; was a very different sort of person from that ofricer, and Major Godfrey knew him personally. He went to the headquar ters, then, and stated, in brief, that Waring had forgotton himself so far as to offer him an irretrievable insult. "I cannot serve longer in a position from which my superior officer has threatened to have me cashiered," he said ; "but I am particularly desirous of taking part in all the actions that may occur here on the peninsula. .If you can give me a temporary command —I don't care how humble—l will gu arantee that no disgrace shall come of it. The reason why I withdrew the 16th Regiment from the post assigned it by General Waring, was that 'Gener al McClellan himself ordered it." "Why did you not explain that to General Waring 7" "His words were such as no gentleman could reply to." A captaincy in another regiment was offered to the major, and it was also promised that a full investigation should be made into the affair. This was on the fourth day of the pro tracted battle that attend the transfer of the Army of the Potomac from the Cthiaaho Min; to the James River.— There had been some gallant fighting every day, and the army was thir.necl and weary, but undaunted. When the line of battle was formed, on the follow ing morning. Major Godfrey found himself put in command of a handful of heroes, gathered from several annihila ted companies, and formed into a new one. As he walked down this line of incon gruously-assorted men, soiled, grimed, and in many oases wounded, he spoke a few stirring words. "Boys," he said, sternly, "you look like fighters, and fighters are just what 1 want. I shall not ask you to cnt away for me anywhere ; but I shall ask you to follow me whereyer I choose to lead you. And I shall lead you into some dke 3:61•11„,'„....1ittfiti1...-.4. MARIETTA, PA., SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 1863. jolly places. If you don't follow*l'll go alone I" A cheer was the response to' this ad dress, for the men saw that their cap tain was in earnest—that he had a din. culty with destiny. 'And the only men: who do anything altogether' well, wheth- er it be singing,' or preaching, or what not, are the ones who , are working out a mighty quarrel with fate. The battle came on later this fifth day than on the previous mornings, for both armies were severely harrassed and Wearied by repeated attack, repulse, attack, and retreat, The lines were•not so firm and steady as on the first day, and some regiments showed great gaps, that told most eloquently of the courage and determination with which they had met the enemy. Still, when the ball was fairly opened and the cannonade-music began to make the air tremble and collapse at every moment, the tired soldiery plucked up a new energy, and fought—pardon me the little egotism—as I believe only Ame ricans can fight, North and South. Captain Godfrey kept his word. He did lead his men, and "into some jolly places." He seemed to think that he had command of a division instead of a company, and could therefore, cope with almost any odds. The enemy, astonish ed by the reckless brilliancy of his char ges, could but think that he was suppor ted by a powerful force, and often fell back when they might have surrounded the entire company. During one of these savage onslaughts a cavalry-sabre happened to alight upon the young officer's forehead, knocking off his cap and.leaving a fine crimson trench from his hair to his eye-brow. After this, he looked more like the men- he led. They were all blood, and dust and powder grime ; and when they came crushing down, in close order, with bay onets fixed, called on by their dauntless leader, coatless, hatless, with a bloody handkerchief upon his head, and his sword dropping gore as- he waved on the charge, it was not so strange that the foe gave way, even when they out numbered this desperate band five to one I The colonel of the regiment in which Godfrey was detailed to serve, was de lighted. He could not nos what fault, General Waring could have found with such an officer, and spoke many encour aging words to the young man. "If he ever comes nut of this," said he, "he will be set up two or three pegs higher at once; if lam ajudge. He means fight; and that is the kind of a man we want." Thera was some confusion, for a few minutes, on the right of the regiment, and the men evinced a tendency to a fall back, that, to do them justice, was perfectly natural. The Confederates had advanced their lines, and a battery of twelve pounder field guns had been so placed as to sweep, diagonally, the ground occupied by the regiment, while a heavy body of infantry, concealed in a woody ravine, kept up a murderous crossfire of musketry. The result of the storm of death; the two currents of which intersected just at the right of the line, was-frightful, and for a moment a panic seemed inevi table. In the confusion, • when the different companies lost their order, and parties of stragglers began wandering to the rear, Captain Godfrey drew up his men in Position, and stepped out to the front. "Who will go :to - glory with me, now?" he asked, pointing to the battery with his bloody sword. "Whoever isn't afraid come on ! If you .won't follow, I shall have to take that battery alone'!" - This magnificent, price of hyperbole must have •been hkard to be appreciated. The whole scene agreed with.its tenor. A field covered with ghastly corpses and wounded men; a wreck of arms and equipage scattered everywhere,; a smoky, stanching atmosphere, quivering and pierced by the terrible galls and cries of the dying, the awful scream of wounded horses, the horrible concus sion of heavy cannon incessantly fired, and the fierce howl of a thousand shot and shell; a disordered and broken host of men, trembling on the verge of flight, with alders galoping hither and thither cursing, praying, threatening, and im ploring:by turns—this was the exagger ated and wonderful background to the picture. In front, amid the wreck, and ruin, and pools of gore, and golgotha piles of dead, a company of the sixty c.! seventy heroes, without coats, often without shirts, without knapsacks, with out a flag; with 'uniforms 9f -half-a-daz en patterns; and arms as ill-assorted ; muddy, dusty, bloody, bruised, /blacken- ed, lowering ofaye and - defiant' of lips ; and before them all, the tall, manly fig . ure of their leader, with his,tUdetOvered with blood froM the' bintiaged' on his' fcireliead, his .biciad chest isPoied; -his sleeves- rolled up,' and his hands' arms, legs, and feet, imbuded and clot; ed with gore like, dose. of a - butcher,. waving that crimson blade, and roaring forth his determination,; too impossible for a threat and too splendid fora.boast —that was the situation. • Without waiting for a murmur of as sent. from , his men; this mad creature cried : "Now then I Double quick.! I' Charge!," and. ran forward at full, speed toward the battery that opened its "deathful, grinning mouths" at short intervals, to omit tongues of Aro and fron that licked np men, and horses, and trees alike. The scattering regiment saw the charge and paused. Several companies, not yet disordered; got into line and followed, but -Godfrey and his command were-already far in advance. Flame and fury whirled down in red hot sheets of destruction from the bat tery; thick,smoke and darkness 'lurked behind. It was an inky' cloud, stifling and heaiy, but charged with the splen dors and horrors of pandemonium. The air gaped and closed with terrific blows -allot, and the ground trembled and twinced at the awfal detonations.— Lights gleamed, and glared, and scorch ed the very eye-balls of those who look ed. All was vague and- bewildering with dizzy noises, and roaring as of a million wheels-and voices, and the brain soon got befogged and dazed by the aw ful magnificence of •the ascent into the teeth of the guns that shouted defiance, .and leaped back living foes. Into the centre of this hell went Cap tain Godfrey, crying as he ran : • "I was called a coward, yesterday, boys ! what do you think of this ?" As the devoted remnant of the com pany—for forty - men reached the front of the battery—came exactly before the guns, a sudden discharge of grapeshot roared along the hill, breast high, and a storm of musketry" followed. The few companies that had accepted the exam ple of the first, replied by a volley as they charged within a few moments the bill was covered with a mass of determined mun, pouring up in incroas ing numbers, stretching down to the ravine beyond, where the enemy -bad al. ready began to waver. The ice was broken the path was. shown by Captain Godfrey's men, and the regiment had followed, unable to stand still and see such -a deed •of`daring done. The battery -withdrawn with-the mar velous speed and ad - dress, but the infan try that had supported was a successful repulse, and due entirely to the unflinch ing heroism of thp little band_ that led. And that ,band!, I know nothing of it, save that Godfrey's body was found, where the contra of - the battery bad been. EIS sword, still grasped in his hand, was through an artilloryruan's ribs, and,a rdusket had.gone into his own Chest, just over ',the heart, There were seventeen other wounds upon him, but that °whined him. As . for hit men, the hill was as an old sergeant said,, "carpeted. with corpses".; I suppose their's were a portion of the carpet. THE rinklTS OF SCIENCE,—A Western steamer-burst- her boiler a few. :days since; sod a gentleman found on xeaoh. ing the:ground; that an iron bar,lei; feet long, had gonb hi 'at . his stomach. tin'd projected from his back. A surgeon informed.him that if the bar remained it Would cause mortification, and if it was removed it would cause him to bleed to death. . "Science has its lim its," remarked the doctor, "End you have your doles." 10" The most agreeable of all com panions is a simple, frank man, without any high pretenSions ,to an oppresaive greatness—:who lovoS life dud under stands the use of it robliging alike at all hours; andve all, of a golden tern per, and steadfast es an anchor.- For such a• one . vre. gladly exchange_ the greatest genius, the most brilliant, \vita the profoundest thinker. tEr The ravels are all Caesars ; they are eeizers-of men„ horses, mules, food, cotton, leather, and everything they can lay their hands upon. ar Dean Swift said with mach truth, "It is useless .to attempt to reason a man out of a thing he was never .resp oned,into." INF The thingayhich are rememherei3 are few and,nnimportent, compared with those' which are forgotten, F.,talc)lls - Jaocl A - lora 11. 185-/1 Fast Life iind Swift, Decay. The only Countercheck—The times in trhich we . live teem with wonder:4.2: 7i Nothing, seems impossible ; for the im possibilities; of,. : Pos e year become the commonplace events of .the - next.— Lightning presses, instantaneous com-, munice.tion..betweeti tbe most distant points, anti .intintarable inventions for . compressing' vast 'amounts of business,' into small spaeqs of' titrie and for' cur tailing the.processes of production and manufacture, are among . the• marvelous ' era,. Under'sudh cirmiriistaices, we may truly be said to live a "fait life." But whether, the whirl and,rnSh by, which. We hre borne along is . rerillY, '_conductive our happiness is another question.. • Oertain it' is that the averag,e dura tion of human life is . dic:reaaing in the midst of this excitement: ' The modern phase of diSease seems to puzzle and bitf fle tle faculty, and with two remarkable ••excePtions, viz., licilloway's, Pills and RollowaY's Ointment, no" medicines ap pear to make the desirbd impressionip on internal or external disordera.,Tliese ; two celebrated remedies are said: bow ever, to be accomplishing the mast , wonderful cures throughout the .length and breadth of our land. Liver com plaint and disease of the stomach and bowels, which in a majority of cases are produced by over-exertion and over-ex citement in business, yield to the Pills when all the_ resources of the drugg:st and apothecary have failed, and erup tive any scrofulous complaints seem to be equally , under the control of the oiut ment. We congratulate,Doctor , way on the signal success of his great medicines in this ! cOuntry, From-what we know of the,man, we have no doubt that the profits derived. from: ,th.at, site; cars will affbrd him far-less satisfactiOn. than the knowledge of the good hi's remedies have effected.—N. Y. Ameri can. . CHANCES OE DEATH IN WAR.-001361". al Rosecrans, in his report of the battle of Murfreesboro', estimates that of 20- 000 rounds of artillery, fired- by the Unionists, 728 hit the , enemy, au d. of 2,000,000 rounds of musketry,- 13,832 were effectual. This would show that . 27 cannon shots, or -155 musket shots', were required to hit quo . triau. ging the latter at one ounce each, the weight or metal required in t ringing down an , enemy , would be 9 .pounds, while of the former it would reciuiip about 226 pounds, or one and a half the weight of the huinua body. Ad, hoiv over, the pioportion- killed .or dying from wounds would be , only about' one; fourth Ofthe number put hors du-combat, tho figures given abOve Must be- in-. creased to the . 'same 'degree. -It will readily be seen how's:each more'destrnc-j i Ilan is dealt by the musket than -the loud-mouthed cannon, when-firing either round shot or shell. CAPABILITIES OF Tr.IIMAN STRENGTEL Dr. Windship has now'acciiiired a lifting. power of over twently-five hundred pounds. His remarkable apparatus is in his office, No. 1 Park street, Boston, where it may be seen by the enrious:— . leis on record that one Richard Joy, of Kent, Ifingland; iu the year' 1763, sac ceeded in lifting a weight of. - twenty-two hundred pounds. Dr._ Windship tins sarpasssd this by three _hundred; and: finding his - strength _, increasing. in an ra: . diminished ratjo, is -still confident, at reaching, within a reasonable tius, ultimatum of three thonSe,nd . pounds., His motive in carrying physiCat opment to this extreme !a purely scien tific; hut he ha's not Yet, we believe, recommended any one to be, in this re spect his imitator. . DISPROPORTION or. Tern BE:lEs.—The great excess, of males in nets terrifories, illustrates the: influence of emigration in effecting a disparity in the ber:ds.-- The miles in California outnumber' the females near sixt,y-severt thousand, to about one-fifth of the population. , In Illinois the excess of males amounte to about nir.etvone thousand, or ope twelah of the entire population. In Massachubetts' the females outnumber the males some thirty-seven thousand six kindred. Connecticut, seven thou sand. Minhigan shows near forty thori sand excess of males; Texas, thirty-six thousand; Wisconsin, forty-three thou sand. In Colorado. the males are .as twenty to ono female; In Utah the numbers are nearly equal ; and while in New York there is 'a small prepon derance of the females, the males are most numerous in Pennsylvania. Talent and virtue are lees fre, qnently hbreditary than the gout. - NO• 39. T HE ,COLUMI3IA INSURANCE C P. - A isT Y, Of colionbia,Zanoaster Cowyy, Petin'a CIaRTER PER4),E7q4 _ • • 'rim 'Corn Patiy eontinues.in :insure Ituildiug,s Merchandise,,and OTHER property, agains loss apd'ilaritage-sby fire, on the'mutual ptan - either flr- a cash premium of premium note _The large and increasing- capital of, the Com pany, consisting of premium mites given • by its members, and based.xpon iI, 475,789 35T , INSURED ON THE MUTUAL PLAN, Affords a 'reliable - guarrantee equal to ten time§,the average loss on the amount insured ; ;and the Directors pledge themselves to deal as liberally with those who niiay suitain' kiss 'or damage as the case will admit of, consistent with justice.to all parties concerned, 'Aloe Ni of P.II,EMIUM NOTES, $ . 155,620 49 BaTiiiice of Cash premiums un- - expended, January Ist, 1862, $1,668 ' Cash receipts during the year . • 2 621e,5s Agents , commissions, 6,78147 'Cash receipts in January, 1 8 63, 69580 —59,345 84 Losses and expenses paid daring the • • , year ‘1862, $6,329 73 Balance unexploded, leb'y 2, 1863, 3,016 11 - , A. S. GRP.EII, PRESIDENT, GF'.6FCGIYOUNG, Secretary. MICHAEL ,S. SLITJMA:N; Treasurir DIRECTORS: Robert T. Ryon, 44ralim 'Bruner; Sr., John FAndricft, Sarnfiel F. E o2l7ein, Michael S. Shuman, EphraiPn t flershey, Michael If.'Moore, George Nicholas Mc Donald. A 77208 8: Green, ReTinnisruns:—The following persons are all members of this Company: Bainbridge—R. H jones, John H. Smith, Jose`phtlfurtz. Coltembia—lGee."Bog.e,. Hiram Wilson, F. S. Bletz, Casper, Yeager, H. C. Fonderathith, John Shenbeiger, Frank Shillot, John Gans; J. J. & P. S. Mcr Tague, .Michael S. ShUman, R. Williams, : John Cooper, Geo. W. Heise; Waallingtbn Righter; , Samitel'Shooh, Robert. Hamilton, Ep,kert & Myers, Thomas Welsh, Win. A. Martin, Casper 'Seibert, J. W. Cottrell, Philip Huebner, Ephraim Hershey, Philip Schalek, David Hans.uer, John Kramer, Jacob Stacks, Jacoh Strine, Benj. F. Appold, Wm. Whipper, John Q. Denney, John Felix;Silvester, y ogle, Samuel Arms; A. Gray& Co. Eat llempfteld —Simon 'Minich. Falmouth--Abraham Col lins, Samuel Horst, Michael Hess. Lancers ter-,-John Rankin, B. A. Shaeffer, Henry.E. Leman, Wm. T. Cooper, John Sheaffer, Geo. Reese. ,Marietta—Geo. W. Mehaffey, John Summy, Frederick Mabling, E. D. Roath, Calvin A. Schaiiner, Joha Nay/or, Samuel Hopkins, Martin Hildebrandt, H. F. Fletch er. Mount •Joy—Tacoh Myers, - Israel Barn hart, Michael Brandt, John Breueinan.—. Manizerm—John Hosteter, J. E. Cross, 'Sam s l. Long, Geo. Weaver, John M. Dunlap, IThn Dutt, Philip Arnt, Jacob H. Kline, David Fisher. Maytnon—ffiram.Beatty, George B. Murray, Samuel Pence, Simon F. Albright.— Mountville—A. S. Bowers. Manor Township —Jacob 11. Shiiman, Christian Miller, Julius L. Shuman. rent& Township—Daniel Frey, Henry B: Becker, Henry Neff, John E. Bren ner. Bapho Township : —Chnstiaat Greider; Edward Givens, Michael Witman. West Hempfield ToWnship—li. E. Wolf, B. A. Price; A: Reid, J. H. Strickler, Araoriff. Bowers, Jacob Hoffman. , Warwick Township—Daniel B: Erb: • ka — . The:Company wish to apPoint an Agent for each Towndliin in Lancaster County.— Persons wishing to take the Agency can apply in person or by letter. - [cS-35 rpOpACCO, AND SLGARS AT'THE OLD PRICES. Sfies; half Spanish; - : Havana at 3, 4 and s , centa . , Shioking Tobado of the test brands,' ; . • Lynchburg, mity Flowtri • 'lloge 'Bud, 81c4 Wc,luvite.the lover ata.good • Segar to call ar'd i‘.2 . a.mineonr stock, for' it is unquestionably the best ever oflred in Mariettia„: ; ; ; - We have - the best-- . VARA AIVD YAIZA.."AGARS the Daltirnorb.market -afforda ' 13,11 d we are. de tezniirled to give this blanch of our business pr,rticular attention; ' " • diss:LtiVT WOLTE's, AND SEE. .11 , .rietta garcli 23 1863::Graos4 71 ISILLE,R 7 S BITTERS. , ' " Att es-eney for the stile Of Hisiderl s. Celebrated Herb. Bitters; 't has been established at • _ _ ,WOLF T 4 'S VARIETYf STORE, - where, one•togile, or: ono. !Andrea .bottles,ean he' had. Thik Irtedii•ih` - has' =fed' when all oihera have. failed. ,-Look:'at • the , eariloin Alan; Lancaster, Express,. of Jahn ' A 3 Eairees- wife; : John- W. Colvin - jack, I.eyi.E,,, Rafe; Henry Cramer, E. F. Benedict, John Wdidman, John Hines, Thdroas Wallis, . . Jay, ' - J. T MeColly x ' John Legion, khsolem 'Fairer, and [ a host 'of others: Marietli - lyTargh 28, 1863.4% DAVID COCHRAN, Pakter, ,Glazier and,Paper . Hanger. 7 OULD most respectfully inform the cit izep.srof Marietta and the, public gener ally that pe iS'prepared to do 11 - ouse Painting, •' . —China Glossing, Paper Hanging, 6.c., At very short notice and at prices to Snit the times.- He can be found at his mother's resi dence on the corner of 'Chesnut - and Second streets, 3 few doors below the M. E. Church, and _immediately opposite the old Oberlin Coach Works. {Aug.. A MERICAN HOTEL, . . PHILADgLP U. Located on Chestnut street, opposite the OLD .STATE HOUSE. , 'and in close proximity to the principal Jobbing and Importing Houses, Banks, Custom-House, ,and places, of amusements. The City Cars 'can be taken at the door (or within_ a square) for any depot in the City. The House has been renovated And refitted, and PRICES REDUCED T0'1111.50 PER DAY. WYATT & HEULINGS, PROPRIETORe'. DRIED FRUIT now-selling cheap at DiFFENBACIPS. lrY -one,of those) beautiful SOFT ms HATS at Cool,t's 9g Market-Qt.. AL., *9;d45 84