The Mariettian. (Marietta [Pa.]) 1861-18??, May 23, 1863, Image 2

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SATURDAY, MAY 23, 1863.
or A Washington correspondent
writes that the rules of the conscription
will exclude all fat men, the reason o
their exemption being "not only their
physical incompetency, but because it
is proverbial, from Falstaff down to
Humphrey Marshall, t h a t they have
never been remarkable for daring deeds
in the field." This sweeping rule has
many very decided exceptions. Crom
well was a lastly fellow.; Gen. Putnam
was alsvays in firie flesh ; Bonaparte was
f a t ; one of the most famous of the liv
ing Generals in Fiance is so atont that
he cannbt ride on . ..horseback ; our Gen.
Butler is by no metaled 'lean and slip
pered pantalOon ; and a great many
other names could be quothed to dis
prove the.reason assigned above for the
exemption of men of superabundant
flesh, who are otherwise capable to
do soldiers' duty, from the conscription.
sr The rebels are very reluctant to
,receive their sympathizing friends, ban
ished into Dixie by our commanders.—
"Noith Carolina they have positively
rtfused to receive them within their
lines ; and we are informed that recent
ly, upon the arrival at City Point, on
James river, of a company of female se•
cessionists from Ba'timore, they were
told by their rebel relatives that they
had better behaved themselves and re
mained at home, as their friends in Dixie
could give them no food to eat,!and do
nothing under Heaven to take care of
them.
or It is said that Erastus Corning of
Albany,' the •"railroad king," as he is
styled, and who commenced life as a
clerk at $2O a month, is about to retire
from biftsines with a fortune of five mil
lions of dollars. This is deserving of
notice as an example for all young men,
showing,as it does, that in most countries,
bat especially in this honesty, industry
and enterprise, aided by wise economy,
may, from the smallest beginning secure
to the humblest distinguished and hon
orable success in life.
Air The $3OO draft exemption clause
appears to cause considerable difficulty
at Washington. Secretary Stanton, it
is reported, believes the clause is per
missive and not mandatory ; but the
Oliva ofihe Attorney General are op
posed to those entertained by the Sec
retary of War, and he holds that the
law obliges the Secretary to fix a sum
by the payment of which the drafted
- persons may be relieved from serving.
lir It is said that the United States
Xlistrict Attorney for the District of Co
flumbia denies the truth of the published
statement, that measures are in progress
for the seizure, under the conscription
act of the real and personal estate Of
Mr. Corcoran, the banker. There is
now no evidence in his possession to
warrant such proceedings.
sur A telegraph dispatch from Cin
cinnati dated Wednesday, says : "Val
landigham was last evening placed on
board a gunboat, now anchored off the
levee. His transfer to the boat was
very quiet and attracted no crowd.—
Those who saw him said he looked so
ber, sad and much broken down. He
certainly goes to Fort Warren ; by what
route I eanget say.
iser A lady in Richmond says that the
best hotels have raised board to tea'dol
lars per day. Three dollars is the regu
lar price at common boarding houses,
and the food served is very plain indeed.
Coffee and tea were hardly to be obtain
ed at all, and common brown sugar
brought one dollar and a half per pound .
Clergymen pay $l5O for an additional
black coat.
eir It is reported that every avilable
soldier now on detached service in and
around Washington, Baltimore, and on
the railroads in Virginia and Mary
land, will be forwarded to Hooker's
command; and their places supplied by
Pennsylvania Militia, which, it is said,
has been tendered by Governor Cur
tin. •
fr To raise funds for the erection of
a bronze statue at Richmond, in memo
ry of Stonewall Jackson, hi friends will
appeal to the generosity of the people.
The estimated= cost of the statue, in
Confederate funds, 'is sixty to eighty
thouland
liar The mildness of the last winter
has reduced the usual supply of ice in
Europe as well as in this country. The
of the Swiss glaciers, it is said, has
all been sold to the northern powers,
and large numbers of workmen aro cut
ting and carting the ice away.
cur Governor Curtin, has offered to
raise 50,000 volunteers to man the forti
fications at Washington, and the propo
sition is, understood to have 4een ac
cepted.
Short Scraps of News from our Exehaltges.
The Harriet Lane has escaped from
Galveston, and may soon be heard of
burning our ships in Alabama style.
A movement is on foot among the
workingmen of Philadelphia providing
that no unnaturalized person shall, em
ployed among them in any capacity
•
whatever.
The National Treasury is i„ good
condition. Mr. Chase has tea millions
of dollars accumulated , all of which will
be paid to the army and navy in a few
The c elebrated horse Ethan Allen
has been purchased by Frank Baker, of
San Francisco, for $16,000.
A brother of Old Ossawatamie Brown
incapaciated for military service, has
been appointed third class clerk in the
Treasury Department.
A gentleman from Oregon thus
sums up existing evils in that state:—
"Indians, small pox, influenza, secesh,
drought, mumps, greenbacks and the
itch."
Mr. R. Ten Broock's Santhal won a
sweepstakes of 10 sovs. at the Epsom
Spring meeting, on Monday, April 20.
Princess Alexandria was married in a
lace dress which cost 48,0001 The same
night hundreds of poor girls were star
ving in London.
A few days since an Irish woman
found $5,000 in green backs in a paper
mill, in a little town in Berkshire co.,
Mass. The money was in an intact
sealed envelope. How did they get
there.
Andrea; Johnson is commissioned as
a Major-General of the Union army,
with authority to organize a foren of five
thousand Tenr,esseeans and ten thous
and negroes. Bob Johnson, son of An.
dy, has beian promoted to a Brigadier.
'The Marshal of the District of Col
umbia has seized the real and personal
estate of Capt. J. N. Maffit (comman-
der of a Rebel privateer,) under the
Confiscation Act. It is located in
Washington.
Five female prisoners arrived in Wash
ington on Wednesday, from Camp Chase
Ohio, add were sent to the Old Capitol
prison.' They are charged with having
assisted the prisoners in the Ohio State
prison in escariicg—furnishing them
with files, &c., done up in pies and oth
er edibles.
Some ingenious Yankee has invented
a Sind of water proof bank note paper,
warranted to wash without injuring the
note in the least. The process is by
putting a thin and perfectly transparent
coat of iudia rubber on the bill after its
printed, which covers and preserves the
ink as well as the paper.
Notwithstanding the war, and the pe
culiar position occupied by Memphis,
Tenn., there is a good deal of sport go
ing on- there. The race course near
Fort Pickering is in excellent condition,
and the races, which take place nearly
every day, are well patronized by sport
ing gentry, both civil and military.
On the night of April 30, and while
the army of the Potomac was en route
for Dixie, a prize fight came off on the
other side of the. Rappahannock, be
tween a soldier boy of the 14th, and one
of the 22d New York regiments, for $lO
a side. The result, owing no doubt to
the "suppression of news," has not
reached us.
"We lea& from an Eastern exchange
that ten thousand cows are required to
supply Boston with milk ;" so says the
Sunday Atlas, which also facetiouly re
marks : "The number of hydrants re
quired to furnish New York with the
same material does not seem to be
mentioned."
The President, the New York Timeg
Washington - correspondent states, has
received, from the headquarters of,the
Army of the Potomac, an orignal letter
written by Jeff Davis to a Rebel Colon
el, in which he speaks despondingly of
affairs in the Send west. and on the Rap
pahannock. The letter was found in a
Rebel camp at Fredericksburg.
A. Milwaukee (Wis.) paper states that
the wheat trade of that city, as reported
by the Chamber of Commerce, is great
er than that of Chicago. The total
wheat trade of Milwaukee for 1.862 was
no less than 17,834 926 bushels. This
amount would make it the greatest pri
mary wheat market in the world. Wis
consin wheat is of a very excellent qual
ity.
Two engravers and lithographers
have been arrested inlSheffield, England
for forging United States Treasury
notes. It is ascertained that large
amounts have been issued in five, tent
and twenty-dollar notes. We hope the
rascals will be brought to speedy pun
ishment. We are abundantly able to
print all the greenbacks needed without
assistance from Europqan fergers.
At Black Creek (Canada West) oil
region a sublime spectacle was lately
witnessed. The creek had got obstruc
ted, and the oil collecting on its surface
was set on fire, when immediately the
whole creek was in a flame, catching the
trees upon its banks and doing much
I damage. For rods, it is stated, the
creek appeared as a boiling cauldron
darting sheets of red flame high in the
it to an altitude of nearly fifty feet.
- 3 rb'aTHE
A STATE IN DEAD EARNEST.—The Leg.
Mature of Ohio has resolved "That "e
will have no desolation of tlf;; If Dien
that we will have no STlDisti" ; that we
as re bels and traitors.;
can fight as long
can ; that the war stall go on until law
is restored ;
and that we will never des
pair o f eta Republic." This resolution
I ,,,, ro duced by a War Democrat, and, was
adopted by a decided majority in, both
branches. It is explicit. It sets forth
a principle and purpose in style no man
can mistake. It has the sterling ring.
The country sees a' once there is noth
ing spurious in that loyaly. There are
no qualifications, no disclaimers, no pro
tests. It is whole-souled. It bespeaks a
State that is stead fast in its conviction
unfaltering in its devotion, indomitable
in its spirit. The resolution ; in this
crisis of the struggle, is a grand ,thing
for Ohio. It will hereafter be the proud
est of all her titles to honor: It ought
to stand in golden letters, on the front
of her noble capital, an imperishable
memento of her fidelity,
Imo' The Tycoon of Japan has sent a
present to President Lincoln, consis
ting of a ,coat of mail. An umbrella
like helmet, of fabricated sheets of
steel and copper, shields the head,
while a vandyke of interwoven silk cord
and lacquered net-work falls gracefully
upon the shoulders. The outside . of
the helmet -is profusely ornamented with
chrisanthemums _of gold, in beautiful
open-work, upon black lacquer, with
now and then a trimming of purest sil
ver. The visor is of copper, laquered
in scarlet and brown. The armlets are
of the finest copper chain work. The
breastplate is of copper intersected
with parallel stripes of lacquer, and
woven togethelr with delicate wire tind
golden cord. A sort of kit accompli ,
nies the armor, and with lacquered leg
gins grotesquely formed completes the
set.
car Two important decisions of a'mil.
itary and political character have been
made by the Supreme Court of Penn
sylyania. First, that a deserter from
the American army is a felon at com
mon le,w, and_if he ba shot by the guard
of a provost marshal while attempting
to escape, such shooting is justifitable.
Second, in the case of the seizure of the
Jeffersonian newspaper, on an elaborate
argument by Wm. B. Read against and
John C. Knox for the constitutionality,
of the indemnity bill of the 3d March
1863, it was decided by the -Ron. Wm.
Strong, of the Supreme Bench, that that
act was valid and constitutional.
CD - Southern accounts state that one
shell from the Montauk
. passed com
pletely through Fort Sumpter, through
both sides. Several very bad.breacbes
were made. The rebels say that if the
firing had been continued twenty-five
minutes longer the city would have sur
rendered. The firing from our gunboats
and iron clads was terrific. In the city
every preparation had been made for
evacuation. Negroes had been sent
out, moveables packed up, women and
children sent off, and everything made
ready for departure.
Gir Since Congress adjourned -on
the 4th: ofMarch, a 'period of thiee
months, the people of the United States
have loaned to the Government, throliiii.
"the five-twenties;" over forty millieds
of dollars. Such a mark of popilar
confidence in the stability of a -Govern
ment has never before been manifested
in the world's history.
Cr It is said that the. Government
makes money by coining mickel cents,
now that the demand is so great.—
These coins are really worth only thirty
five cents the hundred. There are now
three times as many in the hands of the
public as really is needed, and presently
speculators and borders will bring on a
crash.
cir Gen. Burnside has not only placed
the whole of the county in which the
home of Vallandigham is situated under
martial law, but the Dayton Eivire, the
copperhead organ in Dayton, has been
suspended, and the editor arrested.
A man named Jessie Harbor, of
Champaign county, Ohio, recently dead,
was the father of 31 children, the young
est of whom is about two years old. Ii
has managed to give .all who have ar
rived at maturity an outfit of 80 acres of
land.
0 - Never did au Irishman utter a
better bull than an honest John, who
being asked by a friend : "Has your
sister got a son or tk daughter !" He
answered : "Upon my life, I do not
know whether I am uncle or aunt !"
eir The latest method resorted to by
soldiers to smuggle whisky into camp is
filling the barrels of their rifles and put:
ting a cork in the muzzle. We should
call these "barrels of rifle whisky."
(Er "Why is a printer and a pretty
girl alike ?" "They both make impres
sion." "Now, what's the difference be
tween the impressions ?" "Why, one's
on paper, and one on the heart."
eir The little birds serve men faith
fully in a thousand ways, yet he kills
them fbrl*ting a a few cherries. Why
not-kill his human servant la - amuse he
has to feed them.
DROUGHT IN AUSTRALIA.—ACCOMItS
from Sydney, Australia, represent that
'a fearful drought has prevailed in Aus
tralia. In some localities there had
been no rain for fourteen months, and
the cattle had died by thousands. Ono
farmer lost five thousand to six thou
sand sheep and lambs ; another fifteen
thousand, and all who owned stock of
any kind suffered in like manner. No
one in the country remembers such a
season before. Wool could not be
brought into Sydney, as all the bullock
teams died on the road for want of pas
turage and water. In some parts of
the country nothing is seen for-miles
and miles bat the bodies and bleached
bones of sheep and bullocks.
or Surgeon-General Hammond has
determined to abolish the use of Calo
mel and Tarter emetic in the army, it
having proven impossible, in any other
manner, to properly restrict the age of
these powerful agents, and it is there=
fore directed that they be stricken from
the supply table, and that no further
requisions - for these mddicines be ap
proved by Medical Directors. In a cir
cular on this subject just issued froni
the Medical Department to Surgeons in
charge of hospitals and on duty in the
field, the Surgeon-General remarks :
"No doubt can 'exist that more harm
has resulted from the misuse of both
these agents in the treatment of disease
than benefit from their proper adminis
tration."
One of the steamers of the Ham.
burg and American steamship Company,
lately arrived, brought to the port of
New York over eighty large packages
of fine linen and lint, which had been
contributed by the friends of the Unfon
along the Rhine, for the benefit of our
sick and wounded - soldiers. Some of
the packages were of the size of hogs
heads, and all were made up of the best
material. The linen was especially fine
Every package bore this incription
"Renish Bavaria. For the Wounded
Defenders of the United States." These
packages were a free gift of the freedom
loving men and women of Rhine land.
and were brought over free by the Ham
burg and American line.
fer The draft will take i lace about
the first of July. The soldiers now re
turning home will have had six weeks
away from the army, and they will be
gin to be restless. By the middle of
July the War Department will offer a
bounty of $3OO to all who will re.en
list, using the fund which. has accumu
,latedfrom those drafted persons choos
ing to pay $3OO rather than to go into
the field. It is expected that nearly all
these returning soldiers will accept the
high bounty and return to the service.
Six weeks will undoubtedly be consumed
in the enrolling of all persons subject
to military duty.
er Charleston papers are very silent
about the injuries done to Fort Sumter
in the assault by the iron -clads, but a
correspondunt on board the Ironsides to
the Baltimore American says that as
soon as the fleet withdrew staging or
scaffoldiing was erected on the outside of
the fort, and for more than a month past
the rebels have been at work repairing
dkmages, and are still at work. There
are large holes in the walls very distinct
ly 'seen.
fir Regiments of nine-months and
two years men , are constantly pouring
through 'Washington to the North,
their time having expired. There is a
feeling of nervousness upon the subject
in Some quarters, but our military lead
ers are satisfied that if we are to lose
twenty or thirty thousand men from the
army at all, it is better to lose them
now.
ear It is rumored that the' case of
Vallandigham is not yet decided, that
Mr. Seward favors his release, and that
the President is undecided. The Union
men in Ohio demand that'if this man is
to be punished at nil, he should be sent
South to the rebels whose Cllll9B he has
so long defended.
air Flax should be sown. There - is - a
fair prospect that well cultivated. crops
of this staple will be remunerative, and
farmers should look to their interests in
this matter. No one need expect the
cotton will fall to its former prices for
some years to come, and hence the ne
cessity of cultivating flax.
lir Mr. C. W. Field- is again agita
ting the Atlantic Telegraph projpet in
New York city. A meeting was held—
resolutions adopted—a committee ap
pointed—but nothing of a practical
character accomplished so far as we
have learned.
or 4. new two-cent stamp has been
prepared for local or drop letters, baying
a portrait of General Jackson for the
design. Stamped envelopes of the same
rate, for circulars are to be provided.—
The new rate goes into effect in July.
Cr Bayard Taylor, Secretary of Le
gation under Mr. Cameron, has been re
moved, it is said, in consequence of
having allowed his name to be used
against Minister Cassius M. Clay, in the
Senate.
tUr The ancient English "yard" was a
measure of length, based upon the length
of the arm of King Henry I.
EMIGRATION OF BLACKS TO HONDURAS. MRS. DOUGLAS AND DER Fern.v.—A
—Mr. Hodge, of Honduras, has been in Washington correspondent ofthe Spring
conference with the Government for field Republican, alluding to the death
sometime, in regard to the emigration of James Madison Cutts, the father of
and colonization of the freed blacks to Mrs. Douglas, says:—"Mrs. Douglas is
that country. The President and some again in mourning. She was always a
of the members of the Cabinet who have favorite with her father, and the attach
favored the scheme of colonization, are i merit between them was unusually
understood to have changed their views, strong. She is now left alone with her
and are now favoring the idea of using children, to battle with life as best she
them in both the military and naval ser- can. The children relinquished their
vice, to aid in suppressing the rebellion. Memphis estate long ago by choosing
No action will, therefore, be taken at to remain here and espouse the cause of
present by the Government in this mat- their country. One of the boys is on
ter. Mr. Hodge returns without accom- Gen. Burnside's staff. If the Govern
plishing anything. ment succeeds in restoring the Union,
or in pritting down the rebellion, the
children will recover their southern es
tate, though doubtless in a ruined con
dition. R;ery few mouths the gossip
mongers have coined a new story con
cerning Mrs. Douglas. They have mar
ried her to several men, but most fre
quently to Mr. Chase. What makes
the matter worse is that there never was
the slightest foundationfor it. It must
have been started !ntentionally, for a
mischievous purpose. Mrs. Douglas has
busied herself for the last two years at
the hospitals. There is not a woman in
'the country who has been more active
in doing good than she, and hundreds of
wounded and sick soldiers will remem
ber her name with gratitude."
Cr The sister and niece of Jackson,
Col. Ellsworth in Alexandria,
were last Wednesday arrested it:George
town. They are charged with aiding
the rebels , by forwarding rebel mails,
and in other ways. They will probably
be sent South immediately. They were
admitted inside of 'our lines upon the
most pitiful appeals of utter destitution,
and willingly took the , oath of allegiance.
Sending them beyond the lines, there
fore, is too lenient a punishment.
sr A gentliiman at a ladies' fair,
lately, being solicited to buy something
by a fair creature who kept a table, said
he wanted to buy what was not foi sale
—a lock of hair. She promptly cut off
the coreted curl,'and received the sum
asked for it, $lO. The purchaser was
showing his trophy to a friend. "She
rather had you," said the friend ; "to
my certain knowledge she only paid $3
for the whole wig.""
• Increased immigration to- Mm
nesota is especially remarked by the
State. Many of the immigrants are
from Holland, and have gone to Min
nesota on the advice of their friends
here. They are hearty, and industrious
people, and will make first-class, set
tlers. They all have farming imple
ments, stock, household goods, and
money.
GT Gen. Burnside has issued an or.
der in which he recites the sentence
of the recent court martial which
tried Mr. Vallandigham. "That ho
be . placed in close confinement, during
the war, idSome fortress to be selected
by the commander of the4b3partment."
The Order names Fort Warren as the
place of confinement.
iggr The 3d New
_York Volunteers,
Col. Alford, at Fortress Monroe, still
continue their organizttion,aithough the
term of "enlist inent of more than half its
members has expired. It still has more
thaw WO men on duty, and the officers
deserve great credit for their energy in
reorganizing and recruiting the regiment
from its old members.
Cr A letter from Monticello;liren-
Lucky, speaking of the manner jail:deb
the people received our troops in their
recent advance on that place, says :-
-One old lady, a mile beyond this place,
said, as she saw our columns rushing on
after the rebels : 'When I seed that old
Hag comie, I just throwed my old bon
net on the ground and stomped It.'"
Cr The Granite State (N. H ) News
states that the oldest of three brothers
residing in Moultotiborough, married
quite a young girl; his next younger
brother married the girl's mother, and
the, youngest took for his wife the grand
mother. Cupid in our times seldom
brings about such a curious union of tno
families.
gar The Union League Committee
from Philadelphia invited the President
to visit Philadelphia on the 4th of July
next, when the Union Leagues are to
have a grand convention. The Presi
dent promised to attend unless some
thing unforseen occurs in the meantime
to prevent his leaving Washington.
'Er Over sixty thousand tons of ice
have been taken oat of the Kennebec,
Maine, during the season,, most of which
is to go to New Orleans and Havana.
Contractors have agreed to deliver
some twenty-five thousand tons at the
former city, at twenty-live dollars per
ton.
cr The Bangor (Me.). Times says:
there was a fall of snow there on the
7th instant, and the 'Providence Billie.
tin says the ground was white with frost
in the low lands of Cumberland, in
Rhode Island, on the morning of the Bth
instant.
The statement made at length by
asoldier corresp rnding with a Boston pa
per, that General Lee was cruel to his
slaves, is denied by a relative of that
commander, who affirms that while his
political sins are legion, his domestic
virtues are unimpeachable.
ca" The Richmond• Sentinel, of the
14th, says that measures are already in
itiated to obtain a bronze 'statue of the
late Gen. Jackson and place it on the
plateau in front of the south portico of
the Capitol.
tir Gen. T. I?. Meagher has resigned'
his commission. His letter ascribes his
action to the refusal of the Government
to allow the Irish Brigade to have a fur
lough for the purpose of recruiting their
thinned ranks.
ea" The writ of habeas corpus applied
for in the Valla - sdigham case has been
refused.
Cr The death of the late Major• Ge
neral Van Dorn, is fully confirmed. He
was shot by Dr. Peters, on the public
street ; for seducing his (Peters') wife.—
He was an ardent and early rebel, anti
though high iu office, he-was not a lucky
fighter. Stonewall Jackson died of his
wounds on the 10th. It is now clearly
ascertained that Jackson was shot in
the battle of Gbancellorville, on the 3.1,
by two of his own Jiislwounds
,- severe, were not necessarily
mortal ; but pneumonia supervened, and
closed his career, after a week of suffer
ing, at the age of 37 years. Thus, lien.
NlcOullock—Felix K. Zellicolier—Al
bert Sidney Johnston--Maxey Gregg—
and now Earl Van Dorn and Stonewall
Jackson—the master spirits of the
Great Rebellion, are patsing.
Cobb, Toombs, II =Piney
Marshall, and Other . Generals' of Me
batch, have resigned oz been quietly
shelved—even Joseph E. Johnston, who
was long Gonfalon ler-in-Chief, has ren
dered no service since he fell from his
horse shot through the body at Pair
Oaks, and is probably an invalid for
life. The Rebellion is devouring its
authors.
tEr The Prince de Joinville relates,
as an instance of the odd coolness of out
people, that during one of tho hottest
battles of the Chickahominy, newspaper
sellers went up and down the line, cry
ing out the latest news from New York,
and found purchasers for the journals
they had to sell.
cir We learn from San Francisce ra
pers that the Broderick monument is
finished, and ready for the statue. The
monument is thirty feet high. The
work is massive and thorough, and the
mat eriall of which it is - constructed is
California marble.
Cir On . Tuesday last five hundred and
seven persons took the oath of allegi
ancee in Nashville, a majority of whom
were. women. They were all paroled.
Cr By the end cie the present cam
paign, according to a Richmond news
papers, the Confederate debt will have
reached a thousand million of dollars.
Brigham Yoarkg and his wives just fill
five rows of seats in the theatre at Salt
Lake City. ,
DR. WM. B. FAIINESTODK,
OFFICE:—MAIN-ST., NEARLY OPPOSITE
Spangler & Patterson's Store.
Foam 7 TO S a. Dt. - . -
OFFICE HOURS. ~ ITO 2.
' 2 6T07 P. as.
DR. J. Z. HOFFER,
DENTIST;
OF THE BA LTIDIbRE COLLEG
else sa.: OF DENTAL SURGERY, E.
LATE QF
F F I CE::—Front street, next door to R.
Ur Williams' Drug Store, between Locust
and Walnut streets, Columbia.
T. C. MINKS-TOW
la aaa
RESPECTFULLY offers his professional
services to the citizens of Marietta and
vicinity, assuring them that all operations in
trusted to his care, either in Operative or Me
chanicapentistry, will be executed in a tho
roughly .scientific manner.
OFFICE : On Main street, a few doors west
of the Post Office. [v9-35-iy.
Ready-Made Clothing.
3. R. DIPPENBACEI having laid in a very
serviceable stock of strong and well-made
WINTER CLOTHING,
such as Coats, Pants and Yeats, which will be
sold at a lower figure that:l4cm be bought any
where else. Come and hear the prices.
pIiOTOGRAPH •
ALBUMS! !
A fine assortment of. Photograph
ALBUMS,
ranging in price from 75 cents to Five Dollars.
For sale at DELLINGILR'S Photo; mph Gal
ery, Market street, Marietta.
ATANILLA DEANS We have just re-
V ceived a very superior lot of VANILLA
BEANS, new crop just Imported, which we
offer far sale at a fair price.
WOLFE, MARKET-ST.
SOLDIERS! BOUNTY,
BACK PAY, & PENSIONS,
Collected promptly. Discharged wounded sol
diers are now entitled to bounty.
.oretca at Shaffner's Hotel, Mountjoy, Pa.
.G. R. HENDRICKSON.
Mountjoy, May 2,1363-3 m.