lite J'o atitttiatt. P. L. Baker, Editor, MARIETTA. PA : 8421M,DAY, DECEIIIIIOI 5, 1863. TArtlE, PR:AMORAL • CURRENCY .1-- Tlll6 teßAnt that the new fractional currency is to be withdrawn, is incor rect.*Arg,tha.contrary, the issue which blyklideady.begun will continue.as fast asAltno,tes . can be prepared. Some of the objections which have been made to it, are unfounded ; and although it InVeybe admitted that it is not hand souse, it,ie believed it offers special security against counterfeiting, particu larly •bylhe dangerous processes of pho tography. The bronzed ring or seal on the face. of the fractional notes, which has,hceu criticised as an unsuccessful at4ll4o,at ornament, is put on with no vier to. that design, but solely to pre voa counterfeiting by photography. It is,the mark of a yellow mordant which bi l teit into the .very substance of the note, afterwards bronzed, but always yejlow, , and -which, like all yellows, met' inevitably appear as black in a pliplOgraph. • The same effect will be produced even of the bronze is worn, off, when the yollow beais of the ring will appear.— The detiomihation of each Dote is print e4 ritli a similar mordant, in outline leftere, furnishing an additional protec tienMeinst-counterfeiting. The faces ol'Allthe notes are printed in black, and the backs in different colors, according to E gie ,denomination. The, fifty cent pieces. t have red back, the twenty-fives purple, the tens green and the fives tan color. The paper is of a peculiar man uhiobire, remarkably heavy, and it is belierved.that it will be readily distin gnisbedfrom other paper by the touch. Or The Governer has appointed Hen.. Lltwrence L. McGriffin, of Law rence county, President Judge of the Seventeenth Judicial District, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the election of Judge Agnew to the Supreme Bench.— The agent of the State in the Depart ment of the Southwest having bean com pelled to return borne in consequence of health, the Governor has despatched Won. *M. M. Francis, of Lawrence county, to Chattanooga, to look after this sick and , wounded Pennsylvanians. Be will.be followed on Monday by Sur geon General King. Agents of the State, will , also shortly be sent to Mor ris Island, Key. West end North Caro lina, Le lock after the welfare of Penn sylvania troops on the southern coast. ier A Chattanooga correspondent, writing on the Brd, says : "A rebel de eerier came in yesterday, and reports that our dead are still unburied on the battle-field of Chickamauga. He was one of those appointed to gather up the anal,' balls, clothes, and other debris of the fight, bat was compelled to abandon the work on account of the unbearable stench arising from the decomposing bndies of our fallen brothers and sons. Ni saw several lying where the wagon Wetly passed over them. .plir Miss E. M. Goldsborough, Miss Nannie, Miss Virginia and Miss Julia Letuaa,pf Baltimore, were arrested on Saturday, in that city, by the military authorities, charged with being disloyal, and sent to Fortress Monroe, whence they will be taken inside of the rebel libes, not to return North during' the war, no pain of being tried as rebel spies. rA few days since, a lot of negroes collected at the Richmond gas-works fo g raligious purposes. They were cap tured Pith° police, who took forty-three into.custody, and after a hearing before. Judge ,Obandler, each man received ten This item may be commended to the aCtention of Bishop Hopkins, the aprolOgisi of slavery. ['The new fractional notes have upon the , face a faint oval ring of bronze encircling the vignette. Upon being asked its use, Mr. Chase said : "It was a feint attempt on the part of Mr. Clark to give the new currency a metallic' ' ' • oir Mrs. Jane hi. Tierce, wife of ex- Preitdent. Pierce, died in 4ndover, Mass.', on Wendeeday last. She had Win in very feeble health for several years.' .isrpour bears were killed last week, iti)Bleir.county. They were discovered taking`a walk along the turnpike, in the via*, of a dwelling house. It . is . . &Dirtied that no lees than Eve attempts at negro ineutrietion have bowman in Georgia since the month ofjulplaati , it st ated that, the venerable fathou'of General Grant is the owner ocleveml thonaan&acrea of land,. e General Banks has taken Browns vine, Corpna.Chriettand Brazos Inland, 'resat/. The work goes-braTely on, PROFITABLE INVESTMENTB.—The Phila. delphia North American gives some ex cellent advice to those who wish to in vest money. It is well for all who are in funds to heed the counsel :—"Though money has been temporarily scarce, capital continues abundant ; and the recent tumble in the stock market has brought capitalists to a realizing sense of the unreliable character of many of the securities dealt in. It is greatly to the credit of the Government that its loans, of all the securities daily dealt in on the market, have maintained their integrity of price better than almost anything else. Its Five-Twenty year six per cent, loan, the interest on which is promptly paid in gold, has been sub scribed to, all through the pressure in the money market, at an average of more than two millions per day. And what is not the least gratifying fact in con nection with the daily large subscrip tions to this popular loan, scarcely any of it is returned to the market for sale. It is taken for investment, and is held with unfaltering confidence in its relia bility. And why should it not be ? It is seen that the Government now, after two years of the most gigantic war that the world has ever known, experiences no difficulty in commanding the neces sary means to prosecute it, or in paying regularly the interest in- gold as it falls due. If this can be done while the war is being waged, who can anticipate any difficulty in readily accomplishing it when the war shall be ended ? What better investment then, for capital, than the "Five-Twenty" Government loan But if any doubt, let him refer to the statistics furnished by the census tables of the various nations of the world. The facts which they present will prove the most satisfactory mode of dispelling the numberless gloomy apprehensions which are being continually conjured up by those who are disposed to exaggerate the extent of the calamity occasioned by our rebellion. A reference to the state of most of the prosperous nations of the old world clearly disproves such a position, and shows that the highest conditions of national advancement have not been materially affected by the ex tended wars in which those nations have been immemorially engaged, and that a heavy national indebtedness has not proved an unmitigated evil. "For instance, Great Britain, France and the Netherlands will undoubtedly be conceded to represent the highest prosperity that has been attained by any of the European nations. And yet no nations have been called upon to en dure fiercer or more prolonged wars, domestic and foreign, than they. The effect has been, unquestionably, to incur an enormous national indebtedness ; but neither their wars nor their indebted ness have had the effect to destroy their elasticity, nor to check the progress of their general prosperity. The result would have been different, probably, if these nations had been falling into de cay, instead of being, as they really were, in a state of development ; and in this respect their case resembles our own, with enormous advantages in our favor. These nations, while undergoing the trials of war, were oppressed by the evils of an immense exodus of their peo ple, caused by the density of their pop ulation, the impossibility to provide oc cupation for them, the low price of la bor, and the scarcity of territory. Com pared with our own country, they pos sessed slight room for future develop ment ; they were settled in every part, and no vast territory lay invitingly open to encourage enterprise and settlement. Their great problem has ever been what to do with their surplus population, which , in its turn, has sought new fields for adventure and self-support in coun tries like our own, where an illimitable territory waits to be developed, and where incalculable resources invite in dustry and energy. The encouragement to be derived from these facts and com-' parisons of circumstances is very great, and to the mind of any dispassionate reasoner is conclusive that the course of this great country is onward and up ward, and that its credit will live unim paired to the end." spir The tobacco crop of 1863 is larger than that of last year by nearly fifty mil lions of pounds, although the frost in the Western States was very injurious to it. But one-half of the crop there had been gathered before the frost of October 18th, and seventy-five per cent. more ground had been planted thus in 1862. C's A police officer of Louisville ar rested two of Morgan's captains, R. Sheldon and R. B. Taylor,' who escaped with him from Columbus. They were found about six miles east of Louisville and were placed in the county jail,— Meilen himself is not in Canada as re ported. or The Muscatine (Iowa) Journal says : "Cedar, river is said to be literal. ly, swarming with wild geese. Corn fields are devastated, and, people living in the bottoms declare that it is almost impossible to sleep, so annoying is their wild and discordant music." Resolutions have been 'proposed in thilliissouri Legislature to instruct Senators and ROpresentatives to vote for - an amendment to the Constitution forever prohibiting slavery in the Uni ted State's. A 1.4 General News Items. Brigadier Generalßobert Anderson, the hero of Sumter, has been placed up. on the retiring list by the President- of the United States, upon the recommen— dation of the Retiring Board. The re tirement of Gen. Anderson is under stood to be in entire concurrence with his wishes, as the health of the great soldier has long been such as to neces sitate his seeking a condition of perma nent repose. The Washington Star announces that the difficulty about the exchange of prisoners grows almost wholly out of the refusal, on the part of the rebels, to exchange the negro soldiers and their officers, or to say whether they are still alive or have been murdered. A tub of pickled feet (of Chinese la dies) has been received at the Huuterian Museum, London. They show the ef fects of the Chinese system of compres. sion—in one case the outer toes are ac tually doubled under the sole, making the foot only four and a, half inches long, and other strange deformities are seen in all the specimens. It is stated by manufacturers of arti ficial wooden limbs, that they make eight left legs for soldiers to two r ght, and about the same proportion of right arms to left ones, showing that about four times as many lose their left legs as right, and four right arms to one left. Mrs. Agnes B. Allen, widely celebra ted as the relative of Ethan Allen, of revolutionary fame, and the possessor of the sword of the old hero— that sword with which the British commandant at Ticonderaga was menaced and com pelled to surrender, "in the name of the Great Jehovah and the Continental Congress"—died suddenly at Lamont, Michigan, on Tuesday of last week. The richest individual in England is the Marquis of Westminister, whose daily income is estimated at $5,000. The Rothschilds, four of them, are the tidiest house in Europe, and their in come is estimated at nine millions a year, or a thousand dollars an hour. National Banks on Secretary Chase's plan, are starting all over the country. They are based on U. S. Stocks, so that if the banks break, the holders of notes are not swindled. The Copperheads are down on them, and pronounce them un-con-sti•tu-tion-al, but the masses of the people will sustain them neverthe less. There are 2,800 men employed at the Springfield Arsenal, who complete 900 muskets daily. There are in the Arsen al 133,000 pieces stored, of which 40,000 are kept boxed ready to be sent away. The rebels say they have almost no thing wherewith to feed the Union prisoners at. Richmond, yet the Common Council of that city have just voted $60,000 to buy a house for Gen. Lee. An old lady named Mrs. Miller, aged between eighty and ninety years, died last week, in Pottsgrove township, Montgomery county, in whose bed was found, carefully sewed up, one hundred dollars in gold, and a considerable quan tity of silver. Mrs. Dow, widow of the famous Lo renzo, died a few days ago at Montville, Conn., leaving this singular will: "She leaves the whole of her estate ($6 000) to the town of Montville, 'for the pur pose of building fmkr stone arch bridges in specified places in the town." The town, in public meeting, has refused to accept the gift, and the amount goes to her heirs-at-law. On Wednesday night, the 18th ult., an old gentleman named Ira Gay, in re turning home through the streets of Keene, N. H., stumbled head downward into a post hole, dug by the side of the street where premises were undergoing repairs. Unable to extricate himself, he was not discoveied until daylight, when he was quite dead. A pure white deer was recently shot lc Minnesota. his a pure white, with pink eyes and hoofs, and has not a spot of any, other color on its hide. It weighs seventy-five pounds, sod is about a year old. Whisky in Richmond is a dollar and fifty cents a drink. A man is as proud of being drunk there as ever - an old fel low was of having the gout. A coal operator in Carbon has sold his lease on some lands there, with the machinery thereon, for seven hundred thousand dollars. A few years ago the same operator was bankrupt. A $3OOO sword, designed for General Hooker, is on exhibition in New York. It is the gift of his California friends, and ie resplendent with gold and jew els. Private advisee' from New Orleans sate that, rip to Nov. 15, half a million dollars kod been subscribed toward the capital of a National bank. In 1862, 30,000 pounds of opium were imported into this country. Qpium eating is fearfully on the increase. It is said that the new and mean post al not to be recalled, but that issues are daily, going on. MajOr Gen Oral Schenck' has resignqd in the army, to take a seat in Congress. IDENTITY ASCERTAINED :—The identity of the dead soldier who was found on the bloody field of Gettysburg, with the picture of his three pretty little children tightly clasped in his hands, has been ascertained vritbin a day or two. The wide publicity given to the touching circumstance through the mediam of the press produced the desired result. The name of the deceased was Hummerton, and his widow and three children reside at Portville, Catteragna county, New York. Large numbers of photographic copies of the picture upon which the dying eyes of the warrior-father closed, have been sold, and the profits realized from their sale will be appropriated to the benefit of the children. It is hoped that a sufficient sum may be realized in this way and by future sales to aid ma terially in the education of the little ones who were made orphans at Gettys burg. NEW DEPOT :—The freight depot for the Pennsylvania. Railroad Company, which is being erected at Sixteenth and Market streets, Philadelphia, will be one of the largest of the kind in the country. It will have a front on. Mar ket street of 214 feet, and a depth on Sixteenth street of 306 feet, extending to Filbert street. The Market street front will be ornamented with iron col umns, and the structure will be of the most substantial character. Six tracks will enter the, depot from Market street, two single and two double ones. The cellars will be used for the storage of of goods. The work is now progress ing, and will be finished, if the weather will admit of it, in a few months. FATAL SPORT :—EaTlyin last Septem ber a party of six men, with whom Mi chael Donaven was drinking, in Balti more, secretly poured some Croton oil in a bottle of porter, which Donaven drank. From that time the man suffered severely from the effects of the oil, and died on Saturday. All the men con cerned in drugging the porter were ar rested on Tuesday, and committed to await the action of the Grand Jury. In "playing a trick" on a companion, they have caused his death, and exposed themselves to a trial for homicide.— Such fun the law will probably punish as crime. The St. Paul Press says : "Eigh_ teen boxes containing specimens of animals, collected by some naturalist in the Red River country, passed through the city yesterday,• directed to the Smithsonian Institute. In the same lot was a moose.head and horns, weighing 56 pounds, a most elegant specimen . ; also a buffalo head, weight, 35 pounds ; two elk (or red deer) heads and antlers, weight, 38 pounds. They were directed to the 'King of Italy,' and sent to him thro' the American &press Company." er The United States authorities seem to be determined to put an end to the frauds committed upon the soldiers. They have just had a coffee contractor tried for delivering an article inferior to his contract, and, sent him, after sen tence, to, the Albany Penitentiary for five years. The Shoddyites had better take the hint, and be satisfied. with hon est gains. A-few lessons like this may tend to convince them that ,honeity is the best policy. ' illirGen. Leslie Coombs, of Kentucky, having insinuated in a recent communi cation to the Louisville Journal, that "General Carl Shurz, and his 'gang of freedom-shriekers,' fled at Chancellors villa." Gen. Shurz, in a letter to the same pap.er says that. Gen. Coombs lies, and challenges him to a contest of per sonal bravery ou the next battle-field against the Rebels. This would be much better than a hand-to-hand conflict between the two belligerents. er Dick Busteek, of New York, l wbo has been appointed to succeed Judge Lane as Judge of the Alabama District, has led an eventful life. Be was origin ally ['journeyman printer, then studied law, then became corporation counsel, then a Brigadier-General, and now as sumes the ermine. Those who know Mr. Busteed best say that a very godd compositor was lost: when he left the Case. Er The, Russian Admiral and his fleet have gone to Fortress Monroe to , put into winter quarters. The Admiral declined the nee of the Brooklyn Navy Yard, oi the ground that the anchorage at Monroe will be safer and , better, and he will be able to keep his officers on shipboard, which is now impossible. The Cecil Democrat 'says that several farmers in Queen Amie county, Maryland, having lost their slaves, have sent to Germany for a ship load of emi grants. The number of free'negrods in Chi neighborhood is•too small to make good the loss in slaves. sir The resignation of Chief. Justice Taney and Secretary Chase are stated , by a Copperhead newspaper to be in the , hands of the President, the present Secretary of the Treasury to become Chief Justice , after the assemblage. of Congress. eir A. speech' delivered by Robert Toombs before the Georgia Legislature stacks the rebel Administration' in its ruinous currency system, and its tyran• nous impressnients. fir A telegram announces the arrival of the escaped Gen. Morgan in Toronto, Canada. The circumstances of his es cape, by cutting:and digging under the prison, have the usual character of ad venture which belongs tothis•somewhat romantic outlaw. A letter. left by the brickmason of Morgan's fugitive party, states that it took sixteen days, with a couple of small knives, and three hours' work per day, for the band to effect their escape. Friends & Relatives of the Soldiers & Sailors. TT OLLOWAY'S PILLS AND OINT MENT.—AII who have Friends and Relatives in the Army or Navy, should take special care, that they be amply supplied 'with these Fills and Ointment; and where the brave Soldieraand-Sailors have neglected to provide themselves with them, no better pres ent can be sent them bytheir friends. 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 admirable medicines, and by paying proper attention to the Directions which are attached to each Pot or Box. Sick Headache and want, of Appetite Incident 'to Soldiers ! Those feelings which so sadden us, usually arise from trouble or annoyances, obstructed prespiration, or eating and drinking whatever is unwhOlesome; thus disturbing the healthful action of the liver and stomach. These organs must be relieyed, if you desire to do ,well.— The Pills, taking according to the p*Mted instructions, will. uickly produce a healthy ac tion in both liver and stomach, and as a natu ral consequence a clear head and good appeiite. Weakness and debility induced by over Faligue, Will soon disappear by the, use of these in. valuable Pills, and the Soldier will quickly acquire additional strength. 'Never let the bowels be either confined or unduly acted upon.'" It intiY - seetit 'Strange that Holloway's Pills should be' recommended for Dysentery and Flux, many persons supposing' that they would increase the relaxation. This 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_ matter of course. Nothing will stop, the relakation of the Bowels so sure as this famous : medicine. VOLUNTEERS ATTENTION I 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 as stated in the printed nstructions. If treated in any other manner they dry up in one part to break out in another. Whereas 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 us Holloway's Pills and Ointment.— The pour wounded and almost dying sufferer might have his wounds dressed immediately, if be would only provide himself with this matchless Ointment, which should be thrust into the wound and smeared all around it, then cover it with apiece of linen from his Knap sack and compressed with a handkerchief.— Taking night and morning 6 or 8 Pills, to cool the system and prevent inflamation. Every Soldier's Knapsack and Seaman's Chest should,be.provided with these invalua ble Remedies. IMITTLTA NT CAUTION !—None are genuine unless the words 4, HOLLOWAY, NEW Tom: and Loanorr," are discernible as a Watet 7aark in every.leaf oi the book of directions, around each pot or box.; the same May be plainly seen by holding the leaf to the light.— A handsome reward will 'be given to any one rendering such information as may lead to the detection of any .party or parties counterfeiting the medicines or vending the same, knowing them to be Spurious: •.•Sold at the Manufactory of Professor HOLLOWAY, SO Maiden Lane, New York, and by all respectable Druggists and Dealers in Medicine throughout the civilized world, in pots, at 25c. 62c. and $1 each., N.B.—Directions for the guidance of patients in every disorder are adixed to each pot. irk. There is considerable saving by taking he larger sizes. pec,2G-ly 113-71Jealers in my well known medicines can have SHOW CARDS, CIRCOLARS, ST.C., gent them, FREE OF EXPENSE, by addressing 'roomAsLowair, 80 . ,Maiden Lane, New7York. 31latelm, eloefis btu H. L.-8t E. J. ZAI-114 ESPEC3 FULLY inform then SII friends and the public that they , still continue the WATCH, CLOCK ti WELR F business at the old stand, North-Weid Corner of North Queen street and Center Square, Lancaster, Pa. A full assortment of goods in our line of busi ness always en hand andlor sale at the lowest cash rates. 1L Repairing attended to per sonally by the proprietors. ' Lancaster, January 1; - 1859. • The American -Watches. Fr HE American Watches are among the best J timekeepers now in' use; and for durability strength and simplicity far surpass any other watch made in the world. , , H. L.A. E. J. Z A Corner of North. Queen-st., and Centre Square Lancaster, Pa., have them for sale at the verb lowest rates—every watch 'accompanied with the manufacturers guarrantee to ensure its gen uineness. T. 'C. FAIINESTOCK, 11 . 41- ak. • RAGE•OII RESPECTFULLY offers his professional services to the citizens of Marietta and vicinity, assuring theca that all operations in trusted to his care, either in Operative or Me chanical Dentistry, will be executed rn s tho roughly scientifc• manner. • • • OFFICE : On Main street, afew doors west of tke Post Office., [ro9-35-Iy. FXECUTOR'S NOTlCE.—Estate of Maria Rigler a late•of the Borough of Marietta, deceased. Letters of administration on said estate having been granted to the undersigned, all, personsm,debted thereto are requested to immediate settlement, and thosehaving claims or demands Uplink the same will pmsent them without delay for settlement to the undersign ed, residing in said. Borough. • GEO.- W. - STAHL, Executor. , Marietta, October 10, 1863-6t] DR. J..Z. HOFFER, DENTIST, ;OF THE' BALTIMORE COLLEGE i seatisas OF DENTAL SURGERY, LATE OF HARRISBURG. OFFICE:—Front street, next door to R. Williams' Drug Store, between'Locust sad Walnut streets, Columbia. Hammer , ed and . Rolled Iron. 1 GeMend , assortment of ' Hammered. and 4 Rolled Iron, 11. S. Bars, Norway,' Nail ode American and Geeman Spring and ' Cast ''Steel, Wagon. Boxes, Iron ' Axles, Springs for Smiths, &e. For sale at .PATTERSPN . er CO'S. Beady-Made Clothing: J. R. DlFREN.BACELhavingiaid in,a very serviceable stock of strong and well-made WINTER, CLOTHING, ' such as Coats, Pants and Vests, which will be sold at a •Ipw.er figure than can be bought ' , •any. where else. Come and bear the prices. $lOO Revcra.rd. FOR A MEDICINE That will cure Coughs, tickling in the Throat, influenza, Whooping Cough, Or relieve Consumptive Cough, AS QUICK AS NES 00110 B'AMMT. OVER FIVE THOUSAND BOTTLES Have been sold in its native town, and not single instance of its failure is known. We have, in our possession, ;any quantity of certificates, some of them from eminent phys icians, who have used it in their practice, and given it the pre-eminence over any other com pound. It does not dry up a Cough, but loosens it, so as to enable the patient TO EXPECTORATE FREELY. Two or three (lobes will invariably cure tickling in the _throat. A Half Bottle has often completely cured the ROST STUBBORN COUGNA - • and yet, though it is so sure and speedy in its operation, it is perfectly harmless, being,pure ly vegetable. It is very agreeable to the taste and may be administered to children of any age. In cases of Croup we will guarantee a , cure, if taken in season. n;" No Faxii.v should be without st. It is within the reach of all, the : PRICE PRICE BitING ONLY 25 CENTS. And if an investment and a thorough trial does not 'back up , ' the above statement, the , money will be refunded. We say this *novo ins its merits and feeling confident that:one. trial will secure for it a home in every house hold. It:3 — Do not waste away with coughing, when so smalt - an investment will cure you. 3t may be had of any respectable druggist, who will furnish'yon with a circular of genuine certificates of cures it has made. C. G. CLARK, Propiiiteirit, Sept. 24-6 m) New-Haven, et. Fars cp P'u.rs ALL KINDS OF FANCY- FUR.Sk For Ladies and Children's IVear. I wish to return my thanks to my friends nl 4 - Lancaster and surrounding counties, for their very liberal patronage extended to the timing the last few years, and would say to them that 1 now have in store; of my own importation and manufacture a very extensive assortment. of ,all the diflcrent kinds and qualities of fancy furs for ladies and children, that willibe worn" during the Fall and Winter seasons. Being the dtrect importer of all My FURS. from Europe, and having them all manufactu red under my own supervision--enalties me to. offer my customers and the public a much HANDSOMER SET OF FURS' for the same money. Ladies please give me at call before purchasing! Please remeinber the name,. number and street. JOHN FAREIRA, 718 ArtcH-sT , Sept. 17-.sins.] PH ILA DELPHVi • NEW AND 1.- 4 1,P O A . Xeneg Sucrtsoor to Zr. ,franklin lttiuklt PR. LANDIS hiving purchased the entire' Interest and good will of Dr. F. Hinkle's g Store; would take tl is opportunity to in form the citizens of Marietta and the public. generally, that having just received - from Phil adelphia a large addition to the old stock, he: will spare no pains to kee • coustantly,on hatidt the best and most complete assortment of eve rything in the drug line. .. , Hof of Neil effia Toilet 'Articles, consisting inililtrt of Gerimtn, French and Eng.. lish perfnmery, Shaving Spans and Creams,' Tooth and Nail Brushes, ihifialo and other Flair combs, Hair Oils, Pomades,etc. Port Monies, Pocket Books, Puff nu and Powder Bos es, 6-c., §-c The celebrated Batchelor's HAIR' DYE,. DeCoata's and other Tooth Washes, India Cols - gogue, Tricoperous, for the hair, Bay Rum, Arnold's Ink, large and small sized hot ties, Balm of a Thousan.l Flowers, Flour 01 Rice, Ctirn Starch, Heckel's Parini, all kinds of pure Ground Spices, Compound Syrup of Phosphate, or Chemical food, an excellent ar ticle for eronic dyspepsia and a tonic in Con- somptive cases, Rennet, for coagulating milk, an excellent preperation for the table ;, Table Oil—very fine—bottles in two sizes. Pare Coil';. Liver Oil. All of Heel's Perfumery,potnades soups, &c. His Kathairon or Hair Reatorativa is now everywhere acknowledged the best. A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF BOOKS AND STATIONARY: Sheet, Music always on hand, and prow/red by, weekly orders from the city. Havidg secured the services of Mr. Harrison Roth, formerly of the firm of Grove & Roth, ` l, . .he feels confident that he can accommodate as well as please his numerous patrons and friends. Old Port, Sherry and Madeira Wines and Brandies for medical purposes. The Doctor can be professionally consulted at the store when not enoged elmewnere. Remember the place, opposite the Post Office, formerly Doctor Hinkle's. vzig i SUPPLER & BRO., IRON AND BRASS le 0 "CINDERS r And General. Machinists, Second streee' Below Union, Columbia, Pa. They are prepared to make all kinds of Iron Castings for Rolling Mills and Blast Families, Pipes, for Steam, Water and Gas ; Coltimns, Fronts, Cellar Doors, Weights, &c., foe Buil ding% and castings of every description ; STEAM ENGINES, AND BOILERS 5 IN THE MOST MODERN AND UNPROVED Manner; Pumps, Brick Presses, Malting and Pulleys, Mill Gearing, Taps, Dies, Machinery for Mining and Tanning ; Brass Bearings, Steam & Blast Gauges, Lubricators, Oil Cocks,. valves for Steani, Gas, and Water; , Brass Fit tings in all their variety; Boilers, Tanks, Flues, Resters, Stacks, Bolts, Nuts, Vault ; Doors, Washers, &c. i. BLACKSARTHING in GEN.ERIL From longexperience in building machin i try we flatter ourselves that we can give general satis faction to those who may favor us with their orders. IE3 - Repairing promptly attendid to. Orders by mail addressed as above, will meet with prompt attention. Prices to suit the times. ' Z. SUPPLER, T. R. SUPPLER% Columbia;Oetober 20. 1880 . 14`tf rLATED WARE A Large and tme stock of Plated ware at H. L. & E. J. Unit's. mere/ North Queen street & Center Square Lancaster, Pa. Tea Betts, hi variety, Coffee Urns. Piteheis, Goblets, Salt Stands; Cake Baskets,Card Baskets, Spoons, Forks, Enivei,,. Casters&c.,&c.i at manufacturers prices. &E. J. ZAHM'S. A ...- Cot. North Queen st. and Centre SquaWlir i p4 caster, ' Our c priceit are moderate and' alr goods warranted to be as representell.' RarLarma attended to v $ odenite rates. Q T.• CROIX A ND a'.IYGLANDRUM for Culinary Turp*Bovarranted genuine D. Benjamin, FANCY FURif JOON FAR} 11,4 718 A itui-sti below Eighth, sotith 'side, PHILADELPHIA. 13IPORTER, Manyfigturer AND DEALER 1e