he'#atiettian. 4 10 F. L. Faker, Editor. MARIETTA. PA : SATURDAY, JANUARY 30, 1864. isay - Messrs. Hicks and Swann mem bers of the Maryland legislature, spoke before that body on Friday last, as fol lows : "Senator Hicks spoke very briefly, but found opportunity to declare him self in favor of prompt action by the State in reference to emancipation.— There is, he declares, no practical bene fit in temporising over a subject which bas already been disposed of virtually by current events. "Mr. Swann was more distinct and emphatic -in his declaration. , de; clared jrnmediate emancipation the only remedy ; avowed the intention of him bell' and friends to push the steed of emancipation with whip and spur until every valley and every hill-top shall fee) the tramp of his glorious mission, and' the whole State of Maryland, from its centre to its circumference, shall be awakened to an edict of universal eman cipation." These are good words, and if they,be well supported by acts; as r. Swann said, "we are truly a united party." tom' In the Mouse of Representatives a few days ago, Mr. Stevens, in reply to a fishy border State man, on a question affecting the statue of those • States striving to destroy the Union; made this strong point : a State, as a State, make war, and bedome a belligerent Power, we can, when we conquer it, treat it as we would any other foreign nation, and this is not a question under but outside of the Con .stitAtion. Y By the laws of war the con 'queror may seize and convert to his own use everything belonging to the enemy, and sell it to pay the expenses of the war and the damages occasioned by it. Aixtbe confederate States have volunta rily thrown themselves out of the pro visions of the Constitution, and placed themselves under the law of nations, it is our duty to knack off every shackle five every limb. The cry for ''The- Union as it was and the Constitution as it is' was but an attempt to perpetuate slavery. May the God of Justice para lyze all such efforts l" r The Supreme Court of this State, has reversed its decision on the consti tutionality of the Conscription Act nude when Lowrie, Woodward' and Thompson were the majority on the Bench, and now af6rms its constitution ality. This decision is owing to the displacement of Lowrie by Judge Ag new by the people at the last election. 'The Court now stands politically, two Republicans, one Democrat, and two Copperheads, The great sticklers for the constitutionality of everything cal culated to save the country will be thrown somewhat aback by this, deci_ 12M3 ar.Eion.,Eli Slifer, Secretary of the Commonwealth, and Hon. William M. Meredith, -Attorney General, tendered their resignations to Gov. Curtin, last week, to relieve him of all embarrass ment in selection of a Cabinet for his new administration. Governor Curtin promptly declined. to receive them, and they will continue iu their respective positions. So says the Chambersburg Repository. ear Charlotte Berea, aged one hun dred and twenty-five, died last week at Bellevue, Wisconsin. She was born near Green Bay, had gone thrtiugh many'of the early Indian *wars, and in one desperate straggle - had both or her ears'Ont off. Her life was - it varied and ct►Bckered one, and her history, irtruth fully wrttkeu out, would be replete with the most thrilling interest. ' *lt is said that Major White, the State - Senator - frem the Indiana - and A Hutton district, in the Babel prison at Richmond;being . t : einaeci an exchange, has resigned his. stiat;'an'tt that a new `4le - titian OM be bele as soon as it is pthfsible to abcomplish it—tAventy days' notice being' 'necessary': :Meantime legislation will be impossible: electio . n tonic Glace-on Friday Fin those portions of the old State of "'Virginia which are ander the control of loyal citizens. The - election was for ifilltigatos to ilte convention called to .reviise-•the Constitution of the , State. or Mr. Wells- ()overly, tor a long tirrt4 the popular prnprietorof the Jones Be ! ona Fl itrisbn rg; , died= in that place on flanday 'lnorninelast, aged' 46 years. igrCbai;lea A. Dana, of New York, baabgUP nominated for Second .A.asist , anetecretary of War. f lo! •' The Leictiftbre Aid not elect a Ste' te Tileisurer oti`' t fiti* ; l9iii, nu action being taken in theintAter. sr Counterfoit $2O Tteaeu ry Notes are in circulation in N. 1:*. city. General News Items. Gen. Joe Lane, U. S. Senator from Oregon up to the time of the rebellion, and candidate for Vice Ptesidency with Breekinridge, in 1860, was, at the last accounts, in British Columbia, engaged in the cattle business. Louis Bible died week before last in Tippecanoe county, Indiana, at the age of one hundred and seven years. He was born in Virginia in 1758, and has eons over seventy years of age. • Mrs. Ellen Gallagher died in Os wego, on the 12th inst.,•at the age of one hundred and one years. Intelligence is said to. have bean re ceived at Washington to, the effect that the Republican Legislatures of Maine, Illinois and Indiana, on-the 22d instant, added , their •voice to the many which have preceded them, by nominating Mr, Lincoln' , for reelection. The Comptroller of the Treasury an. nouncesthat the First National Bank of Harrisburg has been organized and is ready to, commence the buoiness of banking under the act of Congress. Most of the Continental postage stamps which were formerly illustrated with the likenesses of the rulers, have now the arms of the countries substitu ted instead of the heads, which are no longer of any value. American oysters have been planted at Havre, France, they being considered superior to the native bivalve. Thit Old Dominion newspaper says Jeff Davis' colored steward and cham bermaid have arrived at Fortress Mon roe, having succeeded in esuipingt from the rebel chief. A. R. McCown, of Ohio, on his way East, was robbed of $45,000 at the Or phans' Pair in Pittsburg, a few days ago —the money having been extracted from the inside pocket of his dress coat, and consisting of sixteen $lOOO, eight een $5OO, eighty $lOO and forty $5O notes. Col. William AL Stone, the new GO vernor of lowa, was once a canal driver between Roscoe and Cleveland, Ohio, at three dollars a month. Pekin, China, bus the oldest newspa- per in the world. It has been published for 1,000 years, and is printed on a large sheet of silk. Capt.- Hugh Harkins, Third Regiment Pennsylvania Reserves, tried foi con duct unbecOming an officer and gentle man in picking the pocket of a comrade, was found guilty and dismissed the set vice. Private George flafFer, United States army, found guilty of desertion, is sen tenced• to forfeit pay and allowances, and to be imprisoned at hard labor for ten years, with a ball weighing twenty four pounds attached to his leg. by a chain four feet long. Major French, commissioner of public buildings and grounds, recommends that the President's house be abandoned as a residence, on account of the bad con dition of the basement. A British soldier was flogged in, a public square in Toronto recently with so - much brutality that a physician in terposed to save his life. Henry Ward Beecher says "woman is 'nearer akin to angels than man is."-: That may be, but woman first got inti mite with the Devil. A contraband gave birth recently to a child on the plantation of Gov. Wise. A female teacher from Massachusetts, who was called to assist the mother, persuaded her to name the child John Brown Wise: The Rev. Henry Ward Beecher has written a letter to the trustees of his church declining to receive the addi tional c,ompensation of $5,000 voted to him - at the annual meeting of the true,. tees. A man who had both hands frozen during the cold snap in Chicago, put them into warm water, by which means they were rendered a mass of putrifled flesh, and will probably have to be arn- Yr44eth, Another tsrrible tragedy ;has • been added.to the many which have occurred in New York. The present was & dou ble tragedy ; for the murderer, after .having killed his victim, blew out hie own brains. ' The parties were young colored people, and the inciting cause Was jealousy. A:Man named John Farrell, his wife and two children, and a woman who was visiting the family, were burned to death in Pairslo on Monday night last. They were asleep in the dwelling when it took fire,,and„befere•assiatanee could be renderod::the roof, fell in and they,,were buried, in the flames. . , . A coroner's jury in Louisville a few days since gave a verdict that Philip Mallard "came to his:death from maims 'Lion; • exposure and, general. bad .treat. rrient at the hands - of "his son, Jacob Afedard.". i". • , A. bsogie.r of John . . 13rcips, is about to lie appointed auperin . teiadant of the con trabands in and about Was agton. -~' c T_t ..E MA RIFT TiAN. QUEER GROUNDS FOR DIVORCE.—The following incident is related by a New York correspondent : A fashionable couple up town, married, but not mated, as the story goes, quarreled a few morn ings since, and the irate wife, by advise of her parents, bas sued for a divorce.— The case is only noteworthy from the ridiculous cause of the quarrel. One morning, it seems, the husband washed himself, as usual, in the bowl used by both ; but the lady, for some reason, re fused to use it that morning, and rang the bell for another. It was brought , when the now indignant husband flung it, to the floor, breaking it to pieces.— The wife thereupon called hint hard names, when he• locked the bedroom dour and insisted that she should use the bowl. She vowed that she wouldn't, if she "went "with a dirty face for a week." Be then swore that she should ; and' so, filling a bowl, he seized her hands, and using sufficient force, washed her face for her. Lie then unlocked the door and went to his business, while she . went to consult a lawyer, and the suit was commenced. Tus TEST OATEL—The Senate has discussed, day after day, the "test oath," which Mr. Bayard hesitates to take.- - - Now, it is of very little consequence to the country whether that gentleman dues take that oath, or whether he re, fuses ; to take it, and forfeits his seat.— But the oath, as it nuw graces the stat ute book, is a strong barrier against the return to Washington of those `now in rebellion, to playltheir game over again. As the oath now stands, every Congress man, before he takes his seat, must swear that he has never, by any act of his, committed an act of hostility to the Union, thus furnishing additional secu rity that he will never violat6 his, oath by acting .falsely to his country or to his Government. it is establishing as a principle that any man who has borne arms against this Government, or yield ed aid and comfort to this atrocious re bellion, is unworthy of, a seat in Con gress. The man , who desires the return of these double-dyed traitors and refuses to take this oath, must hold queer ideas as to what loyalty to the country is. DIFFICULTY AT ROME. —The union says that the baptism of Prince Napo leon's son "is at this moment a great stumbling block to the church_ The little prince was half baptized [cn:tdoye) immediately after his birth ; but it is al most without precedent that the full ceremony of baptism should be, post poned longer thou six months. The in fant is now more than a year old ; and the reason given for the extraordinary delay is that Prince Napoleon will have no other, godfather for his s on than the King of Italy, who is excommunicated. The Pope making a great point of hold ing to the excommunication in this case, no bishop in France can be found to fly openly .to the face of the church; and Prince Napoleon, with equal firmness, declares that unless Victor Emanuel holds his infant over the font he shall not be baptized at all." DEATH OF JAMES B. CLAT.=-Jaffled B. Clay, of Kentucky, died in Montreal, Canada, on Tuesday last. He was a so' of Henry Clay. He thOroughly sympathised with the rebel movement in the South, and since his flight to Canada has been actively engaged in concocting plots against our Govern ment. In 1849, President Taylor ap pointed him Charge d' Affaires to Lie bon: In 1851 he again took up his resi dence in Missouri, but returned to Ken tucky in 1853, when he became the pro. prietor of the Clay estate at Ashland. In 1857 he was elected to Congress from his father's. district in Kentucky. At the outbreak of the rebellion be struck hands with the conspirators against the• Union, and subsequently fled to Canada. NINE MONTHS MEN TO BE DRAFTED.-- The U. S. Senate has so amended the Enrollment Act, that none but such-as are in the service, or have been in the service two years, and have been honor. ably discharged, are exempted from the operations of the draft. This throws all those who served in the nine months' regiments, into the classes liable to draft. They still, have one advantage over other men, and but one, that is they get a bounty of $402 if they enlist, while others get only $302. No doubt many of them will "go in." Those . who were drafted and served in 1862 will al so be liable to draft. A COFFIN FOR JEFF. DAVIS.-- The New Yorke Evening Post of Saturday says• that a refugee in that city, recently fromrßichmoud, asserts that :on (Arist a:las morning, at .an early hour, persons passing by the louse of Jeff. Davis were surprised, to see. standing immediately in front of the door a coffin, with a rope significantly laid on the top of it. These articles were taken away as soon as they were discovered by the servants, but they were seen by many'persons. • ar The Union League of .the 24th Ward; Philadelphia; have issued an ad drev„cordially etiAprsing the Adminis tration of PiesidOt 'Lincoln, and re commending...his re-nomination: The , , vote in favor of Mr. Lincoln 'for sitc4 and term was unanimona. far John Ten Broeck is a member of the Ellsworth Regiment. Lie arrived in New York Saturday morning. At the battle of Fredericksburg Ir. T. bad a narrow escape from a premature burial. He was stunned by a shell, and taken up for dead. He was accordingly laid in a trench with six others. He came to just as the dirt was about being shoveled into the grave. His escape from death forms one of the exciting incidents of the war. SPECIAL NOTICES, THE MYSTERIES OF THE TOILET are often exposed in consequence of the inefficien cy of (so called) beautifying preparations; but all who use CRISTADORO'S Excelsior Hair Dye know and feel that their secret is secure. No mortal eye can distinguish the blacks and browns produced by this dye from those im parted by the Creator. No destructive ingre dient, nothing that can shrivel up or in any way injure the hair, mingles with the preserva tive vegetable elements of this wonderful dye. Cristadaro's Bair Preservative, IS invaluable with his Dye, as it imparts the utmost softness and the most beautiful gloss and great vitality to the hair. Manufactured by J. CRISTA onto, No. 6 Astor House, New-York. Sold every where, and applied by all Hair Dressers. PrLce $l, $1;50, and $3 per box,' according ..f-no. 5. MEM ],-* HOSTETTER'S BiTTERS have received the warmest encomiums from the press and people throughout the Union, as a valuable tonic for the cure of Dyspepsia, Flatulence, Constipation, and general nervous debilitY, cannot be approached. Every day new case. of itsgreateirect are. chrpoicled ,through ow principal public journals. There is nothing, equal to the enjoyment to that which the af flicted experience when using this valuable spe cific, Its mild tone, its sure and vigorous ac tion upon a disordered stomach, and the clean sing of the entire human body should recom mend it to all classes of our community. See advertisement. For sale by „Druggists and dealers generally, everywhere. , Da. TOBIAS' Venetian Horse Liniment, pint bottles at 50c each, for lameness, cuts, galls, colic, sprains, &c., warranted cheaper than any other. it is used by all the great horseman on Long Island courses. It will not cure ring boric nor spavin, us there is no lini ment in existence that will. What it is stated to cure it positively does. No owner of hor ses will be without it after trying one bottle. One dose revives and often saves the life of an over-heated or driven horse. For colic and belly ache it has never failed. Just as sure as the sun rises, just so sure is this valuable Lin • iment to be the horse embrocation of the day. Sold by 'all druggiits. Office, 56 Courtlandt street, New-York irk' Eye and Ear : Prof. J. Isaacs, M. D., Oculist and Surest, formerly of Leyden, 'Hol land, is located at No, 511 Pine-st., Philadel phia, where persons alllicted with diseases of the Eye or Ear will be scientifically treated and cured, if Curable. Artificial Eyes insert ed with out pain. No - charges made for exam ination The medical faculty is invited, as he has no secrets in his mode of treatment. Volunteers, Read this:—For the de rangement of tlia system,' change of 'diet, wounds; sores, bruises and eruptions, to which every Volunteer is liable, there are no reme dies so safe, convenient and sure us Hollo way's Pills and Ointment, thormighly [eked in the Crimean and Italrau Campaigns. Only 26 cents per box or pot. - [324. SUPPLER & BRO., IRON AND BRASS 1 4 ' 0 NDERS And General Machinists, Second street Below Union, Columbia, Pa They are prepared to.make all kinds of Irun Castings for Rolling Mills and Blast Furnaces, Pipes, for Steam, Water and Gas ; Columns, Fronts, Cellar Doors, Weights, &c., for ,Buil dings, and castings of every description ; STEAM ENGINES, AND BOILERS, LS TILE MOST IiODERN AInD IMPROVED Manner; . Pumps, Brick Presses, Shafting and Pulleys, Mill Gearing, Taps, Dies, Machinery for Mining and Tanning ; Brass Bearings, Steam F. Blast Gauges, Ltabricators, Oir Cocks, Valves for Steam, Gas, and Water; Brass FiLi tinge in all their variety; Boilers, Tanks, Flues, Heaters, Stacks, Bolts, Nuts, Vault Doors, Washers, &c. BLACKSMITHING in GENERAL. From long experience, in building machinery wi flatter ourselves that we can give general satis faction to those who may favor us with their orders.Repairirg promptly attended tn. Orders addressed as above, will meet with prompt attention. Prices to suit thetimes. Z. SUPPLER, T. R. SUPPLEE. Columbia. October 20, ISO. . tf WINES & LIQUORS. 1140 R. D. 13liTNJAIVIN, DMI ER IN WINES 4t4.1 LIQUORS, Picot Building, Marietta, Pa. BEGS leave to . inform the public that he will continue the WINE & LIQUOR busi ness, in all its branches. He will constantly keep on hand all kinds of Brandies, Wines, Gins, Irish and Scotch Whiskey, Cordials. Bitters, 6c., BENJAMIN'S Justly Celebrated Rose Whisky, . , ALWAYS ON HAND. A very sureTior OLD RYE WHISKEY . ust ieceived, which is warranted pure. All H. D. B. now asks, of the public is a careful examination of his stock and pri• ces, which will, he is confident, result in Ho , tel keepers , and others finding it to : their ad , yardage to make their puichisses from I im S. S. EALTEIVON, Merchant Taiior, and Clothier., At F. J. Kramph's . Old Stand,onthe.Car • ner of North Queen and Orange Streets, Lancaster, Penti'a., ft R ATEFU Lto the Citizens of Marietta Ur and vicinity, for the liberal patrOnage heretofore eirtended, the undersigned respict fully solicits a continuance of the, same; ee suring them, that under all circurristatices, no _efforts will be spared in rendering a satisfactory equivalent for evey act of confidence reposed. CLOTHS, CASSIHEILES A N D VESTINGS, and such other seasonable material as fashion and the market fumishee; constantly kept on hand and manufactured , tcorderorompPy, and rex sonab)y, ste_tasce ,or style, may suggest. ALSO --READY-MADE CLOTHINii, ' Genkimen.7.l Fur:o4olg GoocmY and ouch articles as usually belong to a Mer -1 chant Tailoring and Clothing establishment. E - sifey 0711,11 - to - E3ro., No. 20 North Queen-St., Ilaneaster HAVE COMPLETED THEIR ASSORTMENT GE firiiS AND CAPS, if t it 01 THE NEWEST STYLES FOR FALL AND WINTER saittl) Furs ! We have now connected with our buttness as Batter:, a very large, elegant mud couiplute assortment of Ladies' and Children's Furs, of every quality and all selected with care and judgment. Our stock commises every de scription of size and fashion We would con sider it a favor if the ladies would call and examine our stock comprising Furs of the tirst quality. Ladies and Misses Beaver, Silk and 1 eft Hats, made in the latest fashion and tritnmed in every variety of style and taste, such as the neat I.:OQUEITE and the jaunty SPANISH ; also I-late untrimmed. Tnsnkful for the liberal patronage extended us in the past, we hope by a chichi' attention to the wants of the public, and keeping a large, excellent and complete tassortinent of gouda on hand, to merit a continuance of popular favor.' , li f Dr_ - JE3s - Al s cfd Co_ , WOULD TAKE TILIS Method of informing their patrons andt friends that they have just received a COMPLETE AND-WELL SELECTED Drums 5, CHEMICALS, TOILE 1' ARTICLES, DYE-STUFFS, PERFUMERY, &c. Also, a well assorted stock of Coal Oil Lumps, Shades, Globes, Burners, &c, ; Inks, Pens, Paper and Envefopes, 'Fresh seidlitz Powders, Citrate of "IM'agizesia: Cologne of the best qtitility, Hair Oils, Pomades, Sago, Tapioca, Bermuda Arrow Root, Pure Ground SpiceS, Pecket Books, Soaps. Combs, Brushes, Gum Rattles, Bulls and Rings, Taylors' Shaviyig Compound; Burucit's Cocuaine and Ka;list n; Flayming Extracts of Lemoit, Vi nilia, Pine Apple, Rose, Ws:uterily and Al mond, Infant Powder, Powder and Pull Boxes, Balm of a Thousand Flowers, &C., &e., Sze. lila` Family Receipts carefully comp nuu,ed Prescriptions correctly filled at all hours. Cells answered by the Doctor at all hours SCHENCK'S PULMONIC SYRUP WILL eultE (JON'6 11(YN SCHENCK'S I?ULAIONIC CONSUMPTION SCHENCK'S PULMONIC SYRUP WILL CURE OONSISII.II'I'ION, SCHENCK'S PUL3IONIC SYRUP MEI CONSILNIPTION. SCHENCK'S SEA WEED TONIC DYSPEPSIA SCHENCK'S SEA WEED TONIC WILL CURE DY6rEt-'6IA S'CIIENCK'S SEA WEED TONIC WILL CURE 1) kS VE 1-)61.1. NCHENCK'S SEA WEED TONIC WILL CURE DYSPEVS/ A ,ENCIC'S M.4NEIIGEK E PILLS WILL CURE LI VER Co M PLAINTS SAIDENCRIS MANDRAKE PILLS WILL. CeRK LIVERUOMPLAINTS, SOIIENCK , S MAADRAKE PILLS WILL CUR% LIVER tio PLAI NTS. CHEN CW' S liJ AND RAKE PILLS WILL i IVER COMPLAINTS AS. J. H. SCHENCK has a large sutt of rooms at No. 32 hiund st.. New-Yoric, where hi: cau be found every Tuesday, from 9 a. m. to S p. m., and at No. 39 North Sixth street, Philadelphia, ?a., every Saturday. . ... . He deeps a / large supply of medicines at his moths, which can be had at all times. Those wishing advice ur examination with the Res pi.rometer, his mice is $3. Many persons are afraid to have their lungs examined by DR. SCHENCK for fear they will be found incurable, an I by that means it is put off until it is too lute; How much bet ter it would be to know their cnudition at once, as by abundance of evidence, Dr. S. has shown sufficient certificates in this city that he has cured advanced stages of Consumption: DR. 9C.LIENCIi , ,6 Principal Office is No. 39 North Sixth Street, Philadelphia, Pa., where letters for adVice should always be directed. 1.13 P , 21/CE of the Pulrnomc Syrup and Sea Weed each $1 per bottle, or $:5 the t doien. Mandrake Pills, Iffic por box For sale by all druggists and storekeepers October 24, 1863. 12-3 ins. CHE A.P READY-MADE PLO s TLUNG ! Having jest returned from' the city with a nicely selected lot of Ready-made Clothing, which the undersigned is prepared ter furnish at reduced prices; having laid in a general -assort ment of men and bbYte clothing, vhich he is deters ined to sell LOW, FOR CASH. HiB And( Consists Of OVER-COATS, Daxss, FROCK AND SACK COATS, PANTS, VESTS, PEASACKETS ; ROUNDBOUTS, (knit) OVERHAULS, CRA VATS, DRAWERS, SHIRTS, HOISERV, UNDERSHIRTS, GLOVES, SUSPENDERS, &C. Everything in the Furnishing Goods line. Call and examine be fore purchasing elsewhere-. Everything sold at prices to suit the times. JOHN BELL. Corner of Elbow Lane and. Market Sl next door' to Cassel's-Store. TIOWARD fiaSSOCIATION, PHILADELPHIA, PA, Diseases of the Nervous, Seminil, Urinary and Sexual Systems—new and reliable treat ment—in Reports of the Howard Association. Sent by mail in sealed letter enyelopes, free of charge. Address, Da. J. Sum.xlr Hanna- TON, Howard Association, No. 2 South Ninth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. SPECTACLES to suit all who can be aided with glasses, can be bought at H. L. Et E. T. ZAHM'S, Cor ner of North Queen Let., and Center SQuare, Lancaster. New glasses refitted in old frames, at short notice. [V6-1v .EWELRY.—A large and selected stock of fine jewelry of the latest patterns from the beat factories in the , country can. be found at H. L..Fc Corner-of Center Square and North Queen ftreet, Lancaster, Pa. • UTT A. PERCHA 13LACICINU—without ky„hrushing Soots; Shoes, 'Harness, Carriages, and Military Leather= Work. It gives the:leather a po li sh like patent leather, makes it,matey proof, does not : stain the whit met allele of dress and' need riot`be applied or tener than two-or titres times a month. For sale at Dr. Landis' Drug Store. jantp Jury STOCK OF I= I=l I=l DITRYEAS' Received two "Prize Medals" [Fnom JURIES 3 AND 4,] AT TnE Internatioqal Ezhibition, Landon, 1862 BEING THE SOLE A WARDS GAINED BY Asv - ruirra OF THE KIND. it also received the Superlative Report of "Exceeding Excellent Rood." M Z NA , At the Great International Exhibition at Hamburg', July, 1663, Received the Highe.st Medal FOR ITS DELICACY AS AS ARTICLE OF FOOD Used for Puddings, Custards, Rican Mange, Sze., without isinglas, with few or no eggs. It is excellent lur thickening Swect,Sauces, Gravies for Fish, Meat, l'oups, am. For. Ice Cream i.othing can compare with it, A little boiled in Mils: inalls a rich Cream for Coffee, Chocolate, Tea, &c. A itio:st delicious• article for food for children and invalid's. It is vastly superior to Arrow Root, and rntich more eco nomical. Put up in one pound packages, under the trade-mark Alnizeint. with full directions for use, and .old by all Grocer. and DrugKist& AVILIAINI DURYEA_ VholeBide Agmt. ItiG Fulton Street, New-Y,stk. Aintust 22•6M1 Noibetsal Allhini7er. , No. Lar,t - e4:1) Virtri4t No. 2.—.Medit..a, No. 3.--'!4triail No. B.—Larde tiott.l 14a. N.3.l:".—Nlnditno Laundry, S o run by 'team of • No. 22 —Lnr,e Laundry, ( li 1)11. 30K. Nos L and e no Logs--all °torts In warranted. • No. i, the size generally need in priVallt famil e Orange Judd. ui th :American Agriculttnig.t_ sars of T!;/. nibtrsal Q7,l3thrs sldrinqtr "A child can readily write , out a (Wulf of clothes in a few minutes. It is really a clothe:: saver! A Time Saver! The .aria;; of gar ments will alone pay a lane pea centnee on its cost. We think the mal:ice mucn moa • than pm for itself'. every yenr in the saving ot . garments! There are seveml kinds, neatly alike in general construction, Mil we eons - id-r it important that the tl.'rin•rer be tilted With Cogs, otherwise a mass of garments may rm. : : the rollers, and therol.e t rs upah the craw: shaft slip and tear the clothe,, or the :aster break loose from the shaft. our own is one oi the first make, and it is as goad us uric nearly four years constant use." Every Wringer with Coy IVheels is war I anted in ever!, particular ND It; er can be durable trabont C.kkr-wheth: A good Can rasser Wur,ted ine , e.:• t jst 0. . . on receipt of the price fre.tii 2 1 30 es no une is selling, we will bewl toe Wri:v.-r free of expm.,e. For particulars and circulars. aildreSq b.. C. B IV N (NG . 347 firuhd way, ~e w- A LEXANDER LYNUSAY, l'ash iw.bie Boot and Shoi ..trumtr , Peturer, M.I.RKET STREET, MARIETTA, PENN Would most respecttully inform the citizens of this Borouzli and neighborhood that he has the largest' assortment of City made work in his - line of business in this Borough, and be ing a practical BOOT AND SHOE MAKER. himself,is enablea to select with more judgment than those who are not. He continues to man ufacture in the very best milliner everything in the BOOT AND .HOE LINE, which ho will Warrant for neatness and good tit. sCall and examine hic sick bef.n. pur- Mawr's- elsewhere. Oiodofina /e133,21rij IL L. tz R. J. ZAHNI ESPECT PULLS: inform their l'lLfriends and the public that they 'it," still continue the WATCH; CLOCK A ND JE tirELRr bust flesh at the ofd stand, North-west truer of. Norti Queen street and Center Square, Latitaster,rs, A full assortment of goods in our line of NS,- ness always en hand and for sale at the lowest cash rates. 113— Repairing attended to pt.) - eonally by the proprietors. Lancaster, January 1, 1859. Black Hawk Iron Ore Washer. rir II F undersigned having just completed new J paterns for the manufacture of the cele brated Black Hawk Iron Ore Washer. Ho has removed several ohjeciirins to the old pat. ern, and now feels certain of beingabl e to wash one-third more iron ore per day, and much cleaner. Machines manufactured •and put up anywhere desired at the shortilt no tice, and the working of the machine &erten teed. He can refer, by permission; - to Col. James Myers, of I .regal Furnace, Marietta, and to James L. Slit_ •2 - .. Esq., adjnining Mari etta. • • Address - - SAMUEL HOPKINS. Marietta, Lancaster Co:, Pa HEAP LAMPS. A FREER SUPPLI OF Coal Oil Lamps and Lanterns of evei3 peitern, suitable for the Parlor, the ititchen and the Chamber; Hanging and Side Lamps for Halls; Churches, Stores and Offices, Havin. b purchased : them from the Manufactu rers inlarge quantities at the lowest cash rates we can sell them much under the ?meal retail prices, although every other descripticin of goods are advancing. PATTERSON 4 CO MARIETTA MARELE YARD. Michael Gable, Agt., MARBLE MASON AND STONE CUTTER, . Opposite the Town Halt Park, Marietta, Pa. Marble business in all 0 .ranches, will be -continued at the o .bce, near the Town Hall and opposite FujilN Cross Keys Tavern, where every &Ascription of marble . work be kept on haft:Cot made to order at short notice and at eery - reasonable price*. Martetta,June 290361. - 49- 1 y =I