C be natiettiatt. F. L. Occk,er, _Editor. MARIETTA. PA : SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 27,1864. sir the following-paragraph is taken from wprifate letter from General But_ ler to a get . glistof Congress, who had. written 'Whim concerning Fernendo , wodaTfrotodaltion'toiiwpitiiite s'oine 4)110 (Riitleii) doings : lelkon - your frieudsbip to'iotti‘it : thvor of having ° any official' act` t mine inimitigated ; such investi. gations" will shoirMistakei, blunders, antrfeurns Of judgMent innumerable, and - lbrihese r mast stiffer ; but nothieg"elle.' I shcialif aven'be willing for there to be investigated by Fernando Wood; fibre it not int Are maxim, set a thiel464atcli the thief.' ,tt Ur The Copperheads in the Ohio jJegiehsture are. trying to secure the re leaSeitiff George. W. Binkley; the founder of the-treasonable order of "Knights of the,Gelden - Oirele," who was arrested in Kentucky 'a :few nights ago, and has since, been itoOriiioned in the Ohio pent. tentiarf. They threaten that, unlese he ierdleaseitpeneetibly, they will release him forcibly. By their interest in the behalf of an. original traitor, they give unmistakable evidence that they belong tolis deitorous-seeret organization. sir 4,1431 Stearns, of Los Angelos, lost about seven thousand hea,d of cattle, through want of food. dtt4ll,t4e,litst few months. That gen tleman is believed to be the largest stock and cattle owner in the United States. He owns this year forty-eight thonsaud cattle, besides nine thousand calves. • . • • er Last week Michael Conners, Jas. Brennan (tailos), John Keaton, Patrick Close, Thos. *puke, and James Whe lan, '"corninittee meb," were arrested at Beckscherville, by the military anthtir ities, 'charged with unlawfully and vio lently stopping collieries. •On Wednes day they were sent to Reading, under guard, for trial. la' According to the first official re port made' to" the 'Legislature this ses sion, there are abont twelve hundred miles of canal in the State, having no lesethan 750 locks, and - employing in the' aggidgate about 6700 boats, the greater, Ortion of which are owned by private individnats. ' er A widoiv; occiPyint a large house in a fashionable quarter in New ' York, sent for a =Wealthy-U*7er to make tier wilt, by•whioh.sbe disposed or betisieisi fifty Mid ' siity`f thousand dollars: — He prioposed‘simb effei, was - accepts& found himself the happy husband of a penniletiFadventniebi. = or The London. Times honestly' de clares its= sympathies -are with the re bels and for the reason that the United , States ategetting too large, too wealthy and Loo strong for the rest of the world, and ill extirliple and influenee likely to produeitilnisohief among the European aristocracies, Dr. „ Henry' St. Clair, a lineal de soendatrt'• of General St. Clair, • was elected on'Friday last, State Senator in place of• Maj. Harry' White resigned.— His majority was over 1200. He is, of course; a 'Union man, and will enable this Senate to`erganize and go to•busi -. naps. • shrTwalve,brothers belonging to Ca mains, - Onondaga county, New York, arefaliiinythe army as .soldiers. The lightest of them weighs 200 pounds. A son of-the eldest of these •brothers vol unteered at the same time with his • father.• gar A one-legged man died suddenly in France the other, day. His wooden leg was buried with him. , His sister, on looking ,over his will, discovered that in the wooden leg were deposite4s,ooq. Thi.‘bcOy was exhumed, and. the sum of I,6l3o.,fpurid in-the leg. isir Garrett Davis, the Kentuckytipa nine, inflicted, last week, a four hours' tirade upon the- Senate. Re is beyond all comparison the greatest bore that hacaliar afflicted that body. sr. The great gong upon Colt's fac. tory t which soutzded continually till the building wisl .haK4 4l, 4own, lase heard dintitrt)y at Willinly2itiß; a, distance ,of • r MTh:iehigan higielattere pW Bee a 3,500 oat 1041 - .boottifying of Get* !tort (Minatory -Allottedi tOlAtilito =SE Stone, the nevelai* - vernor of Tows, was once a canal driver between Rag - iiunt:Oeyelend, at three dollars alto oath. TILE LAST SLAVE IN PENNSYLVANIA.- Hannah Kelley p believed to„be the last I slave in Pean:Sylvania, died in Cross' Creek towihship, Washington county, on: the 15th nit., it the advanced age k:If10& - p I years. She vas owned by Joh:ii oer, deceased, formerly of Jefferson township, bat for a number of years, bad boarded with her free colored relatives in Cross Creek' township. Notwith standing her great age, she was remarka bly healthy, and gave fair promise of outliving her grand children, had .she not been brought to her death by a hor rible. accident. Rising early on New Year's morning, she was warming her self by, a very warm fire at the end of a coal scaffold, close by the door of her house, and in some way caught fire, and. Was so terribly burnt before assistance 'could be given that she died, as'recorded above. ' . M.D._ Conway, in a letter ,to the Boston Commonwealth, thus shows one of the many forms , of court etiquette, which restrict the will and affections of English princes : "I learn that there was quite a rebel lion at Win i dsor Castle. The princess vehemently, opposed having a wet nurse, and the prince, took, her side, and could not see why she should not be allowed to nurse the babe, as she , strongly de sired to do. But she was told that the court traditions, should not be set aside; never was English prince or princess yet nursed ,by its own , mother. So the healthy and virtuous Mrs, O'Somebody was sent for, and the;princess had a long cry. This is a . true story, and somewhat more valuable than ordinary court gos- . sip." eir Alexander Fidler, or Aberdeen, has set a noble example by erecting on the quay of that port a drinking faun. , tain, with not only a trough for horses and dogs, but also wash hand basins for the carters. The water is constantly flowing 'through' the wash-hand basins, so that they are sell-cleansing. So highly is this monument of "practical benevolence" valued by the Aberdeen carters, that they have purchased a val uable gold watch, and begged Mr. Fid ler to accept Was a token of the grati tude they feel for the blessings he has conferred upon "man and beast." 'This may be regarded as the highest type of Chriitian benevolence. Gennral Fremont writes to Major General gchenci, chairman of the Eloase Military Committee, that he requested to be relieved from the army of Virginia because he "regarded the order which reduced him to serve under Gen. Pope as an unmerited insult ;" that since then he has been waiting orders ; that he was once promised 'a command but did not get it ; that he has kept part 'of his staff to have their services when he should be recalled to active service ; ,and•that hag drawn his pay, "since the close of the last session of Congress to be applied wheie it might alleviate distresses resulting from . the war,i and it'has'been used accordingly."..., er Dr. John Chapman, a celebrate'd English physician, is now engaged in making important experiMents,' 'con: nected with the cure of epilepsy, and other diseases of the nervous system, by thV'external application of ice and hot water, in rubber bags, to various parts of . the apina:l cord; acting thui on the sympathetic nerve, and, through it, upon the' most important and vital portions of the body. fill• Oysters are among the most healthful, and •nutritious-of all- the arti cles furnished for the table. When fresh, they. are probably most nourishing when eaten raw ;, but they should n Ot be "bolted down 4" as is the custom of some who love this bivalve. They should be thoroughly masticated, or, in other words, made, to•feel the tseth. • eir A. German atatiatical writer re marks that the invention of the sewing machine has enabled one: woman,to sew as a hundred could sew by hand a cen tury ago; but, he continues,. one. woman now demands as much clothing as a hundred did a century ago—so that the situation is not so much changed after all. sr The' Boston Herald says:—The type fdtnideis hive issued a circular to all printers that they have raised the prica of printing material 25 per cent. Paper makers have raised the price of p4per I OQ ,, pol cent. 'The reader will see - that !publiiihers of neWspapers ;are not likely to become m!llioiaires in It huTry under this State of affairs. 1 A report is in preparation upon the claims.of Lieut. Mauiy for compen sation lot alleged damages, in' wliicit - it is stated that he has already drawn from Government more money than Was just ly his due"; Hie bondsmen being iQ the Southern Confederacy it is impossible toproceed against tbein; ' ' er Over 12;000'611 - 4es hare already enlisteii in Tennessee; ifiti enlist meats in the at 'a rate-of 500 per week. 3 *r The. quota -under, the joint tall, of 500,000 is filled in . Columbia, county, this State. All honor to'Co-, fitU I DUh T AW 1 General News Items. • A obspleYor- Swedish officer arriveit in Ne* York city, per steaniet Chitift, on Thursday lajt. )They area , commis; liotind,by their government,to,proseed to the American battle-fields, and take notes and observations upon modern warfare, as exemplified in the coming campaign. It is understood that the commodious buildings near Chester, which for some: months have been used for army hospi tal purposes, will now be converted into barracks for the temporary reception of the re-enlisted Pennsyltnnia regiments, prior to their departure for the flea . Tbe,,law depriving, oolored...versons, of the right to settle . in lowa has been repealed. A trunk containing $40,000 , was found last week by etursoldiets, secreted .in a house near, Knoxville. Some of the - Union men .of East. Ten nessee who have been imprisoned by the rebels; have commenced suits for .datha ges against the villainous leadervin- the rebel 'ranks: -Parson' Brownlow's suit is first on: the dOcket, and he'lays his damages at $25,000.- ' Thurlew Weed says that the Govern: went Lands are more than foUrkeen hundred , • millions of acres. The sale of these retired lands at one., dollar per acre would not only pay the interest on the . National debt, but-,eatiuguish By selling it in alternate sections these lands will increase in value as they di minish in extent. The railroad between Chattanooga and Knoxville has been repaired, and cars.are, now running, to the great jny., of the people along the line of the road. Not a house or ,a shanty was passed ,on the trial trip that the residents did not rush out and with handkerchiefs and flags, welcome'the coming of the Fed erals. The business of embalming the bodies of deceased soldiera is increasing' Washington. The' cost has been re duced to ten dollars each subject, and at the Ailhory Squareliospital all who die are embalmed, whether their friends request it or not. When the friends are too poor to pay no charge is made. Gen. John Morgan, and his two staff officers, who escaped with him, have, been made the recipients of a grand ovation and testimonial frotn the State of North Carolina, The testimonial consists of a megniOcent horse to .each and seven sets of elegant and costly ca : parisous. Michigan has passed the soldiers' vo ting bill. Eleven hundred persons are daily'fed by the Government at Chattanooga. It is estimated that the cost per pan of the arms is nearly if not quite $1,200 annually. A bill prohibiting, the importation of luxuries, into the rebel States has passed the Confederate Congress. • . At the fire of the President's stable's on Wednesday night, Cooper, the PresV dent's hackman, lost between three and four hundred dollars in gold which'he" had in a trunk in the'-stable. Also, all his clothes, Saving-nothing but what he . had on his back. ' - The Secretary 'of. War has directed that no volunteer shall be •rejected on who is account of height who is at least five , feet. Recruiting is going on briskly all over this State. Several counties have al ready filled their quotas, and there seeds to be °a probability that by the fait of March, the extent of the President's requisition will lie'' so nearly filled in Pennsylvania that 'drafting will have to be resorted to in but few localitieS. According to the report of the City Inspector of New York no less than eighteen thousand people live in cellai:s and basements in that city, undei"con . ditions that are constantly proVoctiti , i;O of febrile and epidemic diseases. About fifty rebel prisoners, who, ; it is said, escaped last fall . from. Fort, Dela ware, were arrested somewhere in Vir- gtnia The ' Pest-office - DeOartinent' is no* . self-sustaining, Tor the' first `time in - fif teen years. The President hagisetted a proclama tion opening the port of Brownville, MiChael Dan. Magehark, for a number of Year's past` the oldeet practicing attor ney at the Cambria county bar, died, at Ebensburg on the 6th instant. Ho represented that county in the Leiisla lature during the 'sessions of 1844 aerd 1845. An order from Maqor.General Sullivan, cominanding the post .of'Har per's Ferry, directs that the name's of leading disleynliuts-ln his,,district shall ; be, registered for prosecution, should any property he destroyed in future by pier - :rills bands. 411 Aad lft New O,F -leans or , OE,-* ipihwitl; a PPrtjan of the Western Gulf, Squadron, 41#114.ktiPa unknown. --- * „ - • 4.) ;To- . L ;— qt - .laivon:..hwtqmpleskly , ao 7 feated the Navajo Indians, AMENDMENTS O. THECONST,ITUTION The Nei* 'Post htvives the history of the different Amendments which have been added to the Constitution since its f:ormatine in 1787: Twelie amendtnenis tB' theconstitu tion already exist. By the terms of 'ar ticle five of the constitution, amend ments may beproposed either by Con- I gress or by a convention called on the I application of the legislatures of two thirds of the states ; but all the amend ments now existing have been proposed by Congress, and have been ratified by state legislatures, without the call of a national convention. Twelve articles of amendments were', passed in .:I(ingress, i on the 25th of Se'ptember, 1789, by the were approved by, the „ legislatures of three-fourth 6 Of the 'staies, itiftliecatne amendments of, the-constitution on the 15th of December, 1791--mere than two -years afterwards. The eleventLaniend ment was proposed in Congress on the sth of March,,l79:4,%and became a part of the constitution onthe Bth of Janua ry, 1798, nearly four. , years-afterwarde.— The twelfth was proposed in Congress on the 12th of Decenibei,lBo3„and was adopted by the coniiiintional number of states in 1804. " M=MM MR. LINCOLN• AND A' SECOND - I ERII :- A large delegation, 'appointed by the Philadelphia Union-Leagne;laid 'before the President,. last week, the resolutions which were unanimously adopted at the large meeting of that influential associa tion, held in that city about the middle of January, endorsing the present Ad mit.istration, and ,earnestly recommend ing Mr. Lincoln : . for re election. The resolutions were presented by Morton McMichael, Esq., in an eloquent speech, which was kindly and characteristically replied to by the President. We may add that there-is not a day passes in which the President does not raceive evidence of. .the attaohment of the people end4heir. confidence - in- his administration of the Government. RIMARKABLE HOLD ON LiFII—M iti Of George N. Lewis, of the 12th Regiment, is in town, stopping at the United States Hotel. His remarkable wound promises to heal, and his life will be saved. Not one man in ten thousand would survive such a wound. It. was, a canister shot. weighing about four ounces, and made a hole clear through . hith, shattering his collarbone and shoulder-blade, and splintering his spine., dt, .clid,,,not dis place the vetebrte, which would proba bly hive ended his life suddenly but it has left a bole through him, and it is said that even now a stick cad be'passed through U.—Hartford' Times. HORRIBLR l uRDER..--An Irishman ; named Inell, residing in. Washington, on Wednesday night last, murdered his wife ender circumstances of the, most horrible atrocity. Her head was mashed and beaten-in 'with a hatchet . . He then placed the body in bed, and 'put the lit tle children in bed with it: The whole house gave evidence' iethe blood scat tered about and smeared : overilie bed. The next morning he-hastily buried the body, on the pretense that' the Wbinan died of small pox. A son, of the prison er,. aged eight years, is the principal witness as to the fucks of the,murder. at - John P.' Putniitt, ii"grandson of Gen. Putnam, has presented for exhi bition, at the Albariy Army 'Reid Ba zaar, the piStols in which was burni, the first powder of the Revolution..! It will be remembered that Major Pitcairn rode toward the crowd ;drawn up. in hostile array at Lexington, shoutad "disperse ye rebelb," and fired , his ,pistols into their midst. His horse was shot under him, but he managed to, escape. •T he pistols were found in the saddle, became the property of Gen. Putnam, and were worn by him during the Revolution. , sgir In Idaho nothing goes as - a circu lating medium : but gold dist. tvery' man carries his little buckskin - pouch, and ; inatter'What pnrclaase he, pays for it-in - the 'precious legal of the realm, which is weighe -:out on scales kept for the - purpose, whether the article bought be a cigar, a horn of whisky, or ..something of pore utility and value. The minimum of value is a, quar ter of a dollar, and the weights, are graduated from that sum sir litany 'of the re:enlisied regiinents who are or have heen at hothe'`O - ri furl' lough, are either on their return to the front, or are about to do so. They are all anxious to be again in the oeld., alinokt every instance, aftei spending five ,or six days at hipme among their friends, long to go back again ifir Gen. Howard Says that , General - Grant is a strictly temperate mail, and'" religious. His marked characteristic is a wonderful faith in , his success amountl ing almost 011ie fatality in 'which' Na poleon so Strongly believed. or A scouting arty of fifty men were ambushed by, guerillas on Burnley, two miles east Brentsville. Malor James Lorimer, Acting Inspector Geo oral of Gen. Prawford'sstaff, was killed .- 0 - or .„ Bland ` The G vern •of Rhode las formed the Lagtelature . that the quota of that State under every cal 'Of ; the President jenow'fnll. tle Ihody." Cr In the case of F. F. Hill, the Shultz r—fe.2, r Reading. Railroad Conductor, convicted No. 20 North Queen-St., Lancaster. a few weeks since at Harrisburg, for HAVE COMPLETED THEIR ASSORTMENT OF embezzling the funds of that road, and MI about whose erre& • re fuss at the tirue--being a great fwvorite among the fast men—has been sentenced to a fine of one hundred dollars and to undergo one year's imprisonment, at hard labor, in the Eastern Penitentiary. The arrest, and conviction were brought about, by the celebrated. Chicago. de tective, Maier Allen'Philterton. lir It is expected one million of dol lars will be raised in the free States for tie F relief of the loyal people of East Ten eseee. Goods are to be sent fr4e by the Govern ment, which is takins great interest in the matter. This is a bible-fulrof bolY truth in behalf of the North toward their . loyal brethren of in the South. Think of this, r . mixes wretched traitors,. who , bate 'tbe North! a commentary ibis upon 'slavery and treason. t• • '::With ; regard to the Rower of„, , enr durance of negro soldiers, - the N. Y. 'Tribune's correspendent Fortreas Monroe says that when the late expedi tion' towards Riehmond reached tom's Bridge, where they found their game blocked, roll was called and found that whkle nearly_ one half, the white infadtry had, fallen behind in, the long And rapid march, every-negro .sol, dier was up to the mark tiind answered to- - his name. . liar,,a,sleokUalifornia Legislature, -after an able, debate, have by SD ,inktnense vote declared favor of Idr: Liricoln for the next PreSideney; ands stall - St slavery as the parent of ' The full proceedings lave' just - arrived, 'and ' prove the , grtiwing'pepularitry n'f'fbe ad ministrefien arnoni the:/peiiple' or that tIFO ch„arlvs K assley,„Rzq, fox many years editor and proprietor of the Read ing Adler newspaper, „Ratidirtg,, ,Pa., has disposed . qt his establishment to Messrs. Wm. S. Ritter . , Win, Rosen thal, and Jesse Hawley. , It, is said that the ,p ri,ne, Raid , was $lB,OOO. SPECIAL MYTICRS; Da . THE TURNED HEA ! This title of one o(Pr...ly#Fren, stories in_ moment by all who use CRISTi , LDORO'S HAIR PYK five i, Which in' ve aiiiiutes 'changes w MITE TO BLACK, or red to a rreh brown, iirithout dryihg up - the juices!ot the'hair. It -the oniy safe hair, dye in ,the,world. , . Crtstadoro'sgair Preservative,; 14,in valuable with his Dye, as it imparts the utmost sofuiess and the . most beautiful gloss and great vitality to the hair. Manufactured by. J. CaisrADORO, No. 6 Astor ,Ilouie; Sohkevery - where, and apiqied by all ,Hair Dressers,. , Price $l, $1:50, and $3 per box, according to size. F-no. 6. lll:raft. Teat Veneiian 3 Lyrimeitt. 7 -llt ED or Carrot.. Witat a pretty and interesting child I saw last Week now, 'adds . ! it is no more. Such"' was` the c nivihsaticiii of two gentlemen riding'clown taw& in the cars.: Died of croup ! how strange !,,when Venetian Linitneut is a certain cure, if taken in time. Now, Nlotherl, we appeal to you.— It is not for the Plliry gain and Profit we make but for the sake Of your itifitifchiid that now lies playing at Sour Crdlip da:riger ous disease ; but 11Er:Dn:Tobias' Venetian Lin iment in tinie,L,and:db :is robbed of its terrors. Aln ays keep the house you Allay not want it to-nigliy4 or tomorrow, no ; telling when—but armed with tliis Litiiinent'you are prepared, let it CbineA6iert if Will: Priee 25c a bottle. :old by all druggists. Office, No. 56 Courtlandt street; Nevrttrfr'. 3 ' In,. P RESER ft' YOUR 13r:a thy, symmetry of form, yourlgattil itiCrital :l pirivers, by using the safe? iii'Vasttnt'Aitqiuhie anti ispecitic remedy lincwritaa;',' 4 HELM so Ln:s..l**Tres cr„l:tunu Read the adverAisement ,anotl4er column, and profit byit -Rigeasesand symp!Rms enu merated. tni it out - and pieser4 it. You may not now require it; may at some fu ture•day. v•••- • • - ":.It Oyes health and vigor,to,tlm frame, And bloom to the pallid cheek. It saves long suffering andj exposure. wale" Of counterfeits. Cures guartaMeed. 'Fint sale bit Druggists and - dealers' generally, eviryivhere. • • Eye and Ear : Prof. J. Isaacs, M. D. , Oeulist and ...khriat,lbrinerly of - Leyden; Doi- . land, is located at , N0,:511 Pille-st4, Philadel phia; where persons. afflicted with diseaseS of the Eye Par }c l_ ; bp, scientifically treated and Xcured, if curable. Artificial Eyes insert ed without pain. No charges made for exam rnatiun medical faculty is "invited L tis he tiits no secrets in hie incite of treatment. I[3= The Splgires Trey_ Friend.--Forr more , than forty years, Doctor Holloway has been supplying all the srmied' of Europe with his Pills and Ointment, they having primed them. selves the only niedieines' able trreire the w oret cases of dysentery, scurvy, vioiirdlii-and bruises. Every knapsack'should contain them. Only 30 centslper box iir.pot. " 1232'4 ,•14AMMINI EXTERMINATORS ! - - , FOR' RATS; MCE; ROACHES' ANTS, BED-BUGS; MOTHS IN 'FURS; Weotitisi Irtszers • ort Pee tersaowts, , Animala, 4re. Put up in sse. 50e. and $1 Boxes Bottles,. and Flasks. Thteeand.,Fiye dollars sizes foi Hotels Pyille Institutions, Sm. "Only iiitallibte remedies inditm." "Free. from^Poisonk" . "Not cbmgeroueto. the Human Family-7- . , qtats come'llufbf'tlieir liblOs to die."' wholesald'in all large &ties. - ; Sold by all druggisis and retailers eve rywhere. • • Xi: r. ri" BEWARE of au thoiihiess imitations!! — kl .. ! ,, Oorthat,",,COSTAJPS":narneda on eAsh Box,)lottle, and Flask, before you buy. IHAWK Y • Principal Deppt,,4B2 Broadway, N. Y. brgii iiholesale'arid 'Drug giEts in Marietta. [lO-30 was a great NEWEST STYLES FOR FALL AND WINTER. gaup pro I jam Ours ! I We have now connected with our bustnese as flatters, a very large, elegant end complete assortment of Ladies' and Children's Furs, of every„qrility and all selected with care and judgment.: OW stock comprises 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 first quality. Ladies one: Misses Bear fr, -, and: 1 elf _els; made in the latest fashion and trimmed in '..every Naxietypc‘siy,le..andusi the neat COQUETTE and the jaunty SPANISH i. also lists untrimmed. thd Rhin] patronsge extended' Tnankful for it. us iu the past, I.N& hope byk t a carefill e atten#on to the wapts of the Public ' mud keeping& large, excellent and , iArnpleibl,Sdaiirtment of goods on hand, to merit a continuance otpopplar favor. NEW AND FRESH ,atentig ~.qaticas; 5 turtssor to 30r..",fratiklii fttar4 . + pruß. LANDIS, having purchased the entire interest and good w ill of Dr. F. Hinkle's g Store, would take tliis oppoitunity to in form the citizens of Marietta and the public generally ; that having jugrreceived 'from -Phil adelphia a large addition „to the old stock, he will spare no pains to keep constantly on hand the best and most corripint.?hSitortMent of evi rything in the drug Lot of.iquelj load artiCkS, cousiOngin pertot German,: French end-Eng lish - perfumery, Shaving smxpe • awl creama, , TootkandNultklrushes,Aulysiloagul , pther flair Contbs, Bair Oils, Pofflades,etc;go4 Port )fortieft,, Poc,ketßooks, : Pis/ Et and. Powder 3303 es; 4e„ The celebrated lkitcheloe,s Ai Al a i DYE, . . DeCohta , s and other Tooth Wasltes,l nilutpla • gogne, Bariv's Tricoperous, for th . 'huh) Bay ' Runi Arnold's Ink, large undilutedl sizedhol ties, Balm of a 'Thousand Flowers, Flour iii Rice, Corn Starch, Ileekef Farina, all kinds of pure Ground. Spices, Compound SyTuftor. Phosphate, or Chemical teod„an excellent tide for cronic dyspepsia and a.tenic .in Con somptive cases, Rennet, far Coagulating milk,. all excellent preperation for the table ; Table Oil—very line—bottles in two size's., „Pure,Coti Liver Oil. All of HaePs perfumeiy,pomades, soups, &c. His Kathairon or Heir Restbtative is now everywhere acknowledged best. A LARGE ASSORTAIMT OF BileKs fin STATialiilitY Sheet Music always on It mat, and procwed , by- weekly orders from the city. Having secured the services of Mr.. Harridan , . Roth, formerly of the firrn of Grove & Roth, he feels confident that he can accommodate as well as please his numerous patronattne friends. Old Port, Sherry and Madeira Wines aid Brandies for medical purposes. The Doctor can be professionally consulttd at tne store when not enus.,ged elsewnere. ft 3— Remember the place, opposite the =POst , @thee, formerly Doctor HitikWS. eritll: COLIJAIIIIA , 11 , 1 , 5 U RANGE co., - (if Colivhbia, Lancaster Cuu .1y; Penna. . , FOURTH ANNUAL REPORT. Whole amount insures!, $2,60-1,43:5 t. Whole anniunt of Premium Not 6, 255,831146 Bal. CaSh Premiums, January 1, 1563, Al2O 31 Reepts for premium's, ' • ' ' less Agt's cotrimis.s• ions in 1863, 9,382 46 - Receipts for Assessments Agt's COIIII7IiSSiOLIS . in 1863 " 2.385 02 Losses and . expel,!ses paid in - 1863; $10033 32 Bal. of Premiums, Jan. 1, 156 4, GREEN, PliEstptirr; GEORG E. YOUNG; Jr., recretary.. MICHAEL S. 'SHUMAN, Treasurer.' DI E TOKS Robert T. .Ryon, , • John W. &my, John Fendrach, H.-G:•Minich, Samuel F. Eoetlein, Michael S. .shuman, 3fichae/ S. .shuman, S. C. ...17.aymaker, George Young; Jr., Nicholae.Mc Donald Edmund Ppering, Amos Green. •• , Mir& L. , BAKEIL Strihincr anb orolibtkom Woutm most respectfully take this mizinsn' informing his friends and the public generally that he . has commenced the drawing of DEEDS, MORTGAGES, JUDGMENTS; and:in fact everything in the CONY i.vaNci ..Having:gratuatous intercourse With a member of the, Lancaster Bar, will enablethhn execute instrumeuti of writing.with accuracy. 1U ,He can be. found at the.office of teeTtra MA RIETT/A on- Front street or at his.res idence ;Market street; near ?he teDonegal House," Marietta. r..rßltualr Deeds Mortgages, audgmentaand. Lewes always ou /land and .for sale:.. . . . - IMPORTANT 'TO MARAIRD TRULY A BLESSING!! I will Send, free of ckarge, to any lady Who. will send in her name an address, directidn's' d. /tow to prevent the exiremne pain of chiiiit=Mat t ' also how to have perfeetty healthy and beast tiful children ; also one other new and import ant 'secret the only sure and safe remedies ever discovered. My object in making the above offerliftn induce every lady to test - my remedies. Address ManassE DULEZVTAIIi., M. p. ' 3m 767 Broadway, N. Y..-1 , WINES & LIQUORS. El. D. BENJAMIN, DEA.] ER IN WINES & LIQUORS, Picot Building, blarietta, Pa. BEGS leave, to, inform the public that:he .wwill continue the WIN E & LIQUORAUsiI nese; in all its branches. lle will constantly keep on hand all kinds of Brandies, Wines, Gins, Irish and-Scotch Whiskey, cordials, Bitters, c. , = BENJAMIN'S Justly Celebrated Rase Wysky,' ALWAYS ON HAND, A very surerior OLD RYE WHISKEY , ~ . . üßt received, which m warranted pore. EP All H. D. ii..now asks of the public is a careful egamipation of his stock and,Pii eel, which' Will,; . he is confident, result in:Ho tel keepers and others finding it to their still. , vantage to make, their purchases from I ini-" TIA.NIEL G. RAKER, " ATTORNRY dIT LAW, LANCASTER, PA. OFFICE:—No. 24 NORTH( MIKE Ssmanr,; opposlte the Court House where he will at tend to the practice of hf:profesnon in &Wits various branches. • 'i. -•"••• . • ITT I .1. C.O X' S, Celebrated V T tension Steel Sprink Skeletott a ritT, with self-adjustible Shane. The,"Weil and beet in . use, just received at D NBA CM'S BUY one of those beautiful S 0 F T HATS at CRlrr.L's, 92 Market-at. Hz S_AIIB _Cfi PS, OIL EIMTEI $13,887.: 79 3;754 47 -- $13,887 79