The Mariettian. (Marietta [Pa.]) 1861-18??, April 02, 1864, Image 2

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    Mariettiait.
F. L. Faker, .Editor.
MARIETTA. PA :
....
SATURDAY, APRIL 2;1864.
A GREAT CHANGEe--011 Monday the
19th regiment of colored troops, under
the command of Colonel Henry
Thomas, marched from Camp Birney,
and after , parriding through the princi
pal streets of our city stacked arms in
front of the Holliday Street Theatre, ,
upon the very ground where, on the 20th
and 21st of April, 1861, the secessionists
of Baltimore, muter the guidance of ex-
Marshal, Kane, gathered to carrry out
their nefarious plots. The various
movements of this body of men evi
denced the high state of discipliai to
which . the men have been brought by
their officers, and which favorably im
pressed all loyal men.--Bellimore *Amer
ican.
or Joseph Moore, whos'e trial for the
shooting of Jordan Maibourg, at Johns
town, took place during the past week,
has been found guilty 'of murder in the
second degree. It will be remembered
that Moore was a soldier, and that du
ring his absence in the army, his wife
and Marbourg were on too intimate
terme—hence the murder. Both par
ties belonged to the most respectable
classes of society, in Johnstown, Cam
bria county. Moore bas bees sentenced
to six years imprisonment in the West
ern Penitentiary.
Gen. Prim, the celebrated Span
ish officer, Bays : In my opinion, if the
importance of nations is to be measured
by the number of soldiers that they can
put in the field—when these are well
led, armed and equipped—the United
States is the first nation of the world;
because I do not know of another tt
tiviovhich cal] maintain for the long
period of four years a million and a half
of men under arms, expending in all
that appertains.to war about four mil
liom.,of dollars a day, without, up to this
hour, calling for a foreign loan.
ear A Western paper notices a curi
ous. specimen of the handwork of a
Southern lady—a pair of knit panta
loons in crochet work. The work was
firmly and neatly done, and the maker
was Mrs. W. H. Mackie, of Columbia,
Arkansas. During the blockade in that
region her husband needed a pair, of
pantaloons, and as there was no cloth
to be had, she took her crochet needle,
and, with plenty of home-spun yarn, got
up an article equal to' anything a mer
chant tailor could turn out—handsome
in eppearance, and good for "three years
or the war."
sr The estimation put upon Mr.
Jeff. Davis in North Carolina is shown
by this observation in the late speech
of Governor Vance. He said :
every man in this county (Wilkes) who
had used abusive language toward Jeff.
Davie and the Confederate Government
were to be put in jail, he would have to
address his entire audience through the
prison bars."
The wife of the rebel Senator
Henry S. Foote arrived within our lines,
and had an interview with General Sul
livan. Mrs. F. says she is disgusted
with the Confederaey, cannot live there,
and has come within our lines to take
the oath and go North. Mrs. F. had
her child and a nurse with her. She
was, however, sent back again - into
Dixie.
sir President Lincoln is the recipient
of a pair of Woolen socks, knit by Miss
Addle Brokway, of Newburypert, Mass.
On the bottom of each was knit the Se
cession flag; and near the top the glo
rious Stars and Stripes of our Union, so
that when worn by the President he
will always have the flag of the rebel
lion under his feet.
gor At Parkersburg, Fa., oil wells
have been struck yielding'from six hun
dred to one thousand barrels per day.
The excitement is very great in conse
quence,- and every man in the place
((inks•he has an oil well in his cellar.
Ont 3 of the most curious farming
customs in the heights of Thibet is that
of stuffing quantities of hay among the
big* hritnches of trees; the snow in
w i n t er lying five or six yqrdsAsep, .and
the sticieir, which abound in, theie dis
tricts, being then able to wit at the hay.
Hon. Jere. Clemens, of Hunts
ville, Ala., formerly United States San
or s - presided ovor and addressed a
Union meeting at that plaee on
s` Stir instant. Highly loyal resoln
`ltfikOme passed, and anothet conven
tion WlOOllO. 111.0 is ti,Cood
Mr. C, Ys :a man of influence in his State.
lllir .VIT.O thonsapd men are called
for by advertisement in 'the Wieeimain
papers, to work sawmills and navigate
lumber rafts the coming season,
A NEW LEAGUE PROPOSED.—The Bos
ton Messenger wants to see organized
r grand Ladies' Loyal League, composed
of women who are willing to pledge
themselves, while this war lasts, a de
cent economy in their attire. A league
that eschews costly apparel and other
kinds of extravagance will be confined
to.a select few. Extravagance and ex
penditure rule the day and have their
causes in the necessities of the war.—
Nothing but compulsion, which the
rapid consumption of wealth by the war
must eventually bring about, can pre
vent their operation. When men build
warble stables for the accommodation
of their horses, and pull down hundred
thousand dollar houses to raise more
expensive ones, extravagance has reach
ed a point that cannot be resisted ef
fectually by , any voluntary association of
self-denying women.
er General Meade claims that it was
his intention to have turned Lee's right
flank at Gettysburg, and to have placed
his own army between the Confederates
and the Potomac before giving general
battle, He says that he was perfectly
confident of his ability to defeat Lee,
and could then have captured him bag
and baggage, but that General Sickles,
by disobeying orders, advanced his corps
too far, got it, involved , and it then be
came necessary to engage the whole
army in order to save Sickles. Meade
says that it cost three thousand men to
repair the blunder of which General
Sickles was guilty ; and in this view
General Halleck, otherwise hostile to
Meade, fully sustains him.
Or Captain L. B. Peytoo, one of
John Morgan's men who was last week
transferred from the penitentiary at Al
legheny city to Point Lookout, Md., was
shot and killed at the latter place on the
18th ult. It is stated that a guard of
colored soldiers were placed over the
prisoners, which offended Peyton, and
induced him to abuse the white sergeant
in charge. The sergeant, who belongs
to a New Hampshire regiment, and
whose name is Young, cautioned him as
to his conduct, but Peyton, it is alleged,
continued his abuse, and shook his fist
in the face of the officer. Tho latter
then drew his revolver and fired.
lEr Brigadier General David B. Bir
ney, United States Volunteers, has been
confirme4 as a Major General in the
Volunteer- service r lie -commission to
date from May 20th, 1863. Birney is an
Alabamian by birth, and the son of
Jas. o..Birney, who, originally a planter
of Alabama, liberated his slaves, re
moved to the West to educate his child
ren, and was in 1840 made the Aboli
tionist candidate for the Presidency.—
General Wm. Birney, in charge of the
recruitment of black regiments in Mary
land, is his brother.
A lady pianist has lately appear
ed in. Holland who enjoys the singular
advantage, to one in her profession, of
having six fingers on each and, the sup
plementary finger adjoining the little
finger, and resembling the thumb of
another hand. She playa the piano
with much brilliancy, making much use
of the supplementary finger. Her six
fingered gloves are manufactured ex
pressly for the lady in Paris. She has
also six toes on each foot.
Gir A rebel woman writes to her hus
band in Price's Arkansas army (the let
ter having been intercepted) that "Par
son Nolan is our sercut rider now. He
says that God has planely promised to
be on our side and drive the Yankees
from off our soil. Parson Nolan is a
splendid preacher, but it don't look to
me as if God uni s driven the Yanks any
too much outen Arkansas just now."
GO" An Act relating to foreign coins
and the coinage of coins, was passed in
the U. S. Senate on last Monday. It
provides, among other things, that the
weight of the cent shall be 48 grains
and composed of 95 per cent. of copper
and 5 per cent. of zim> or tin.. It also
provides for the coinage of two cent
pieces of the same composition.
or Provost Marshal Fry publishes
the decision of Solicitor Whiting, last
year, that any man who leaves his resi
dence and is drafted daring his absence,
if the notice be left at his last, place of
residence, can be arrested and shot as a
deserter. The Government overruled
this decision last year, but it seems to
be revived now.
W Postmaster Wakeman, of New
York city, proposes to take into the
post office a number of boys of the age
of about sixteen years, whose fathers
have lost their lives in the service of
their conntry, thus aiding their widowed
mothers, and introducing them into ac
tive and industrious employment. A
most excellent idea.
it Neal Dow remained long enough
in Richmond to see the rebel ',twists.:
ture pass an act to seal, up every grog
shop in Richmond, and perhaps in Vir
ginia, on the Ist day of May. General
Lee asked for the law, and' it was con.
ceded.
lir Hon. Wm..P..Tplinaton, of Pitts
burg. has been appointed; by Gbvernor
Curtin to represent pennsylvaMa in the
movement lately inaugurated by the
Louisville Board of Trade, for the im
provement of the Ohio river.
...51r4Ya IP 1 A A 111
a. ffl iik 1 A
„ ,„%--•-;
General News items.
John William Wallace, of Philadel.
phia, has been appointed reporter of the
decisions of the United States Supreme
Court, in the place of Judge Black, re
signed.
A London Surgeon put a dog to sleep
with chloroform, and, taking out a piece
of his skull, has inserted a watch crys
tal, through which he can see the
changes in the brain produced by sleep.
The returns thus far of the vote of
New York, on the Amendment to the
Constitution allowing soldiers to vote,
foot up a majority of one hundred and
sixty-one thousand in favor.
A cotemporarY says that the New
York Herald has changed its pro
gramme, and now goes for Grant on
Mondays instead of Tuesdays—reseiv
ing the latter for its McClellan
Thursday instill its Fremont daY.
Prisoners from Richmond do hot
hesitate to assert as their belief that the
Rebels have already secretly executed a
number of officers attached to colored
regiments. Several have 'disappeared
mysteriously from the Libby, it is said.
A man named Phelps, who die.
Salem, Ct., recently, by his own ag
ment sold his bOdy to a surgeon in
ton for $l,OOO, the money to be ap
priated to the use of his widowed i
ther, and his body to purposes of 5.. 1
tific investigation. His death was
duced by an enormous tumor upon ,
back.
A man named Orson Jones recery
brought a suit against the town of n
dover, for damages for injuries in On
sequence of a defect in the highw4.—
Fle lost his case, as the accident oitur
red on a Sunday evening, while he ---
engaged in taking meat from Si
Reading to Lawrence. ,
The London Morning Post annou
with much formality that the i
prince will be called by his Uri
name, with the prefix of Prince, no
may please the Crown to confer a
age upon him.
Captain Sawyer, recently releqed
from the Libby Prison, has been pro
moted to the post of major in his
meat (the let New. Jersey Cavalry) by
Governor Parker. His new oommisqion .
dates back to last October.
Deacon John Phillips, of Sturbridge,
Mass., will be 104 years old on the 20th
of June next, and has never been severe
ly sick since he was 14 years of age. He
was chosen deacon, in the place of his
father, in 1790.
Mrs. M.umford, widow of the man who
was hung by General Butler at New
Orleans, for trampling on the American
flag, passed through Columbus, S. C., a
few days ago, on her way to Richmond.
Recently, in Salem, Mass.,. died Cap
tain William Story, at the advanced age
of 89} years. He was the oldest brother
of the late Judge Story.
One of the agents of an insurance
company in Hartford, in sending a small
remittance of $12,000 from the West,
the other day, wrote upon the foot - of
the check, "Good for burns !"
J. B. Gough has refused nine hundred
invitations to lecture this season.
Mr. A. T. Stewart's (of N. 71) sales
during the past year have amounted to
nearly the enormous sum of thirty-five
millions of dollars ! His net income
has been given in to the proper authori
ties empowered to levy taxes, at four
millions of dollars.
Widow McClintock, on Oil creek,
was so severely burned, on the 18th ul
timo, by the explosion of some oil she
poured on the fire, that she died on
Tuesday. Mrs. McC. was one of the
original landholders there, previous to
the discovery of the oil, and had become
very wealthy from the production of her
farm.
It is rumored in military circles that
the entire organized militia of the North
is to be called into active service for. a
period of six menthe, to hold certain
strategetical points during , the campaign
against Richmond, which is about to
commence.
We have been informed that the com
missioners of Chester county have re
solved to pay $350 county bounty to all
recruits, to fill up the quota of the coun
ty for 200,000 men. Those who enlist
in Chester county receive a bounty of
$750.
Diarrhcea and dysentery will decimate
the volunteers far more than the bullets
of the enemy, therefore let every man'
see to it that he carries with him a full
supply of Holloway's Pine. Their use
in India and the Crimea saved thou
sands of British soldiers. Only 30 cents
per box.
A Mrs, Cornelia Hill, who died in
Monroe, Connecticut, last week, was
born,• married, and died on the same day
of the month, and the same month in
the, year. A.remarkable coincidence.
It is announced in a dispatch from
Washington, that the:. draft =will •take
place in this State on thn -15th• of
Hon. Oien LovejOY, bi. 0., froth Mi.'
noie, died •in Brooklyn, New York, a
few days since.
INVESTIGATION INTO MORGAN'S ESCAPE.
—The Committee of the Ohio House of
Representatives, investigating the es
cape of Morgan from the Ohio Peniten
tiary, charged the occurrence to tho
carelessness and impropriety of Lieut.
Judkin's upon Gen. Mason's staff, who
had charge of the prisoners. The rebel
officers flattered the vanity of this young
man by consulting him on all matters,
and asking his opinion of the proper
wording of their petitions, &c. He al
lowed orders to pass from the rebel
prisoners to Gen. Mason, requesting
him to deliver to Lieutenant Judkins
sundry articles, such se medicines, gotta
percha buttons, wine, a vice, files and
two dozen watchmakers' or diamond saws:
The saws were on two separate orders.
One of these Orders was signed by Ba
sil Duke. These packages, as well as
the prisoners' mail, were taken in and
out of the prison without going through
the hands of the warden, and without
his knowledge, and in some cases, against
his express orders. The committee say
of this vigilant Lieutenant, that he must
have been destitute of that sense, dis
cretion and firmness which constitute
the good soldier, or wanting in that
moral integrity without which no man
can perform a true soldier's duty. And
while we are of the former opinion, we
think he should be discharged from the
military service of the United States.—
This will probably be Judkin's fate, if
it has not been so already.
MO
-1 .
en-
ar A proclamation from Kossuth is
circulating among the Hungarians who
form part of the Austrian Army in Ve
netia. The ex-Dictator prays his coun
trymen to desert the Austrian flag, de
claring that the Hungarians about to
be freed by an alliance with Italy. The
proclamation adds that the King, who
has merited the title of "gallant man"
from his people, is preparing to lead his
brave army against Austria, and that
all Hungarians who desire the emanci
pation of their country from Austrian
tyranny should rally round his flag.—
Kossuth tells them, in conclusion, that
there is a Hungarian Legion being
formed in Italy, and it is of pressing ne
cesaity to fill its ranks with devoted pa
triots.
was
nth
098
Ifant
tiara
it
!CMZI
ar The Princeton Standard says that
on Wednesday night last a large organ
ized corps of college students sallied
out into our streets, making a ferocious
assault on domestic peace and private
property. Almost every gate, large
and small, that could be got off was
carried away ; in some instances iron as
well as wooden gates were badly broken
and injured. On the previous night
some person or persons perforined the
hazardous feat of ascending the cupola
of the college, on the outside, to the
bell, and robbing that time-honored
mouthpiece of Nassau Hall of its tongue.
The New York Herald's readings
of the sacred hook are original and ca
rious. In defending the practice of
raffling it refers to Scripture examples,
and mentions that, after the death of
Christ, the friends of the Saviour cast
lots for his garments. It so happens
that the lots were cast by the execu
tioners, to whom the garments of the
victims belonged by the usage of the
times.—Exchange.
illar A workman in the Commune of
Le Jarue has succeeded in making bar
rels without hoops as solid as the best
hooped barrels in the world. So at
least asserts a French paper, and the
alleged discovery, which has been a de
sideratum for some three thousand years,
is now undergoing examination before
the Academy of Le Rochelle.
Gir The Chicago people are building
an observatory. It is to have a tele
scope twenty-three feet long, which will
weigh about six tons, or twice as much
as the great ~equatorial at Cambridge,
Mass. Its cost is estimated at eighteen
thousand dollars. Mr. James Dull, of
liarrisbnrg, is one of the contractors for
the erection of the immense work.
lir The Supreme Court of California
has decided -the statute constitutional
which requires attorneys to take the
new oath of allegionce before they are
permitted to continue practice in the
California courts, and some lawyers of
rebel proclivities are removing to Ne
vada Territory, where test oaths of boy
alty are not required.
fir The autograph sale of the Cin
cinnati Sanitary Fair took place last
week. General James Clinton's origin
al Order Book sold for $l6 ;, a manu
script speech of William H. Harrison
for $lO ; B. B. French's "Last Words
of John Brown" for $lO ; Elizabeth
Barrett Browning's autograph for $6 ;
Washington Irving's, $5 50; Jeff. Da
vis', $5 25 ; John Adams', $5 ; Buchan
an's, with a letter of Baron Humboldt,
bought for the sake of the latter, $5.
fir Official advices received from
Arkansas state that there is a steady
return there of citizens to their alle
giance, many prominent rebel officers
being among the number. gen. Albert
Pike hoe, it is averred, made overtures
for an aFunesty.
has`
WLady Dot ' s returned to Ana
tralia, where her husband, Sir William,
the long man, died about two 'years ago.
SPECIAL NOTICES,
ila" Hostetter's Celebrated Stomach Bitters
is one of the greatest strengthening prepara
tions extant. It is especially adapted to those
who are afflicted with the fever and ague, or
any other disease arising from a disordered
condition of the digestive organs. For the fe
ver and ague there is perhaps no medicine in
the world equal to it, as it enters, purifies and
replenishes the blood, which is so important to
bring about healthy action in diseases of this
nature. The Bitters are now among the most
popular, and at the same time, valuable speci
fics in the medicine world. In recommending
it to the public, we are fully conscious of do
ing them a great service, knowing, as we do,
their many excellent qualities, and sure and
speedy action in all cases where the disease is
caused by irregularity of the digestive organs.
A trial will suffice for the most skeptical.
See advertisement. For sale by Druggists
and dealers generally, everywhere. Elm
lEr Da. To.erws' Venetian Liniment :—A
certain cure for pains in limbs and back, sore
throats, croup, rheumatism, colic, &c. A per
fect family medicine, and never fails.
Read! Read!! Read !! !
Livonia, Wayne co., Mich.,
Tune 6, 1859.
This is to certify that my wife was taken with
9,umsey sore throat ; it commenced to swell
and was so sore that she could not swallow
and coughed violently. I used your Lini.
ment and made , a perfect cure in one week.
I firmly believe that but for the liniment she
would have lost her life. John H. Harlan
Price 25c and 50c a bottle. Sold by all drug
gists. Office, No. 56 Courtlandt street, N. Y.
Fear at an end ! No one is now deter
ed from changing the Whisker or Moustache
from red, or grey, or sandy to a rich black or
brown by a fear of injuring or staining the skin.
CIUSTADORO'S HAIR DYE,
IS harmless as water, mild as new milk and
true to nature, in the magnificient colors it
imparts.
Crtstadoro's Hair 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. CarsTanolio,
No. 6 Astor House, New-York. Soldevery -
where ; and applied by all Hair Dressers.
Price $l, $1:60, and $3 per box, according
to size. [M-no. 6.
It =' Eye and Ear : Prof. J. Isaacs, M. D.
Oculist and Aurist, formerly of Ley den, Hol
land, is located at No. 511 Pine-st., Philadel
phia, where persons afflicted with diseases of
the Eye or Ear will be scientifically treated
and cured, if curable. Artificial Eyes insert
ed without pain. No charges made for exam
ination The medical faculty is invited, as
he has no secrets in his mode of treatment.
DZ' Do you wish to be cured? Dr. Buchan's
English Specific Pills cure, in less than 30 days,
the worst cases of Nervousness, Impotency,
Premature Decay, Seminal Weakness, Insan
ity, and all Tridary, Sexual and Nervous af
fections, no matter from what cause produced.
Price, $1 per box. Sent, post paid, by mail,
ou receipt of an order. Address,
James S. Butler, Station D,
Bible House, New-York.
Er Swallow two or throe hogshead.s of "Bu
chit," "Tonic Bitters," "Sarsaparilla," "Ner
vous Antidotes." &c , &c., &e., and after you
are satisfied with the result, then try one box of
Old Doctor Buchan's English Specific Pills
—and be restored to health and vigor in less
than thirty days. They are purely vegetable,
pleasanr to take, prompt asd salutary in their
effects on the broken down and shattered con
stitution. Old and yourg can take them with
advantage. Imported and sold in the United
States only by JAMES S. BUTLER . ,
Station D, Bible House, New-York,
General Agent.
' P. S. A box sent to any address on receipt
of price—which is $1:00 post free.
Use no Otber I Ilticirares Specific Pills
are the only reliable remedy for all diseases of
the Seminal, Urinary and Nervous Systems.
Try one box, and be cured. One Dollar a box.
One box will perfect a cure, or money refund--
ed. Sent by mail on receipt of .price.
JAS. B. BUTLER,
Station D, Bible House, New-York,
General Agent.
SPRING!.
1864,
T. R. DIFFENBACII
Invites attention to a large and handsome
assortment of
New Spring and Summer Goods,
Purchased in Philadelphia and New-York,
consisting in part of
LADIES DRESS GOODS,
Silks, Prints, Lawns,
• Ginghams, Chintzes, Challies,
SHAWLS, NC.,
Together with all kinds of Domestic goods,
such as bleached and unbleached Muslins,
Ticking, Checks, Denims, Funiture Checks,
Drilling, &c., &c.
One case of Prints at 14 cents'a yard.
Case of Bleached Muslins at 14 cents.
Latest style goods for Gentlemen and Boys
wear, Fancy and Black Caisimeres, Tweeds,
Jeans, Cloths, Vestings, &c., &c.,
Large lot of fresh Groceries of all kinds.
Rio and Java Coffee, Teas,
White & Brown Sugar,Fresh Spices,
New Mackerel, Extra Syrups,
Salt, Sugar-Cured Hams, &c.
20 barrels of sugar at 122 cents per pound .
5 Hogsheads Syrup at 60 cents per Gallun.
Miscellaneous.
French Corsets, Traveling Over-Shirts,
Neck-ties, Under-Shirts,
Handkerchiefs, • .Di - awers,
Shirt Fronts, Balmoral Skirts, 4c.
Large lot of Pure Liquors.
He also continues to keep on band a large
supply of superior Brandies, Wines, Gins
Schnidam , s Winos, Diakes, Plantation Bit:
tem, and that superior Old Rye. Persons pur
chasing Liquors can rely upon - getting the best
article at the lowest price the market will afford
-Zi•Highest prices given for country produce.
PRIME GROCERIE Java and
Laguira Coffee; Crashed, Pulverized and
Brown Sugar; Superior Green and Black Tea,
Rice, Cheese and Spices; Syrup and prime ba
king Molasses; Excellent Pearl Barley at
J. R. DIFFENEACIPS.
Er ICK013.1" & Oak Wood, 50 Cords each
Hickory and Oak Wood. Orders must
be accompanied with the cash when they will
be promptly .fille?. Spangler & Patterson.
3000 cP.2,IJILLS alinted'llleGetfßo;
ale at. J. R. DIFFENBACH'S.
TERLINEVS AMBROSIA, for the Hair,
I. just received and for sale at the Drug
Store, of DR. LANDIS.
. .
BANDlES—ailbtande—guarranted, to be
JD genuine. H. D. Beniamin.
B OHLEI V S long celebrated GIN,
H. D. BENJAMIN
Friends and Relatives of the brave
SOLDIEBSKISAILORS,
H OLLOWAY'S PILLS & OHITIOENT
ALL WHO HAVE 'FRIENDS AND
Relatives in the Army or Navy, should
take special care, that they be amply supplied
with these Pills and Ointment; and where the
brave Soldiers and Sailors have neglected to
provide themselves with them, no better pres
ent can be sent them by their 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 relieved, if you desire to do well.—
The Pills, taking according to the printed
instructions, will quickly 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 FATIGUE.
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 may seem 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 a matter of
course. Nothing will stop the relaxation of
the Bowels so sure as this famous medicine.
VOLUNTEERS ATTENTOIN!
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.
Wheless this Ointment will remove the
humors from the system and leave the patient
a vigorous and healthy man. It will require
a little perseverance in bad cases to insure a
LASTING 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 he would only provide himself with this
matchless Ointment, which should be •hrust
into the wound and smeared all around it. then
cover it with a piece of linen from his Knap
sack and compressed with a handkerchief.—
Taking night and morning 6 or S Pills, to cool
the system and prevent inflamation.
Every Soldier's Knapsack and Seaman's
Chest should be provided with these invalua
ble Remedies.
IM PORTA NT CAUTION !—None are genuine
unless the words " HOLLOWAY, NEW Tow.:
and Loa pox," are discernible as a Wake,-
mark in every leaf 01 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 'lamnation as rimy - lead to die
detection of any party or parties counterfeiting
the medicines or vending the same, knowing
them to be spurious.
'.'Soled at the Manufactory of Professor
HOLLOWAY, 80 Maiden Lane, New York,
and by all respectable Druggists and Dealers
in Medicine throughout the civilized world,
in pots or boxes,at 30c.70c. and 51.10eacti.
• N.ll.—Directions for the guidance of patients
in every disorder are affixed to each pot.
DZ' Dealers in my well known, medicines can
have Snow CARDS, CIRCULARS, Nte., sent them,
FItEE OF EXPENSE, by addressing
THOMAS 110.1..r.01VAY,
60 Maiden Lane, New-York.
113 r There is considerable saving by taking
the larger sizes. [Dec 26-ly
The New York Herald
The cheapest paper in the World '
rrliE extensive and comprehensive facilities
I in its possession enables the proprietor of
THE WEEKLY HERALD
to guarrantee the latest and most reliable in
formation possibly to be obtained, not only
from all parts of the United States, but from
all parts of ,the world.
Its home correspondents, engaged at heavy
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military expedition of the government, prove
that it is determined to leave no spot unco
vered by Its operations and no event can occur
that shall not find immediate report in its col
umns. It costs the proprietor over one hun
dred thousand dollars per year to maintain its
corps of correspondents in the
field. -
In its collation of Foreign News the Herald
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endeavor in the future to maintain the stand
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kets, General News, and reports of all events
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1864.
The Weekly Herald is issued every Saturday
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.$2
Three copies, 5
Five copies, 8
Ten copies, 75
Any larger number, addressed to names of
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An extra copy will be sent to every club of
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Twenty copies, to one address, one year,
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Advertisement to a limited number will be
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The Daily Herald, three cents per copy.—
Ten dollars per year for three hundred and
sixty-three issues. Five dollars for six months.
Two dollars and fifty cents for three months.
JAMES GORDEN BENNETT,
Editor and Proprietor.
N. West corner of Fulton and Nassau sts.,
New Yor'tsity, N. Y.
There are no traveling agents for the Herald.
The imeticitn Watches,
THE American Watches are among the best
timekeepers now in use, and for durability
strength and simplicity far surpass any other
watch made in the world.
H. L. lk E. J. Z ARM
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.
Estate of Mrs. Barbara Johnson.
ESTATE OF BARBARA JOHNSON, late
of the Borough of Marietta, Deceased. -
Letters Testamentary on said Estate having
been granted' to the undersigned, residing in
the City of Lancaster, all persons- indebted
thereto are requested to melte iniliiediate set
tlement, and those having claimi4r demands
against the dame, to present them without de
lay for settlement. A. HERR SMITH,
March 12-St. 1 Exscurou