itite cM,atiettiatt. F. L. ..a..7cer, Editor. MARIETTA. PA : -- ----- SATURDAY, NAY 7,1864. „, THE MEIIRETARY'S Porky.-It is im portant to know, so far as possible, the future policy Of the financial minister of the Government; and especially at this time, when, to make gambling specula tions profitable, an uncommon flood of false'assertions and theories damaging to the public credit, are boldly ,circula ted. The excitement got up in Wall,street . by kamtilers in Stodks and Gold, are tel egraphed everywhere—exaggerated— and the outside publiunaturally feel that there is some great wrong somewhere, whea, in fact, there is nothing wrong. There is only a hullaballoo among the bulls inifbeirs. • Mr. Chase will press right on with the National Ten-Forty Loan, just as he has begrin. There . will be no change inge;rate• of interest.. Ho will make no temporary loans or the Banks, but money from 'the people or the Banks at five per cent. interest, payable on ten days' ;notice, as heretofore ; and h'e will ran the nsual line of one-year Certincateit:'Ve the surplus setting• gold from cus oms, a fter aside an amount sufficiant for eix mool.he' interest and use the proCeeds, as the spirit and letter of the law demands, partly in a sinking fund, and partly for the current expenses, of the government. He aPpeals afresh to the people in thie the most trying military and _finan cial peri4Of the Rebellion , to come 14w,iird With;:heart and money. Ile is refincing the. volume of currency graci- Uallx, , and will continue to do so. If the etnclipd,gold gamblers shall again •at teupt the` genie .12ey, played last week, he will bring the whole power of the its, whole means, both sir and abroad„ to checkmate them. - The:Becritary of the Treaeury relies a'renithe Feople for the ways an means; Airpy vio'tories, and upon ogress idignite taxation. Theyeopin will come to his help with 4e14. 44 th . at Oen beLaPpropriated. This i s their true interest ; it is their safety. '11 , 0; armies now will do ttiefr - Pait- - --:there ,alternative but victory. Congress will -do its duty—it 'dare find failtdr. TiV.thosiVavitlallsts who complain thetlitdr.TilittrunglA to pay a higher 'fiteltif.iiiiiiiitelf i we•say, pointedly, that e b lied cent, Übligation againet the . I.ifferiet&Panple idbetter than a bond 6614-higher rate of interest. For why? tenrAloney righteously invested, free Trim tixtertien;•generously invested, for dolirAy'S' cause, is, and will be through all time, Valid. We learn from Mr. Bowman, Cashier • ofl-he'Pirst National Bank of Marietta, that 'Over three hundred thousand dol. `lei Of 'these Bonds - have been sold at our Bank. This loan will, unqUestiona bly, b t as popular as the 5-20 in a short time. Capitalists should not allow this faVorable opportunity for a fine invest 'meritto pigs heedlessly. slar From the present condition of the National Bank bill in Congress, there is not .the least doubt but that Bich a Measure will pass as will meet, in the most efficient manner, the neces sities Of the country. One great feature of it will be Co bring all the State banks under the National law, so, that, in a little while we shall have National paper money only. To this end, a tax will be levied upon the circulation of State Bank notes for a time, when they are to be totally prohibited. lar The fate of the bill to increase se tters' pay depends on the'passage of the new tax bill. The Senate passed a bill equalizing the pay of black and white soldiere. This was sent to the Rouse Committee, which bad agreed to raise the,pay of privates to sixteen dollars, • but it was defeated through the influ ence of Frank Blair, who reduced the pay-:o!colored troops to thirteen `dollars. The measure now hangs fire, and may go =over for the present session. -Art is a mistake to suppose that the , draft has been indefinately postponed. The instructions, as we understand them to the- Provost Marshals are, to be otelid3i.to proneed just as soon as the lidjutinf General at Washington, can out, from be rolls; the credits g4 4 hOilvarsit,d'bil alltrived in each State, ? &nay- and'Distrint. Just as • soon as ascertained, , the draft will go we think can be relied on as 145)*(let„ 4. widow named Blackstock, in Alla: foi - ra, shot a man named Simplon ettiw days eines bacause be broke - a *arrie4,engagenteift With her. Situp- Won survived the wononant the dieap: pointed - woman threatens one that will prove fatal. The Union State Convention which met in Harrisburg on Thursday oflast weekkielected the following elec toral ticket: : BENATonur... Morfon 31'tdiehael, Philadelphia. Thomas H. Cunningham, Beaver county. REPRESENTATIVE. I—Robert P. King, 21—George Morri;on Coates, 3—Henry Bumm, 4—William H. Kern, s—Bartin H. Jenks, 6 Charles M. Rank, 7—Robert Parke, B—Aaron Mull, 9---john A. lliestand, 10—RAchard H. Corryell, 11--Edward Holiday, 12—Charles F. Reed, 13—Elias W. Hall, 14—Charles - H. Shriner, 15—John Wistar, M'Conatighy, •17—Da . vid W. Wood., 18—Isaac Benson, - 19-4ohn Patton, 20—Samuel B. Dick, 21—Everard Bierer, 22—John P. Penney, 23—Ebenez'r M'Junkin, 24—JOhn' W. Blanchard, The members of the State Central Committee froni this county are Messrs. O. J. Dickey and Peter Martin. Hon. Simon Carneron, Hon. A. 'K. McClure, Hon. Morrow B. Lowry, and Hon. W. 'W. Ketcham, were elected delegates to the National Union Con vention at Baltimore. Resolutions urging the nomination of President Lincoln forre-election, thank ing the Legislature for giving the right of saffrage to soldiers, and returning thanks to the soldiers in the field, were adopted. After several speeches the convention adjourned aihe die. WORKING BOTH W AM.-- The crowd of deserters from the United States, or persons subject to the draft, has been so large in Canada, and the competition for employment so great,,that the young and, enterprising Canadians are driven to immigration as, a means of getting eninething,better to do, than remain at home on poor wages. Every steamboat crossing over to •the United States, brings, a load of young Canadians' seek idg, eMploymeut in • the United States, sdkne destined for the army, and some seeking agricultural employment. Itirr.aurres.—General Order No. 252 issued at Washington in July last, thus lays down' the law of retaliation: "For every soldier of the United States killed in violation of the laws of war a rebel soldier shall be executed ; and for every one enslaved by the leerily or sold into slaiery, a rebel soldier shall be placed at hard labor on the public works, and continued at inch labor until the other shall be released and receive the treatment duel to a prisoner of war." eir A farmer, in Canada, recently lost his wife;and,on the day appointed forth° funeral, when the guests were assembled, he persisted in postponing the funeral.. Several sympathizing friends, who endeavored to reconcile him to a final leave of the loved re mains, elicited from the distracted man the fact that he had been disappointed in the attendance of a professional gen tleman, to extract several teeth con taining gold filling, which had cost him $l2 some leers previous. eir In London, a few years ago, the 'butchers combinei'd to put up the' price of meat, and the people resisted it, re solving to Consume' the article'but three times a week ; the result was a tumble in prices, that must happen here would people do the same thing, not only in regard to meat, but to every other arti cle which is .inordinately high, and the partial consumption of which can be dispensed with, . igar Narman Chaffee, of South Wil. brahaM, Mass., Who died a few days since, had his coffin in his house for more than twelve years before. He made it himself, sawing the boards in his own sawmill. He also dug his own grave two years ago, walled and cement. ed it, prepared a large stone to cover it and erected a monument suitably in scribed, leaving a blank to be filled with the date of his death. air A sad affair occurred in Barps well, Maine, a few days ago, by which two little daughters of James Linnett, aged six and , eight years, were drowned. They had been to gather shells to put on their mother's grave, and while re turning across the stream the tide came in and swept them under. When found they were clasped in each other's arms. The Governor of Ohio has issued an order calling the National Guard of that State into service for one hundreddays, the troops to be clothed armed and fed by the United States government. The widoW'of Dr. Kitto has present ed a copy of her husband's last work, "Daily Bible . Dltistiations," to the Prin. cess of Wales, who has been pleased to accept the gift. .A.-man in LeekportNew York, last week disgorged alizard, wide)) had grown to °s l arge elm and then -dewed irrr his stomach. Thermaundied-soon wafter the., remains of the animal had been expelled. (A a A General News items. Green, the murderer, has just been sentenced to be hanged. Of a family of eleven children living in Middlesex, Canada, seven are deaf and dumb. The descendant of a Prince of the an- Merit Amorique, Count de Verrocq, has jest died at the poor-bo use in Paris. A bill will be introduced in the Sen ate appropiating $200,000,000 to pay the western militia, now being called out for one hundred days' service. The. Steamer Susquehanna, used kos ,a ferry and towboat between Columbia and Wrightsville, was formerly employ- ed as a ferry and towboat at Sunbury, At a recent sale of autographs in L• on don,. foar letters , of Washington—one written in 1788 in favor of a union of the States, against the idea of their sep erste sovereignty, brought 890.56. All the heavy artillerymen of Massa chusetts have•been'ordered to -Washing ton, and the State militia called out to man the fortifications during their ab• Bence. Dr, IKirklaridge, in his report of the Insane Asylum , of Pennsylvania, notes the enormous increase of female patients whose insanity is caused by the loss of relatives in war. It is not a little singular that the nearest relative to George Washington, now living, holds an important position in the rebel army, and that the only son or Zachary Taylor is also a leader in the rebel ranks. The Governor of Indiana has issued a call for 20,000 troops. The Governors of Illinois, lowa and Wisconsin will also soon call out morn men for the purpose of liberating veteran troops and making the campaign decisive. A cow in Washington fell into a sew er last week, and battled all attempts to extricate her. She devours all the, slops thrown through the grating, but still the police have failed in .every way to get her out. The Secretary of the Treasury ac knowledges the receipt of $2 50 from a clergyman of the Catholic church, to whom the money was paid. through the confeesional, by a person who acknowl edged it'to be due the United States. Military feeling is high in Ohio. Ev ery member of the National Gaard is obliged to report in person,'Or by soh. stitute, when ordered out.. GovernOr Morton, of Indiana, propiises to 'com mand the troops of that State in perion. Major UenPral Butler has% written a letter denting the statement that he had threatened to resign or; acconnt of the appointment of f;en. Smith to the command of the troops in his Depart merit. • The Maryland State,Authorities have selected a site for the intended monu ment on the battle field of• Antietam. The position selected is about the centre of the battle field and upon the right side of the road leading into the town of Sharpsburg. It was admitted in a rebent 'de bate in the House of Commons that du ring the last ten years Ireland has lost two and a half millions'of its population, and that the ekodusls still 'going on at the rate of 'one bundred snd twenty thousand per annum. The Governors of several ofthe north western; States have offered to the pres ident the services of 100,000 men for 100 days, to act as a reserve for the Army of the Potomac. The offer has been accspted, and the men will, it is thought, be raised by the 26th of May. ----- Eighty mounted rebels entered Ken tucky through Pound Gap, on Tuesday, but were immediately driven out by a detachment of Kentucky mounted in fantry, killing several ariO:i4Xpturing several. Rot Kentucky - 410r4orted free from rebels now. . *.- On Monday last, three regtm tits of colored troops, fully equipped, passed throngh the streets of Baltimore. Just three years ago from that day, a Bald more mob assaulted Alassachusetts sol diers who were on the way to the de. fence of the national capital. The Mon umental city has improved in sentiment. The printers of Atlanta,.. Georgia, having "struck" for-43187 per thousand ems, the four journals published at that place have been compelled to suspend publication. As soon as the printers quitted work, however, the conscript officers seizad them and marched them off to camp. After the capture of the Garrison at Plymouth, N. C. , the colored soldiers were shot by the rebels. This seems to be the "policy" of the'rebel barbarians, and it is now about time that our gov- ernment should take bold and decisive measures to protect all men who - wear the national uniform by its authority, A Chattanooga paper says that while the rebels bald Lookout Aquotain,tbey made sleeping plaees i of, flat stones is sheltered places, Some would bold fifteen or twen'ty •persous.',; In.-these pared' r onehes=4laget fires. were:.:b El mad„ThEiV - 00&634151 tbe"noafamd - ashes 'were raked stdby bed the Bilivering tadii3rwilitigosed.thatn solves for (deep. A REMARKABLE MILITARY COMPANY.- Company D, of the 47th Pennsylvania regiment, shows a most remarkable re cord as regards the relationship of the men. There are four brothers and a cousin, all named Powell. There are five brothers, all named Brady, three brothers named Baltzer, three brothers named Krozer,and three brothers named Harper, who are also brothers-in-law of' the captain. There are two brothers and a cousin named Shaffer, and a father and two sons named Tag. Perhaps the most singular circumstance is the pre ,sence of six pairs of brothers, named Clay, Reynolds, Vance, Charles; Antho ny, and Vertig ; also two . step-brothefs named Baldwin and Taylor . , These,men are all mainly of the old Holland stock, and lived within a circuit of fifteen miles. They are all re-enlisted men, but two.or three. gir The State legislature adjourned on Thursday. In the general appropri ation bill, fifty thousand dollars is voted to enlarge the capitol and depnitmental accommodations. A handsoMe private mansion has been 'purchased for the residence of the Governor, twenty thou sand dollars of the cost of which is con tributed by the people of Harrisburg.— The session has continned much longer than there was the least necessity.— Business was delayed shamefully. Had the meMbers not spent nearly half their time; in. Philadelphia, and anxious to dircharge their duties properly and hon estly, an adjournment could heve taken place by the first of. April just as Well as now. iligr At the launch of the iron-clad CataWaba, on Wednesday last at Cin cinnati, Ohio, some 200 men, women and children were standing very near the water's edge, although - repeatedly warned of their danger. When the ves sel struck the water an immense wave rolled shoreward completely submerging those who stood in its-way. It was lu dicrous to see these 200 persons crawl ing out of the water like so many drowned.rats.. The subsequent waves after thedirst, were not.so strong, and finally, the involuntary bathers,screaming for assistance, succeeded in scrambling out of their unpleasant predicament. fir We See by an exchange that the merchatits of Chicago have presented to an editor of that city', a thousand dollars' worth of printing paper, as a Now Year's gift. We have strong inclina tion to Move to that country.' - Editors are evidthitly tippreciated there: Here, instead of receiving presents, they make the public a present of several thousand dollars' worth of printing . paper eveiy year ;or what amounts to the same thing, they send theit'papers to subscri bers who, promise to pay but don't. tur o-a co end men tof the Senate to the .Army Appropriation Bill, equali zing the pay, ttc., of colored soldiers with those of the other soldiers or the Union, was adopted on Saturday last, by the decided vote of 81 to 49. This measure is only one of the commonest justice; withoht it, what claim can we have upon the patriotism. and gratitude of the 150,000 colored men in arms fight ing for the Union ? lir A subtnarine boat has b , :en bath at La Rochelle. bhe carries a spur at her bow, which is formed like a tube and incendiary shells may be placed in it. Should an enemy's fleet be at adchor, the Plongenr will drive her spur into the dearest ship, and then retreat, uncoiling at the same time a metallic wire, When at . a safe distance, an electric' spark' will cause a great explosion, the enemy's ship beingblown up. or Governor. Brou gh of ;Ohio, has ordered's general muster of the militia of the State on the 25th of April. This order.excites great interest, as it is sup• posed to be preliminary to an order from the General Government calling out the entire militia of the loyal States to per form garrison duty and guard against a rebel.invasion, while the veteran troops are pressing the enemy in front. far The rebel papers intimate that Gni. Johnston is concentrating a pow erful army in Northern Georgia. Bish op Polk's fifteen thousand men are said to have returned. The greater part of Gen. Beanregald's command has also joined him, with a large levy of raw Georgia troops. The bulk of the rebel army lies at Tunnel QM, and skirmish ing with our outpo;tioccurs daily- ter 'rho miasma and Foul vapors gen erated by the. hot sun will be Jar more deadly to our volunteers than the ene my's bayonets. In the Indian and Cri mean campaie:ns. Holloway's Pills were used -in enormous quantities. ,They kept the ,troops in perfect health. Only 30 cents per box. Soldiers supply yourselves.. • GE- Vice .President Stevens, of the rebel,confederacy, is said to be, since his sickness, more fleshlesi than ever, a thing that one Wouid . possible. Be has so his bones that 0 " soul, it can a soul inca ver., Joan inter ; A SENSIBLE CONCT.USION.—The Lon don Times, which has been discouraging the emigration to America of the Irish, now says, ''it is better to encourage emi gratiort than to maintain these people at the expense of the Giivernment."— Just so, as an able-bodied laborer can earn more in a day in this country than he can in a week in Ireland, the induce ment to go abroad is not to be resisted. The bill before Congress to encourage immigration, will add largely to the numbers already on the way here. fir The Knoxville Whig and Venti lator, Parson Brownlow's paper, con tains the following in reference to the rebels under Chalmers,, who butchered the garrison of Fort Pillow after it had surrendered : • "Had we our wish, we would throw hell wide open, and place all such beast-like officers and men upon an in clined plane, at an angle of forty-five degrees, the plane covered with hog's lard six indhes thick, with a' wicket at the bottom, and send - them, as one stream of traitors, robbers, And assassins into the hottest part of the infernal re . gions." • . illar A desperate 'encounter occurred a few days since in,Washington between Hole•in-the-Day, the chief off the Chip pewas, and , Look-Around, one of his young warriors. The latter bred a pis tol, the ball from which entered near the right ear of the chief, passing around his head and , coming out of his mouth.— He lies in a critical condition. Look- Around had his 'face injured with a pocket-knife in the hands of Hole-in-the- Day. SPECIAL NOTICES, IQ— Green and Purple- Hair are often' the results of applying the ordinary dyes.. The only safe article which invariably produces any shade of color desired, from a fine amber brown to the intensest black is CRISTA DORO'S HAIR DYE. It pervades every fibre from the root to the tip with thitinge required, and actually feeds the hair with the aliment which is requisite to promote its growth, its lustre, its permanence and its beauty. . Crestadoro's flairPreservalire, is invaluable With his Dye, as it imparts the utmost softness and the most 'beautiful gloss and great vitality to the hair. Man, ufectured by J. Catsrs DORO, No. 6 Astor House, New-York. SoldeVery where, and applied by all Hair Dressers. Price $l, $1:50, and's3 per box, according to size. • (11n. 13 Females! Females I Females! Use that safe, pleasant remedy known as iini.st notn's-ErrnapT Ekren q• For all complaints incident to the sex. No family should be without it, and none will when once tried by them. It is used by Young and Old. In the decline or change-of life, before and alter marriage, during and after confinement, to strengthen the- Nerves, restore Nature to its proper channel, and, invigorate the Woken down coustiution, from whatever cause origi nating. Use no more worthless Pills . Take Hembold's .Eztract Buchu.. See advertisement in another column. _ _ _ Da. Toes s' Veaetian,Liniment t—More testimony ! This is to certify that for the _last Eve' years I have used in my family Dr. ,To bias' celebrated Venetian Liniment, and in every, instance have found it fully equal to his recommendations. I have.found it togive almost instantaneous.relief in cases of tooth eche, croup, bilioua,colic, sore throat, pain in the chest and back, and rhenmatism,,and cheerfully' recoinmend its tiisl to everY nne afflicted' with any one of the above-named diseases. TAR: H. WARNER. Hartford Conn., Oct. 16th, 1861. Price 25c and 50ce. bottle.. Sold by all drug ests.: Office, No. 56 Conrilandt street, N. Y,.. rie• Swalloiv two or throe hogsheads of 54.1Su chu," Bitteis," "Sarsaparilla," “Ner vous. Antidotes," itc., &c., ,and after you are satisfied with the result, then try one bo?t,of Old Doctor BuChan's English Specific Pills —and be restored to health and vigor in less than thirty days. They'are purely vegetable, pleasant to take, prompt asd salutary in their effects on the Woken down and shattered con stitution. Old and yourg can take them with advantage. Imported and sold in the United States only by JAK ES S. Burt.na, Station D, Bible House, Hew-York, General Agent. receipt. of S. box sent to any address on receipt of price-L-which is .$1:00 poet free. 113.. Eye , and Ea; Prof. J. Isaacs, M. D: Oculist and Aurist, formerly of Leyden, Hol land, is located at No. 511 l'ine-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. 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, nn matter from what cause produced. Price, $1 per box. Sent, post paid, by mail, on receipt of an order.. Address, James S. Buller, Station D, Bible Holise, New-York. 11:31 Use no Other! BUCHAN'S 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 wilLperfech a cure, or.money refund ed. Sent by mail on receipt of price. • JAS. S. BUTLER, Station D, Bible House, New-YOrk, General Agent. and having prc, sod other necessary mt.are: Ferry across the river, at a , m. to 8 p. m., iritboutq safety,. all ~persoso. cattle, freight, &c., tliat mi sections witECall peskie r moderate. stay, 186 T_T_ .S_ 10-40 4111 La These Bonds are issued under the 4el of Con • gress of Match Stb, 1864, which provides that all Bonds issued under this Act sha H be EX- EMPT FROM.TAXATION by or under any state or municipal authority. Subscriptions to these Bonds are received in United State. notes or notes of National Banks. They are TO BE REDEEMED IN COIN, at the plea- sure of the Government, at any period not less than ten months nor more than forty year/ from their date, and until their redemption FIVE PER CENT. INTEREST WILL BE. PAID IN COIN, oa Bonds of,riot over one hundred, dol/arn anuuaur and on alt=-other Bonds semi-annually. The interest is pay- able ori the firstdays of March sad Septem. ber in each year Subscribers wilt receive eitier Registered or Coupon fronds, as they may prefer. Reg . istered Bonds are recorded on the books of the U. S. Treasurer, and , can ; be transferred only on the owner's order. are payable to bearer, cud are more conve nient for commercial uses. Subscribers to this loan will• have the op. tion of having their Bonds drstv interest from . • Mardi Ist, by paying the accrued interest in coin—(oi in United States notes, or the notes of National Banks, adding fifty per cent. for premium) o receive them drawing intereK from the date of subscription and deposit. As theft Bonda are Exempt from Municipal or State Taxation, their value is increased from one to three per cent. per annum, according to the rate of tax levies in vaiioue parts of the country. At the present rate of premium on gold they pay Over Eight Per Cent Interest in curthicy - , and are of equal convenience 14 a pprmanent or temporary inveatmeat It is believed that no securities offer so great inducements to lendertv as the various descriptions of U. S. Bonds. In all other forms of indebtedness, the faith or ability of private parties or stock companies or /*perste coairnuuities only is pledged for payment, while for the debts of the United States tl,e vihote property of the country i• holden t, secure the payment of both ptinmpal and. in terest in coin These bonds may be subscribed for in sums from up to any . miguituae, on the ssm terms, and aka thu9 made equally to the smallest lender and the largest espitat- ibt. Tkiey can be cow:cited i/210 Inonty ea any moment, and the :holder mall, hive benefit of the interest It mad• be useful to . 4titte in tbia eorinettia:, ttAtt the total Funded Debt of the LT03t,.1 Slates on whiete interest is 'payatrie iu gui.i, on' the 3d day of Maroh, 1359, waa 87674,96 000. The interest on this debt for the comm.; fecal year wili he $45,937,1tti, tvhile the CL:2. tows revenue in gold for the current ri4es.j. year, ending : June 30th, 1564, hug been 90 fa: at the rate of over $100,C03,000 per annax It Will be seen that even the prearnt go:1 revenues a! the Goverdritcat are htr6vlyto excess of the wants of the Treasury for tba payment of the gold interest, while the recent increase of the built' will doubtless raise the annual receipts from customs on the same gmount of iinportations, to $150,000,000 per DIEM Instructions to the National Banks acting- as i 041) agents were no issued from the United State Treasury until March 2t3, but in the first three weeks of Aptil the subscriptions averaged more than TEN. MILLIONS A WEEK Subscriptions will be received by the First National Bank of Philadelphia, Pa Second National Bank of Philadelphia, PA Third National Bank of Philadeldhia. Ya And by all National Banks which are depositaries of Public money, and all RESPECTABLE BANKS Sr; BANKERS throughout the eountri, (acting as scent,' of the National DepOsitarylra,) will fumi6b further information on application and AF FORD 'EVERY FACILITY ,TO SUBSCRI • BERS. • pminside. -gcilee-$. Stribiner attU el:rants-Km WOULD most resciectfullilake this means of informing his friends and the public generally that he has commenced the drawing of DEEDS, • • MORTGAGES, JUDGMENTS, hid in fact everything in the ConvevAnciso line. Having gratuitous intercourse with a member'of the Lancaster Bar, will enable him execute instruments of writing with accuracy. He can be found at the office of "SUF. MAititrrian,” on Front street, or at his res idence on Market street, a,square west of the " Donegal Rouse," Mariet ta. lai - Blanic Deeds, Mortgages, Judgments and Leases always on hand and,for.sale. Executor& Notice. Estate of Henry Sultibach, late of the Borough - of Marietta, Deceased. Letters Testamentary on said estate har ing been granted to the undersigned, all per sons indebted thereto are requested to make immediate settlement, and those having claims or demands against the same will present them without delay for settlement to the undersign ed, residing in the Borough of Marietta. AARON GABLE. C NRISTLAN 'STIBGEN, Executors. Nrietta, April 26, 1564-6 t. 'Coupon Bonds Country -311 will te VS, .... =EI made All l‘larite -$,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers