Zile mariettian. ..„.„ , .... ;14,; ,; "'AYibl, F. L. ..czicer, Editor, MARIETTA, PA : SATURDAY, MAY 14, 1864, digr As'We go to piess, alt is excite: ment--the war news so encouraging that every person feels like dropping everything and going into a general jollification., The Fates can hardly now prevent our taking Richmond. The. Army of the Potomac has had a series of.successes since Sunday last. Or The Sword Contest at the Metro politan Fair, New . York, was of very doubtful „propyiety. A 6llar was charged fora vote, in favor of the pres entation of.a, sword to: the most worthy Genetal. The contest was soon narrow ed down betiveen Lieut. Gen. Grant, and the. T . send o gene - nil McClellan, and the*grefitest effort was made in behalf of the littei by the rebel sympathizers who abound so largely in New York, to carry-off the sword for him. For two weeks the daily, voting, ended in favor of McClellan, but at the very close of the fair, on Saturday evening, the tables were suddenly and surprisingly turned. The friends of the noble chief at the head of,the Union armies made an over whelming rally, and achieved the victory for God arid our country by over fifteen thousand . .majiiiity I=ln alluding to the suhject of the voting, the N. Y. Eve ning Polit states that Mrs. Grant was at the fair",,but was not generally recog nized, and:that she cast her vote (on the sword. qnestion) for Gen. McClellan. be puzzled to decide Whether tine Was magnanimity 'or 'scar cest°. The presence of Mrs. McClellan almost all the time at a table but two steps from and in fall view of the sword voting-booksehas been widely noted, while the-persistent absence of Mrs. Grant has been equally. observed. Bow ever,the, decision,may fall, .[ the paper not then knowing the result, it is mat ter of history that on the one aide noth ing that could be done by the magne tism of personal attention was omitted, while on the other there were the oppo sites of studied absence, utter indiffer . once as to the result, and something just at the close which looks very much like a delicate bat pointed condemnation of the contest. The sub-committee on the conduct of the war, consisting of Senator Wade and. Representative Gooch, have return ed frgm Fort Pillow. They took fifty seven depositions, all of which more than confirm the newspaper accounts of the massacre. They say that it would be impossible to exaggerate the, cruelties , committed. Among the witnesses ex amined is the negro who was buried alive and who•dug hithself out of his own grave. There is no doubt of the fact that one .dr more persons were nailed through .their flesh.to pieces of wood, and then 'buried alive. Not only on the day of the surrender were Aheie fiendish acts perpetrhted, but .on-the next day in cold blind. The victims seen by the com mittee were most of them cutand pierced in the face and eyes with bayonets and kivoyds, while other parts of their bodies were maimed and disfigured either by steel or lead. ear Provost Marshal Fry has given notice to the States of Ohio, Penney!. vania, Massachusetts, New Jersey and Missouri, that a draft will be at once tuade and for the Provost—Marshals in the several districts to prepare . their blanks &c. . In some portions of this State the draft will,eertainly take place. The deficiency of the State in the,aggre gate t is about 18, 000. Ohio is only 2000 . .behiud. It is .a source of deep regret that 'Pennsylvania skOuld be laggard when the emergency is so great. oar Governor Curtin has received positive assurance from the War De. pirtmentlhat the Pennsylvania Reserves should be -mustered out of service at the end of three years. from the time they en tered the iState; service. t. They did not , olulterithe Federal service till two months after they were sworn into the State ser mice., They come-to recruit and re-en has. Their return will, however, ..be a lose, Gen. Grant,of 500.9 of 140 most effective men for the grouter part of the Ammer campaign,: t'• 'NW The transp'o'rt steamer Collin, from North Carolina, arrived at New cYork on Wednesday, and brings' the •Tietsrkiddlars of the evacuation of Wash • itiktan. ,OVer4o,:oo6loyalpeople, black and,White, have been abandoned to the rebels,' who have already .commenced thoSe *lib have accepted prefililetti Lincoln's amnesty proclama , ante families of the loy,al. North ila r roligtalseldjera have also been render ed Or 3n eohauge says--There thiiig inexWreseibly • sweet about little girls. The Lottii;rillei it grows ou 'era as they get bigger." PENNSYLVANIA AND THE DRAFT-: It LS now positively fixed that the localities in Pennsylvania which have not furnished in full their quotas making up the en tire number called for from the State, will be compelled to resort to the draft to settle their accounts with the War Department. To these proceedings we have no objections to urge, nor will the localities thus deficient or negligent in filling up their quotas, have a just cause of complaint. In making a call for troops, a fair time has always been afforded every district to complete their enroll ment; while the Facilities contained in the law on the subject were of a char acter to render the rigors of conscription comparitively,light., Hence, the district no,w4eficient, cannot complain if the' draft is vigorously and even sternly en forced. , ar The Baltimore p American's special correspondent says: "The flag-of -truce New York arrived at the Naval Acade my wharf from City Point with 34 pa roled officers and 364 men. Such was the condition of the latter that every man of them was admitted to the hospi tal. One hundred and fifty had to be carried from the Water on stretchers end ears. Their looks and words abun dantly testify that their miserable condi tion has been produced by starvation, and many are undoubtedly pick the reach of medicine or nourishment. Among the Officers is Colenel Rose, of the 77th Pennsylvania Regiment, who was the chief engineer of the tunnel by which so many of our officers escaped in February last, he having been recap tured. • Itir The Governors of. Ohio, Illinois and Indiana, with General Heintielman, met in Indianapolis on Friday, to con sult, it is presumed, upon grave matters of state. It is intimated that these dis tinguished gentlemen are apprehensive of a rebel raid upon that border, and one object of their council is to provide the means, of defence by the militia of the States interested, in case of such an attack. It is also rumored that it is the intention of the Federal authorities to call, out the militia of the States for sixty days , to garrison the defences of Washington while the Army of the Po tomac is advancing upon Richmond, so that all the effective troops can be em ployed in the capture of the rebel cap ital. fir Mr. Peter Bocelle died in Oswe go o n the 17th ul . t., at the age of 110 years, 4 months and 26 'days. The old veteran retained his consciousness to the last. Mr. Bocelle was of French descent, born in Brooklyn, N. Y., April 22, 1753. He has had two wives, the second of whom is now living, and is 82 years of age. He has had in all twenty five children, mostly boys. The oldest, a male, died at the age of 82. He en joyed life, possessing a contented mind, and with a heart ever grateful for the benefits bestowed by a kind Providence, he was, although a poor, a happy man. er Dr. Evan Pagh, a very difitin guished Agriculturist, died at Belle fonte, Pa., on the 20th ultimo. Dr. Pugh was a native of Chester county, and in early life set out in a most enthusiastic pursuit of scientific knowledge, attend ing lectures in. England, .France and Germany, on science to its applicability to agriculture, attaining in his course the position of principal at Rotherham farm, in 'Yorkshire, one, of the most dis tioguished honors in the field of agri cultural pursuits. He was soon after called to preside over and organize the JAgricultural College of Pennsylvania. far A singular accident occurred in Cleveland, Ohio, a few days ago. An old, gentleman was passing a couple of ladies on the sidewalk, when his foot caught in the crinoline of one of them, and he fell backward, striking his bead violently against the bottom of a lamp post, laying open his scalp and stunning him. Be was taken into a neighboring dwelling house and his wound dressed. It was feared his skull was fractured by tho blow, but the injuries proved not to be dangerous, though, in view of his age, serious results might have been feared. a% As William Howard, of Ashford, Conn., a few days ago, was playing ball, he.missed catching the ball, and it struck his left eye with such a force as to knock it completely oat of the socket so . that the eyeball hung by the roosenea cords an inch and.a half from its place. It was a hard knock, but the eye was re placed, and bids fair to retain its former usefulness. A lady in, Louisville," ,Kentucky, on stepping from her room to the porch, Na few nights since, was horrified at find ing the bloody corpse of a man lying across her threshold. The man was genteelly diessed, and had on his person a large amount of money. The - police can get , no clue to the mysterious mur der. far An expedition recently sent up the Washita, river as, far as Monroe, by Admiral Porter, captured three , • thous and biles of rebel cotton, brought away eight hundred negroes and destroyed much - rebel property. , ,The , .eipedition was under:LioutOnant Onm.Toiteriland : i Was particularly stfccesdful. - • -5rn'&THE General :News Items. Several women in Lemberg, Gallicia, have recently been flogged by the mili tary authorities for insulting sentinels. Three-fourths of the type-setting done in Massachusetts, out of Boston, is done by female compositors. The Hon. Simon Cameron has been chosen chairman of the Union State Central Committee. It is proposed in New York to intro duce into the churches "invalid pews' and sleeping pews." The net proceeds of the Cincinnati Sanitary Fair are officially stated at $234, 500. It is published that several young ladies in New Orleans are studying den-, tistry. A new balmoral shoe factory at Hart ford is so arranged that a shoe goes through thirteen different hands, and comes out complete in ten minutes. It is proposed to use the White House for a Department of State and for official receptions and to build the President a new house in the suburbs. A. J. Baily, a well known citizen of Armstrong county, was- recently drown ed in the Allegheny river, at Manor ville, his place of,residence. Be had fallen asleep'on , a:hench close to 'the brink of the river and was drowned. The Maryland Commissoners are be. ginning to pay the Government bounty of three hundred dollars to loyal slave owners for each of their men who have been enlisted. Secession sympathizers don't receive a dime. Three brothers named Hudgins, who took the oath after deserting from _the Rebel army, and then found employment in one of the Government repair shops in Washington, have been discharged by Colonel Ingraham for rejoiceing over the Fort Pillow massacre. Dr. Evan Pugh, Principal of the State Agricultural College, died suddenly on last Friday night, near Bellefonte. Dr. Pugh was,a native of Chester county, and in early life set out in scientific pur suits, and attained the highest honors in the field of agricultural knowledge. The scheme for the removal of the capitol to Philadelphia was finally killed in the House by a'vote of 71 to 19—a most extraordinary change of sentiment effected in two weeks by ,the force of public opinion. All our members voted against it, in which they did right.. Mrs. Elizabeth Barriuni, residing in Brooklyn, gave_ birth on Friday night, to four children'--three boys and one girl. The childrenwere all alive and - well form ed, but have since died. Coroner Bar ret was notified to hold an inquest ou the bodies of the infants. The mother of the children is an Irish woman and the father e German. Tho city councils of Baltimore has passed a resolution appropriating $2,500 for displays of fireworks tit certain places in that city, and directing the Mayor to issue a proclamation inviting a display of flags from all residences and the ship ping, and foi the ringing of bells and firing of a salute at sunrise and sunset, on the ensuing Fourth of July. At Port Allegheny, Pa., a few days ago, a funeral procession was passing over a bridge to bury a child of Mr. George Moore, ,when the bridge : gave way, and precipitating the, mourners in to the water, another child belonging to Hr. Moore was drowned, together with tbree of his brother's children, and one or two other lives were lost. A planter near Fort Pillow is repOrt ed :as saying that Forrest informed . him that his men had already buried three hundred and sixty negroes, and that the last one in the fort would be buried be fore they left. As there were only, four hundred negroes in the fort, there would he but few survivors to -this, the, most fiendish butchery that ever disgraced the world. The Governor of New York has, ten dered to the War Department the use of- the militia regiments for the defence of the forts around New York and glee where on the , frontiers. He thinks this desirable as well to relieve the regular troops detained within the State for such purpose, as to afford the , National Guard a desirable opportunity for drill and practice. • In Gen. Bnrnside's Corps, which pass ed through Washington, was a colored brigade, belonging to Gen. Pot!er's Division. As they passed along, their fine soldierly bearing and good march ing elicited general praise and they :were loudly cheered. Gen. Potter is a son or Bishop Potter, of the Diocese of Penn sylvania, and he will have about 16, 000 colored troops in his Division. The Newcastle Chronicle was estab lished in 1764, and on the centenary day which occurred Marcia 24, the proprie tors reprinted the first number for pre sentation'to their subscribers. On the first page`was an advertisement calling for a man and wife to take nliarge .,, of a bachelor's mitablishment andAlte reprint had notrionf been issued before a num ber of 'people' applied fiir the TheY wei:e'sliOhtlfastetiished to 'bear , Viet; thiii 'll Atflitirila years too' late. DEAR LIVING.-A young man who on the 28th ult. escaped from Richmond, called upon ns yesterday, says the Phil adelphia North American, There are those who believe that the publication of starvation prices of provision in Rich mond is made only for abet. Accor ding to the statement of this young man the tale is an o'er true one. He states that the traitor government is conscrip ting every male between the ages of 17 and 70, with a remorselessness that knows no relenting. The following were the prices asked for the articles named. Flour, $350 per bbl. Calico, $l5 per yard. Corn Meal, $1 per lb. Boots, $3OO per pair. Sugar, $l5 per lb. ' Coffee, $lB per Common drudge Whiskey, $l5O per gallon Greenbacks, $18"on $1 Gold, $2B on $l. Hon. Henry L. Datives, of North Adams, member of Congress from the Tenth Massachusetts district, having had bad luck with two or three of his appointments to West Point cadetship, resolved to disregard the pressure -of high recommendations, and take the matter of securing a suitable candidate into his own hands. He accordingly songht out a poor Irish boy in Cheshire whom he had heard of as having attained extraordivary proficiency in his studies in the school in that town. Finding him at work in a potato field with his father he besought the parent to allow his son to go to West Point; and the father yielding, Dawes now has the satis faction of hearing that the young son of Eriwstands fifth of his class , in mathe matics and ninth in languages. All of .his previous candidates ; appointed had been turned out, and one of them was recommended by the veteran General .Scott. CT Thomas ?resinll a' Minnesota soldier, recently releaied frdm Belle Isle, has written a long letter to the St. Paul Press, describing the sufferings of the Union prisoners. Among other things, he says: I have seen our men carried out of the hospitals, dead, and laid in rows on the ground without their faces covered, and not buried for five days. Once they lay for seven days and the hogs ate two of theta half up. You may think this too mean for a civilized people, but it is a fact, and any of the men who were there will testify to it. illas Mr. White, °Chelsea undertaker, made a disinterment, a few weeks since, of the body of Mrs. Estes, who had been interred in the Garden Cemetery in Chelsea for near sixteen years, for the purpose of removing the remains to Plymouth, when he found the body in a most remarkable state of preservation. The coffin was decayed away, and the bead of the body was almost entirely gone, but from the shoulders to the feet it had not in the least mouldered in the grave by its long interment. The body was,porely white and - solid as marble. lir It is sometimes profitable to com pare one time with another. The year 1816 was a time of peace, and our money was silver or its equivalent. But the weather was very unfavorable for crops in this vicinity, and our working people were paid' very low wages, some trades less than half what they get now. Yet in the winter following the cold June of 1816, the price of warn was from SL.9O to $230 per bushel'; rye $1.75 to $2; butter 24 cents, hay $25, flour $l5, &c. gar A New Orleans correspondent writes as follows : "Gen. Bowen, Pro vost Marshal General, has just issued an order that all - colored perSOns in the Department who are or have been living together with out authority, must now be married and receive a marriage cer tificate from the Provost Marshal of the parish. This order has been the occa sion of numerous jollifications among the negroes, who are 'henceforth to' be something more than cattle." gir A ead affair occurred in Harps well, Me., on Friday, by: which two little girls, daughters of James Linnett, aged 9 and 8 years, was drowned. They had been to gather shells to put, on their mother's grave, and while returning across the stream the. tide came .- and swept them under. When found they were clagped in each other's arm. air A paper speaking of ".LlZagi John Wentworth" M. C., says that when, he addresses the people, they have to dig a hole for, him to stand in, not because he is so tall, hat because he never feels at home except when he is up to his chin in dirt. : • _ 1g45. The President has approved the act, extending for two years from date the time within which the Stateii and Territories may accept the grants of lands donated, for the establishmeni of colleges for the benefit of agriculture' and the mechapip art. .arl The Boston Post says there is a town in - Neiv , Hampshire sothealthy.that the people have hid - to borrow a corpse to i start'a - grieVey'are- ' r'' zegP J;ohn,; i. Bacopof, Williamstomn, In Vt; made •fr ' .oneAreekthsi present sea= sou seventee pounds of maple sugar. A RAID BY "Bou:trry nuens.."—Eten jamin F. Cox of the 102 d P. V., writing from "Camp Distribution," near Alex andra, Va., on the 16th, says that a squad of about sixty convalescent sol diers were sent there, from New York recently, in company with three hun dred "bounty jumpers.' The latter, while crossing on the boat, rushed upon the convalescent veterans, and plun dered them of their money and every thing of value they had about them. Upon reaching the camp, search was made, and three or four thousand dollars found in the possession of the deserters, together with watches, breast pins, fin ger rings &c. Over a thousand bounty jumpers are now in camp, under guard, at Alexandria, and our correspondent says a "harder looking set of men could scarcely be 'band." They are being sent to'thefront as filet ab possible. Ax AGED FROG.—The other day, at Johnstown, as a mason was engaged in cutting stone, a living frog was found in the centre of a stone that bad been in use in a • wall for over thirty years. When discovered, he was as flat as a pancake, but after being released from his prison, could hop about as well as any other frog. The Cambria papers think that his frogship, could he speak, would tell us about the times when Noah lived, His only defect is, that he is totally blind. He has beer placed in a cage for safe keeping. Monona WILL our.—A man named Williams' was murdered at Locust. Gap ./ this county, in 1861, and all efforts to detect the murderer proved abortive. Recently, however, one Barney M'Gon ical was arrested in Minersville, Schuyl kill county, upon the oath of the wife of Williams, as the murderer of her hus band. He is now in jail at this place, awaiting trial. If the woman sustains her charge, it will furnish another illus tration of the truth of the old rioting°, that "murder will out," r Dispatches from the Army of the Potomac furnishes the usual stories rela tive to the fabulous strength which Lee is massing in front of Gen. Grant. His infantry is reported by deserters to num ber eighty thousand, and his cavalry twenty—two thousand, all mounted, of course, on well—fed steeds, with ten lays' rations issued every week for an advance which don't take place. l'he town of Madison Court House has been burned by our troops. • Cr William McDonald, of Baltimore met with a heavy loss by the death of his valuable trotting stallion "Burling ton," of inflammation of the bowels. He was about eight years old, was sired by George M. Patchen, out of the thorough bred Monmouth Eclipse mare. He was valued at $25, 000. Burlington promised the fastest speed in the world, and was said to be a much finer breed than Patchen. a ir There are three things easily raised and harvested for which the farder may depend upon it there will be an enor-, mous demand, and high prices paid du ring the war. We refer to potatoes, beaus and onions. The farmers could not do a better thing' for themselves and the country than to plant these vegeta bles very extensively: air A woman writes to the Mobile Register a fierce letter declaring that she and a good many other females of that city will gladly take up arms against a Yankee invasion. We judge from her language that she is a 'match for the Swiss heroine, who killed twenty Mol davians in one day and was brought to bed of twins at night. —Louisville Jour nal. ar The Scientific American knows a man who does the principal part of his advertising by writing his name and business on the back of bank bills. Per haps he is not aware that, in case those banks whose notes he thus indorses were' to break, he could be held responsible for the face of the note. Courts have so decided in similar ca'ses. gar I Paris physician has been sen tenced to imprisonment for one year, fined five hundred francs, and placed under the surveillance of the police for five years, fOr having divulged the na ture of a patient's disease and thus in jured his character. He was also con demned to pay one thousand francs dam ages to his patient. Itir There i's-no truth in the report that a Mr. Charles W. Barber recently lifted in a mill in Dunkirk, N Y, a weight of 2;•840 pounds. The owner of the mill.fn . a letter to a gentleman of that city, contradicts the statement in toto. 'So' that Dr. Windship is not out done. eir Seven hundred volunteers sick'in _.camp r.—Yonng men,be.warned in time, supply yonrselves with Holloway's Pills Eointinent. They are guaranteed to care the worst cases of Sores Ulcers, Scurvy, Fevers 4 bewel complaints. Only 30 cts. per,,box cir pot. 11 1 r• rah hi s sSophy, what are you• making?' said a gentleman,to a young Aady,w4ewasiat work ; upon. a < garment of up and down des9ription inwhite cot itqux--459011f the de' m ure reply. A ,t4AD[STAKE. —A singular incident occurred at a wedding in Troy lateii. The guests were assembled, and tir, carriages were awaiting them at the door, when a sexton drove up with a hearse, which he backed down to the gate, alighted and opened, and stood waiting to receive the coffin. He had mistaken the place; and seeing the car. sieges, supposed it was the funeral in stead of a feast. The circumstance cast a gloom over the happy bridal gathering. LIST OF LETTERS Rena lams. , in me Post Office, at Marietta, Pa., for the week ending May 12, 1864. Burrier, Lydia Miller, Levi 2 • Barr,Thomas A. Miller, Simnel Byar, R. B. Mentz, Mathias Clepper, John ,Martin, Barber: Crumrn, Relit/ice' NistleY, John R. Eisenhower, Washg'n Pitta, F. • Funk Ruben Raume, Barbara' Givens, David E. Swentzel, E. W. Geltmacher, Abrm Stroope, Israel Gibbs. Viola • Scoommer, Martin Gurcrer, George Snyder, deo. Hill, Sarah Walker, William Herr, E. J. Watson, Joseph 2 Jenkins, Capt. Jos. Winters, Sohti Loacks, Hedu rfPersonscalling for letters in the above list will please say they are advertised. One cent will be charged on each letter, to pay for advertising. A. CASSEL, P. M. Friends and Relatives of the brave SOL DIE RS SAILORS. H OLLOIV'iIY'S PILLS & 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 Direction• which are attached to each Pot or Box. Sick Headache and want of Appetite Incident to So4tiers Those feelings which , so sadden us, usually arise from trouble or annoyances, obstructed prespiration, or eating end drinking whatever is unwholesome, thus disturbing the healthful action of the liver and etomach. These organs must be relieved, if 3tou 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 Dibility induced by OVER F4ATIOU Will soon disappearjby il the use of these in. t valuable Pills, and e Soldier will quickly acquire additional strength. Never let the bowels be either coilined or unduly acted upon. It may seem strange that Holloway's Pills should be recommended for Dysentery and Flux, many perscins supposing that the , • would increase the relaxation. This is a great mistake, for limb Pills will correct the liver and stomach aid thus remove all the acrid humours from it • system. This medi cine will give tone nd vigor to the whole organic system how ver deranged, while health 'and strength Bow as a matter of course. Nothing will stop the relaxation of the Bowels so sure as t is famous medicine. VOLUNTEERS ATTENTOIN!. Sores and Ulcers, 13 I can with certainty be Pills are taken night'! Om tment be freely used , ' nstructioos. •If treated they dry by in one part t Wheress this Ointm humors from the system a vigorous and healthy •, a little perseverance in LASTING For Wounds either occas Sabre or the Bullet, To which every Soldier there are no medicines so venient as Holloway's Pi The poor Wounded and n / might have his wounds d.! if he would only provid Matchless Ointment, whi. into the wound and smear • cover it With a piece of sack and compressed wit.l Taking night and . mornin 4 the system and prevent int! Every Soldier's Knaps Chest should be provided NI ble Remedies. IMPORTANT CAUTION unless the words " Hom.o and Loanox,” are discer mark in every leaf of the around each pot or box plainly seen by holding the Aliandeenrie reward • will rendering such information detection of any party or p the medicines or vending- th them to be spurious. `.'Sold at the. Manufac HOLLOWAY, 80 Maiden and by all respectable Dru in Medicine throughout th in pots or boxes, at 30c. 70c. N.l3.—Directions for theg in every disorder are affixed lE3 Deqlers iTz• my well km have SHOW CARDS, CIRCULA FREE OF EXPENSE, by addre THOMAS HO 80 Maiden ;Er. There is considerable the larger sizes. 3iJ4tely,s, eiodis a IL L. & E Alf&Tl ESPECTFUL lfriends and th luo still continue the 1 s , a isn JEWELRY stand, North-nest Queen street and Center Squ A full assortment of goods ness always en hand and for cash rates. rt.. Repair' sonally by the proprietors. Lancaster, January 1, 185 PLATED WARE: A of Plated ware at H. L Cornerof North Queen stree Lancaster, Pa. Tea Setts, Urns. Fitchels, Goblets, ' Baskets, Card Baskets, Spoo Casters, &c., &c., at menu& H. L. & E. .1,. Cor. North Queen St. and C caster, Pa. Our prices are, goods warranted to be as r REPLATING attended:to E 5 - -T- Administratoet Estate of Catharine, Bit Donegal Townshi Letters of administrati ; having been granted to th persons indebted thereto ar: l immediate settlement, and or demands against the them without dalay for sett dersigned, residing at Mayt GEOR April 30, 1864 tIOB. SALE CHEAP. -Et od as new COVERED - GERM TOWN agon, bitylog been used b a short time— will be sold cheap if applicatl be made soon. CALVIN - K. S LTZBACIL Marietta April 23 , 1864. ALARGE stock of Papariand EnreloPel - of 'die best quality just' rkeired and for sale at The Grea Mortar. tehea and Swelling, dieally cured if the .nd morning, and rhr s stated in the printe.t n any other -nannez i break out in another. It- will remove- the net leave the patient n.. It will requite d CRAPS to insure a U.R E. bed by the Ba yowl • es or Bruises, nd Sailor are liable :afe, sure and con , s and Ointment.— ost dying sufferer •ssed immediately. himself with this i should be thrust all around it, then n from his Knap , a handkerchief.— or 8 Pills, to cool rnation. ck and Seaman's "th these inraluit- one are genuine AY, NEW YORK 'tie as a fVolei ok of directions, e same may be of to the light.— given to any. one s may lead to the ;es counterfeiting same, knowing .ry of Professor ne, New York, tats and Dealers civilized 'world, nd $.1.10 each. dance of pataenta o each pot. wn medicines can s, &c., sent them. ing LO WAY, e, New-York .aving by taking l Dec 26-1 y EMI ZAHN' inform their public that they ATCH, CLOCK siness at the old Omer - of North e, Lancaster, Pe. our line of busi le at the-lowest attended to per- • e and line stock E. J. Zanses, Center Square variety, Coffee it - St ands', Cake a, Forks, Knives, rera prices. .tre Square, Lan "oderate and all muted, oderate rates Notice. , late of East ' eceased on said estate undersigned, all quested.to make • having claims e will , present ent to the un n, in said ton n- BILLET, dmintstrator.