the paritttiast. F. L. fakir, Editor, MARIETTA. PA : ------------- SATURDAY, JULY 16, 1864. giir When Maj. Gen. Franklin was arrested in the train near Baltimore, he was dressed in citizens clothes, and when the reheliiititered the ear and asked him who be Vred, l 4tetieplied,. "nobody of any acconlit. 4 The guard passed on a few yards, when a Baltimore lady, (of whom there was quite a number on board) told him the General . * rank and name, The guard returned and demanded his papers, which were of course banded over, and the Genets' was taken from the oar, he said he could not march with them as be was disabled, when one of the guard took possession of a passing horse and buggy and put the General in. surrounding it with a guard. the guard. composed of Geueral Owens and two privates. Ile was driven through the country stopping awhile at Townstown. and at Reistertown, where they arrived at midnight, and immediately bivouack. ed for the night. The General excusing himself as sick end weary immediately, laid down and feigiied sleep ; soon after the guard laid down and it was not long until indications of sleep came from them. The General continued to feign; sleep with his ears open until he found' the whole three of the guard, were, un mistakably asleep, when be got op and carelessly walked around and coughed aloud, enough to have waked almost any person but a very Wed soldier—eanh oft the guard lying with his hand on his musket—finding they were, beyond any doubt, asleep, be jumped the fence a 9 made for the direction of Baltimore ; ter nearly an hour's run he eaten& a thick woods and in his weakly . tZte sought a place of concealmanywhere he remained for the balance of,the night and all of the next day ; kalrequently saw prom his biding place, the rebels bunting him. Finally4out sun-set, nearly famished !or water and food, be ventured ont: and soon saw two men moving towftrditim with large bundles of - hay. . Be walked up to them and asked, whit they wanted with hay in the woods ; they replied' that they had bid their.-horses from the damd rebeld and that they were about giving them same feed. This reply assured the Gen eral that he was in the hands of friends— be made-himself known and they home. diately,dropped their hay and conduct ed him to their home where he was most kindly treated. Here he remained se• crated. until Wednesday night when he arrived at Baltimore. The name of the patriotic Maryland farmer is at present with held for prudent reasons. , or Hon. Jas. T. Brady, the well known Democratic lawyer of New York, in a late speech uttered the following just sentiment; "Hach has beep said, too, about usurpations of .power; but where'in history will yoti find 'a war a. gains, rebellion conducted with such moderation 7" . ear A Court- Martial, for conscripts, at Grand Rapids, Michigan, has senten ced one guilty of desertion, to.forfeit all pay and allowances due and to become doe him, and be imprisoned at hard la bor for ten years, with a ball weighing twenty-four pounds attached to his leg by a chain four feet long. lir Two farmers in Bunterdon, New Jersey, undertook to resist the collec tion' of the Internal Revenue tax, by re fusing to pay it. They were indicted, pleaded guilty, and each bad to pay a line of $5OO. The amount of the tax whitib that' refused to pay was one dol. lar. girGeorge Peabody, the great Amer loan Banker in London; will retire final. ly from active businesssin October next. HaM desirous of spending the rest o bia life in the United States, but has re= solved sever , to gratify 'that wish until the Union is restored and peace is par amount. sr Gen.--Lee's personal property which hati'been 'condemned by tbe Uni ted Stated District Court, is to be Hold gt Alekandria on'the 10th inst. Some :2household goods are of an elegant • lotion, sod the sale will include a Itamber of rare and beautiful articles. v.* - Ofilitob & Son, iron safe iiondon, - Ragland, bare recently constructed a safe for a beak in India, in size 14 feet long, 10 ft. deap.and 8 feet high, weigbing 17 tune. Tbionter doors 4Fe faetecid by four throwing 27.ifieita.. fir To obow the eifeot of the raid pries, in Bottimore, the hotels chap . , from $B4O to $6 per`dl9 , for hfordi Boar to $l5 per herrel; berh_ere 45 coma f or 0 shave andeverything in.propoOoit. rare old, sold foe Asa retaialiiirimot she t~th. . - Tax "GREAT EASTERN" AGAIN. This monster, about the intended destination of which emits curiosity has been exci ted, will, we understand, says the New York Artisan, shortly leave the Mersey for the Thathos. She is at present ta king in coals, and by the early part of August will, it is expected, be ready to take her depurture. On her arrival at the Thames she will receive a complete overhauling and be fitted with the neces sary machinery for laying the Atlantic telegraph cable, for which, es already announced, sho. has been secured. ID she meantime aitt cable is being manu factured and the operation of laying will be commenced in the spring of the en suing year. WHAT IS ASTHAKAN 7—Many women • the past winter have worn Astrakan, without thinking„ hat it is. Astrakan, as its name indicates, is an Asiatic in. vention. They couple a black ewe with a black rain. .#ilifore the dim:Atte given to, the younpebe is killed, aad the lambs are taken from her womb. Their wool is jet bleat and of an extreme fineness. Ii costs,very dear; there are Persians whose Astrakan bonnets are worth $lOO a piece. This statement is worthy of noticit.by ladies who have false Astra. kan-t Astrakan the wool of which is longnd dyed. - - HARD CUT.- In reply to 000 of Garret Davis' treasonable speeches in thfUoited States Senate, Senator Chan dler of Michigan stated that be moved the resolution of expulsion against John Breckenridge, but, he added, "I re gret that I did so, for it created the re caney now filled by the senator from 'Kentucky (Mr. Davis)." The latter was so infuriated at this thrust, that he jumped to his feet and appeared for a moment as if intending to bring on a personal collision, but soon thought better of it. fir Colonel G. H. Covode; 4th rean• sylvisnia cavalry, was killed in Sheridan's fight on the 24th ult. He was a son of Hon. John Covode, the second son who was killed within sixweeks. His broth er Jacob was killed with Graut, in one of the battles after crossing the Rapi dan. His father was last week search ing for his body, and found it. eir• A terrible railroad accident hap pened in Canada, near Montreal. A passenger train ran through a .draw bridge, and up to this time 87 dead bodies and 80 wounded have been ta ken from the wreck. They were mostly emigrints, going west. The engineer, :Wm. Briney, has been arrested, and lodged in Montreal jail. Or The war`democrats of New York held a meeting on Thiirsday evening of last week, and after adopting a series of resolutions in which they unanimously agreed to support the nominations of Lincoln and Johnson, for the Presidency and Tide. Presid'ent, made arrangements to hold a mass. meeting at the Cooper Institute. I It is calculated that fully five thousand people were injured through out the country on the 4th of July from accidents from firearms, fireworks, etc. Two million dollars' worth of property was destroyed. The loss of life was, however, small. A Pittsburg lady, writing from City Point, on James river, makes an earnest appeal for armslings. The wounded are suffering in consequence of not having a sufficient supply of these articles. They are also badly needed in the western army. • Charles Langhein, who was re cently tried in Cincinnati by a Court Martial, for defrauding the government, has been sentenced to a year's imprison ment in the Ohio penitentiary, and to pay a fine of twelve thousand dollars, G ir The Secretary of , the Navy has recomtnended to the President that Captain Winslow, of the Kearsarge which stink the pirate Alabama, be pro moted to a commodore. gar R. B. Bowler, Req., an old and prominent citizen of Cincinnati, and President of the Kentucky Central Railroad, was run over by an omnibus on the dth, and instantly killed. isr The Commissioner of Agriculture says that letters show the growing crops in the eastern and middle States to promise well. The hay will be one .third in excess of usual years. gir The league of loyal Texans now resident in New Orleans, have made ar rangements to secure the removal to the Northwestern States of the desti tute families - of loyal Texas refugees. . ,• - or The Bank of MontreWdeltroyed thirty.seven thousand dollar!'-7citits old issues on Saturday by butlibwr It has -issued new notes of the denomination of five dollars. ; PenneylystinVeteTeaebers' Ponyention meets in Atpons on Toes. day? Aug ust 2, and will continue its sell , Mtt , t , ons until tbe next Thnridey, evening.: Air Leaves Orgateley, eaten with yin= egsr w witl preveiitthedisagreeable non: sequence ottati'necibillitit:' ear Five men wine hung at igaeltville , Op the 17th 44, f o rth IPer4,ref trefoil ftUezWl cPv--fa'l7l-TE General News Items. A young married couple, while bath. ing on the shore near Gloucester, Mass.. on Saturday evening, had their clothes stolen. The husband made a raid, and procured, "substitutes" for both. The personal income tax is now 5 per cent. for over $BOO and under $5,000; il per cent. for over $5,000 nod under $lO,OOO ; and 10 per cent. for all over $lO,OOO. Ten cents per day bas been added to the pay of- oar soldiers,, making their pay now fifty-three and a half cents per day, Four hundred rebel prisoners from Point Lookout; Md., arrived in New York on their way to Elmira, where a depot for prisoners has been established since July sth. Speaker Colfax has been renominated by acclamation from the IXth Congres sional District of Indiana. This is the seventh time that he has been so honor ed. Five times be has been elected ; every nomination was unanimous. The Most Rev.. Bishop Spaulding, of Louisville, Kentucky, has accepted the appointment of Archbishop of the Ro man Catholic Church of the diocese of Baltimore. The personal friends of general McClellan in Boston made him a pres ent of a library worth two thouiand dollars, last week. Rev. Samuel Laird, of Philadelphia, has been chosen pastor of the Tricity Lutheran Cburcb of Lancaster. The McKean Miner announces that Brigadier General Thomas L. Kane, formerly an ardent Democrat, has ex pressed himself in favor of the re-elec• tion of Mr. Lincoln. Provost Marshal General Fry has M aned instructions to the various provost marshals that under existieg laws, they can receive or accept colored substitutes for white persons. Miss Clara L. Ganby, of Salisbury. Md., who was arrested about two weeks since for manifesting secession proclivi ties, is to be sent south by order of Ma jor Gen. Wallace. It it; reported that General Franklin escaped from his captors the first night after his arrest,. by steng off at d get ting into the woods. Gilmore, the Bal timorean head of the rebel baud, scour ed the country around, including huts, outhouses; barns, etc„ without, it is said, re-capturing the General. The same day that witnessed the pas sage of the House bill repealing the Fugitive Slavelaw, by the 11. S. Senate, saw the passage of the article abolish ing slavery within the State by the Con stitutional Convention of Maryland. That day - will be marked with a white line in our future histories. The Supreme Court Jury at Chicago rendered a verdict last Friday for $175 damages against a landlord for renting a house that contained the small-pox in fection, whereby the wife of the tenant was attacked by that disease. Captain Winslow, of the Kearsarge, is fifty-three years of age, a native of Wilmington, N. 0. Helms been in the navy since he was fourteen years of age, having been appointed through the in fluence of Daniel Webster. Ilia family resides at Roxbury, Mass. The certificates to be issued to persons, ladies or gentlemeo, who furn ish representative iecruits-tiider the re cent plan announced for the Provost Biarshal Geom.'s!, are being sent to the provoy marshals. They are handsome ly execked, and will hereafter be a source of eride to all who possess them. The. British yacht Deerhound, which rescued Semmes, befiNgs to the 6rm of Frazer, Trenholm, & 'go., Liverpool, rebel agents for that port.` , ,She was not, therefore, present accidentak at the ac tion, as sbe is as much rebel property as the Alabama herself. The crop all over the country seems to be extraordinarily good. It is no:O., beingliarvested ; the only drawback is a great want of laborers. Very high wages are offered, yet the scarcity con Untie's. A couple of miners at Wai a duel recently with pickaxe' one. They were placed a and advanced on a given si hurled his pick at his antai buried it in his eye. The %vs,' lingered some days in horrid . They are making in Canter; Sanitary Fair, to be held th( a gigantic cheese, six feet ii and two - and a half feet thicl four thousand pounds. They the Cream of Cheeses. Gov. Hall, of Missouri, ast week to the daughter of ary of State for Miseouri s a widower, over fifty, and air maiden of seventeen. A statue of Mozart is abon rented in the centre of the Vienna , which. bears. the a, great composer„in the room , tain now standing there. •> GaribabWbasrAbarkod fr on board thiPakb - of Slither! for tba,bitba of bobbx A lady named Hardman was bur ied in St. Peter's Church vaults, Drog heda, Ireland, eight days after her de. cease, at the age of 92. This singular request was owing to a piece of family history which must be familiar to every one. All have heard of the lady who was buried, being supposed dead, and who bore with her to the tomb, on her finger, a ring of rare price, which res cued her from her prison -house. A but ler in the family of the lady having his cupidity excited, entered the vault at midnight in order to possess himself of the ring, and in removing it from the finger the lady was restored to conscious ness, and made her way in her grave clothes to the mansion. She lived many years eiftririOrds before she ivas coriergri ed to the vault. '['he heroine of the story was a member of the Hardman family—in fact, the late Miss. Hardman's mother—and the vault in St. Peter's Church was the locality where the start ling revival scene took place. The First National Bank of Pontiac, Mich., has been seized by the sheriff of Oakland county for a debt of eight thousand dollars, owed by one of the stockholders. William H. Perry, the president of the institution, has employ ed counsel in Detroit, and proposes to 'ascertain if a sheriff can close a national 'batik on an individual debt of one of the stockholders, when there are eight own ing the stock of the bank. The institu tion is a small affair 'of only fifty thous; and dollars capital. This invasion, if it is worthily op po ad, .will be fatal to the rebellion. If it is not opposed, it may be a- severe blow to Gen. Grant. The invasion is not formidable in numbers ; it is danger ous only so far as our apathy makes it so. Don't wait to send troops to Balti more. Let, men go., You will find a place and a musket when you get there. If this rebel force is defeated, victory is certain in front of Ricbmond. . . . . Kiiir The simple fact that the enemy moves on Baltimore or Washington, not into the Cumberland Valley, proves the movement to be an invasion and not a raid. The fact that the main - army of Lee still opposes Grant, proves that it is not an invasion in great force. The enemy solely depends upon the failure f 1 o e North to resist. lo -41. Lee has divided his army. He may have kept threelourtlis and .sent one-feurth of it into Maryland. If we will deal with the invasion, Grant will take care of Lee. This is the best op portunity that has yet existed for the destruction of the rebellion. The inva sion is a desperate attempt, and indi cates the desperation of the rebel cause. Gir Wm. W. Glenn, a prominent law yer of Baltimore, has been sentenced by Gen. Wallace to leave that department, and not return south of New York or St. Louis during the war. The charges against Mr. Glenn were in connection with the rebel spy Richardson, who was hung in western Maryland some time ' • since. gar Barnum's fat woman, Miss Jane Pishon, formerly exhibited as Miss Jane Campbell, died at' Brookfield, Conn., the other day. Her exhibition weight was 680 pounds. Ten men were employ ed to get her into ‘her coffin, which was so wide that the door of the houSe bad to be enlarged fo enable its removal. or Why do, they call them straw berries ?is the question most people have asked about this , ruddy fruit. The name is derived'from a custom long ago prevalent in England, of the children stringing the berries on straws of grass and selling so many strings for a penny. or Two niaininoth children are on exhibition at Keokuk, lowa.. They are brother and sister, and were born in Cass county, 111. The former is twelve years of age, and weighs 300 pounds: the latter is six and weighs 180. sir On Saturday the Commissary General of Prisoners, by order of the Secretary of War, sent the rebel officers ,who are to be placed under fire at 611arieston from Fort Delaware to Hil ton Tead. SINKING OF THE ALABAMA.—The pirate Alabama was sunk ten miles from Cher bourg, on the I9th of June, by the Uni ted States steamer Kearsarge. The Alabama made the attack, and the en gagement lasted an hour and forty min utes. Siztyeight prisoners were cap tured by the Kearearge. Semmes and a portion of the crew were rescued by the English yacht Deerhound. Nine rebels were killed and twenty wounded. The Kearsarge had three slightly wound ed. The career of this famous pirate commenced on the 29th of July, 1862, and closed on the 19th of June, 1864. Semmes was carried into a British port by the Deerhound, and entertained with a supper by the British sympathizers with treasen. air The last phase of the-Confidence game" was developed a short time since by a Cincinnati female. The woman having an earthen vessel entered a gro-, eery store and bought a pound of coffee. Removing the lid she dropped the coffee in said vessel, replaced the lid, and was about to pay for it, when she discovered she had forgotten to bring her money a long. Not to have her honesty suspect ed, she said she would leave her pur chase till she went home and got her money, and accordingly set her crock ery on the counter, where it remained until he thought something must be wrong, and on removing the lid he found there was no bottom to the vessel, and of course ,the woman had gent:Leff with the coffee in her apron. Gir Ho I woo d Cemetery, says a late Richmond paper, is becoming thickly populated with our (rebel) dead, expir ing in Richmond hospitals. Corpses ar rive at the cemetery faster than they can be interred by the limited force al lowed for the purpose, and as high as twenty-five green pine coffins fastened with only, one nail inch end, have the lately been seen er arped open by 4 the min. exposing the roftrescent bodies to full' view, emitting (sickening odors and attracting swarms of flies. Cr The Washington Statesman re cords a costly cat-astropbe occurring in that regioti. A company of hay packers, for sport, saturated a cat with turpen tine and let her go. Consequently the cat cut funny capers, jumped into a campfire, jumped out all ablaze, run into a hay stack, then into a barn, setting both on fire and consuming them. This little piece of innocent sport cost the party just $6OO. eir Mr. Fessenden, the new secretary of the Treasury, for seven sessions of Congress has been . a member of the Finance Committee of the U. S. Senate, and for the last three sessions has been the Chairman. Be bas had the most intimate official knowledge of every measure of finance since the beginning of the rebellion. Who could possibly fill Mr. Chase's place better? eir Last week an old - woman, corn. plete!y -blind, traveled alone all the way from Scranton, Pa., to Trenton, to try to reclaim leer son, who, against her will, ran off pith the hundred days' men, but came a few hours after they had left for Baltimore. She was kindly put in the way of getting home again. egr In the year 1830 there were only seventy souls all told io what was then known as Chicago. In 1835 Chicago was incorporated into a city, and then its onward and extraordinary progress commenced. In 1840 the population had increased to 4,853. It now numbers not far from 170,000. Cr On Saturday morning a most dis. tressing accident occurred, at Williams port. A little girl, seventeen months old, was standing on the railroad tract when a car passed along, knocked her down, and cut off both her arms. She is likely to recover. iggr Within the past few days the reb el pirate Florida has been cruising off Cape May, doing great damage to our shipping. Since Friday` last she hag captured and burned 6ve vessels. Gov ernment armed vessels have been dis. patched in pursuit of her. fir Gen. Giant has, captured ' more than thirty stands of rebel colors, and a bout seventeen thousand prisoners-- quite a little army--during his Virginia campaign, while his own losses are not equal- to one-third of that number. Which way is the exhaustion the rep itiee, the calls for .oportion inforced. .stroyed. te deter not re- sr The total number of officers for 1 4olored regiments. examined by the, proper board, up to this time, is 2,471. Of these, 985 have been rejected and 1,486 recommended. gar The great Ocean Iron-clad "Pali tan," launched at New-York on Satur day last. She was commenced in 1862, and will require another year to finish. in woods )ek ago, lays and ied when A man that married a widow is bound to give up smoking and chewing. If she gives up her weeds for him, he should give up the weed for her. Leaned a it Thure mil iation United ogr The Itlornsons botiet that, with one hundred thousand people in ; Utah; there is not ., a 'single' dilnking ealbon , billiard table, or , bowling alley. ..3 -being man' the 11/oared sr Having been a tailor in kis early days, it may be confidently said tbat, Governor, ndreiV l TOlinton !!ttmind on Lie (ogee.?-, - ere free HOSTETTER'S CELEBRATED STOMACH BITTERS. A PURE AND POWERFUL TWO, Corrective and alternative of wonderful effica cy in disease of the Stomach, Liver and Bow els; cures Dyspepsia, Liver Complaint, Head ache, General Debility, Nervousness, Depiesv. sion of Spirits, Constipation, Colic, intermitten- Fevms, Cramps and Spasms, and all complaints of either sex, arising from bodily weatiess whether inherent in the system or produced by special causes. Nothing that is not wholesome, genial and restorative in its nature enters into tne compo sition of Hostetter's Stomach Bitters. This popular preparation contains no mineral' f any kind, no deadly botanical element ; no fi ery excitant, but it is a combination of the ex tracts of rare balsamic herbs and plants with the purest and mildest of all diffusive stimu lants. 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The weak stomach is rapidly invigorated and the appetite leatOreil try Mkt sgreealne to nic, and hence it works wonders rn cases of Dyspepsia and in less confirmed forms of Ma gestion. Acting as a gentle and painless appe rient, as well as upon the liver, it also invari ably relieves the Constipation superinduced by irregular action of the digestive and,secretivy organs. Peisons of feeble habit, liable to ner vous attacks, loivnesS ofsPirits and fits) of len gour, find prompt and permanent relief from the bitters. The iestinionv on this point is most conclusive. and from both sexes. The agony of Bilious Colic is immediately assuaged by a single dose of the stimulant, aufl by occasionally resorting to it, the return of the complaint may be prevented. Last, but not least, it is The Only Stfe Stini ulant, being manufactured from sound and innocuous materials, and entirely flee from the acid elements present more or less in all the ordinary tonics and stomschics of the day. No family medicine has been so universally; and, it may be truly added, deservedly popiilar With the intelligent portion of the community, as HOSTETTER s 3 ihTT.RRS. Prepared by HOSTETTER Ps SMITH, Pittsburg; Pa. Sold by all Druggists, Greene and Store= keepers everywhere. Genttiße itePANtiOnS• COMPOUND FLUID , EXTII:ACT BUCHU, A POSITIVE: MID SPECIFIC REMEDY For diseases of the Bladder, Kidneys, Cravel. and DropsicalSwellingS. This Medicine increases the power of Diges tion, and excites the Absorbents into healthy action, by which the Watery or Colceireous de— pOsitions, and all unnatural enlargements are reduced, as well as pain and indentation. RELMBOLD'S EXTRACT RCCRU. For weakness arising from excesses, habits of dissipation, early indiscretion of abuse, at tended 'with the folloWing symptonid Indisposition exertion, Loos of Power, breisting, Loss of . 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Advice Gratis Address letters for information to 11. T. lIELMBOLD, Chemist. 104 South Tenth -M., bel. Chestnut, Phila. HELMBOLD'S Medical Depot, HZLMEOLD'EI Drug and Chemical.-Warehouse. 594 Brodway, New York. Beware of Counterfeit. a and Unprincipled Dealerniwbo; endeavor -to dispose "of their own";and "other , ' articles; on the reputation attained by itelmbold's Gennine Breperations. " Extract Buchu. ' ItS Imptelinn _Bose maah. Sold by all Druggists everywhere. - Ask for kieltibold'a. Take no other -Cut ant theadvertiannent and send for It• .sad avoid imposition and exposure. MI