eariettian. E:!:!:E=EME2111113E3:!!!!!1 F. L. Baker, Editor. MARIETTA. PA SATURDAY, JULY 30,1864. FOR PRESIDENT, ABtAIIAM LINCOLN, OF ILLINOIS FOR VICE PRESIDENT, ANDREW JOHNSON, OF TENNESSEE ti' nton E,ltttotal Z,ichet SENATORIAL. Mowron. McMicusgEL., Philadelphia, Tnomas H. CVNItINGEIAN, Beaver co REP RESE 1. Robert P. Ktag, Geo. M. Coates, 3'l Henry Bumm, 4• Wo. H. Kern , 5. Bailin „rods, 6. Chits M. Hunk, 7 . Robert Park/. 8. Wm. Taylor , 9: Jab.. A."Hiestand, 10 H. Coryell, 11, Ediod. Halliday, IT: Chas. P. Reed, ...... ...... CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS. Special Election, August 211, 1864. In favor of Soldiers voting. A. MUNIFICENT DONATION.—The Penn sykvania Railroad Company paid over on. Wednesday, to the Christian Com mission, five thousand dollars, which, sum was a donation to the cause of the' soldier. The Pennsylvania Company, from the beginning, has carried free the delegates and the stores forwarded by the. Commission. The donation is a lib eral one. This corporation since, §be war began, has been generous in;rdgney and service to a degree hitherto upper stalled. All thanks to it. atr A very horrible means of secur ing the payment of pen 4 has been at tempted by a poor; - lWoman living near Cestlebar, in I4and. Her husband, who was the, pensioner, was, taken ill, and as be Hied with hie wife in a remoba! locality )3 1 e was not missed for some 'time. Inquiries being at last made, it was found that he bad been dead for several weeks, his body being hidden, in a horrible state of decomposition, by his wife, who had hoped therehy to con ceal the fact of his death 'until after quarter-day, 'when she would have re ceived'his'quarter's pension. = Charles Mifflin, of Pennsylvania, a resident. of New Orleans for forty-five years, died there recently. He belonged to the Mifflin family of the revolution— a grandson of Thomas Mifflin, who was a revolutionary officer and Governor of Pennsylvania at the close of the war of Independence. He was also a cousin to George M. Dallas. But, during a long life in New Orleans disaster fol lowed the heels or misfortune, and his existence was rendered wretched by many failures. Within the last three years he was near to utter poverty. *0- A. local paper in lowa threw the Copperheads into the most furious rage and denunciation o f the demoralization produced by Abolitionism, by publish ing a statement that a soldier's wife had given birth to an African infant. The next issue observed that the editor ..for got to remark in the former item that the father and mother were both ne groes. ar A local reporter of the Dayton Journal was cowhided in the streets of that city by a woman on Tuesday. lie igiraii item of it in the Journal, but treats the whole thing with levity. The cause of his flagellation was a siatement of his that the woman was a "sbe rebel," and blatant in support Of the Jeff Davis dynasty. lir A. fire broke out in the pines in I an county, N. J., on Saturday, Juno and raged for four days.. It started att r ffiree miles northeast of Ferugo, estooded to Tgm's river, making a cep of about nine miles in a direct 'se, unfl destroying every vestige of bccaud•vegetation over an area of prei4VtvrAinty-0 ye. square miles. , James F. Simmons, formerly Unitid'States Sinator, dkid on Thurs day, at his residence in Toliston, R. 1,. the,age afatiiirat sixty- p ace years. He wits tiy -for mafilfiT connected with im irtiint insoitfilhaiiaL,e6tAiPrises in ode Island, was a 'proitilcout Whig litician, and w: t izZeiti4r of the up . Or branch of 0 1,80. ihr Rev. Daniel I Valiia, nearly one undred and igplatuii fell down a light of stairs ati4traisits, 1 Y., on •aturtlay, add received et shotdv which y prove fatal. Ile trtut *haploid to E The Illustrated Phrenological Journal for July.—Vol. 40 begins with a double No., now ready, containing Por traits, Characters and Biographies of leading men, living and dead, such as Hancock, Sedgwick, Wadsworth, Haw thorn, Murillo, President Of Colombia, S. A. ; the Dying Gladiator, with Por traits, Chara4ers, and Biographies. Also, Ethnology , .or the races. Physi ology, the Laws of Life and Health. Phrenology, with choice of pursuits. Physiognomy, or "signs of Character." Psychology„ Science of the Soul, and much - either matter, to be found in no other publication. It is a handsome ly illustrated monthly, with ninety-six columns of rich reading matter. News men have it. , ".Sold at 20 cents, or $2 a year, by Fowler & Wells, No. 389 Broad way, New York,. ifir Of all the ingenious ways of rais ing money for the Sanitary . Commission, that devised by the people of the town of Catawissa, Pennsylvania, is probably the. oddest. The male citizens agreed to decide by vote who was the prettiest girl in town, and it was declared in favor of Miss Hattie S. Reitsnyder, by a ma jority of two hundred and eighty votes. Eacvote was accompanied by the sum of seventy-five cents, and the proceeds were given to the Sanitary Fair as the contribution of the favorite beauty. What makes the matter more interesting ie the fact that Miss Reitsnyder is nurs ing wounded soldiers in the Army of the Potomac. METE! 13. Elias W. Hale, 14. , Chas. H. Shriner, 15. John Wister, :16, D. /IPConaughy, :17. David W. Woods, : 18. Isaac Benson, 'l9. John Patton, .20. Samuel B. Dick, :21 Everhctrd Bierer, :22. John P. Penney, :23. I:be'zer Minn/gin, 24. J. W. Blanchard. gir New York proposes another Cab. icet for the President, when he is re elected. Here it is :—C. F. Adams, Secretary of State ; General Dix, Secre tary of the Treasury ; General McClel lan, Secretary of War ; Admiral Dupont, Secretary of the Navy ; Alexander Ran dall, Assistant Postmaster General— Postmaster General ; Reverday Johnson Attorney General. It thinks that such a Cabinet would unite radical and dem ocrat, administration and anti-adminis• tration men. President Lincoln may have his own views on such matters. Will New York go for his re•electien ? That precedes Cabinet making. tar A young married lady, travelling a few days since from New York to Syracuse, and suffering from consump tion, had been laid carefully on a pillow on the cars by her husband, while her little girl remained by her side. At Little Falls she fell asleep, and the child commenced fanning her, saying "Mamma is sleeping." A passenger, however, noticed the peculiar whiteness of her lips, and, on looking closely at her, discovered that she was dead. Keep your, eyes on the Copper heads on election day. Some of them pretend they are the friends of the sol dier. Make them face the music. Give them a chance to vote for the soldier. The soldiers want to know how they vote. gir It is stated that we shall receive from internal revenue, this year, the sum of three hundred millions of dollars. Jan men who read this believe that a country with such resources can be over thrown by a miserable rebellion ? Er John U. Heenan was seriously in jured by a railway accident in England recently. Lle jumped from the train at the moment of a collision, fell heavily, injured his spine, and has since suffered from a succession of fits. 456" Freedmen are harvesting wheat at Arlington on the government farms,% for the first time. One field of sixty acres has a fine crop. The general yield is good and the grain in excellent con dition. Cr Archibald L. Crandell, of Wis consin, was married, on the Fourth, to Mary M. Brown, of Pittsburg—both deaf mutes. The ceremony was porform ed without a spoken word. Car A terrible accident occurred at Phoenix colliery, Schuylkill co., on Sat urday, resulting in the instant death of 21 men, on a slope car coming out of the mine. The chain broke, allowing the car to run down 600 feet. eir A family at Bridgeville, Pa., a faw days since, beard an unusual noise in the parlor, and upon making an ex amination a horse was discovered quiet ly surveying himself in the looking glass. itir William's, a miner on Yoat's isle and, near Reading, while digging iron ore, discovered a rich bed of copper, and sold the lease to New York capitalists for $20,000. Cr Moses Taylor has been appointed Assistant Treasurer or the United States at New York, in place of Mr. Cisco, whom'continued ill health com pels to resign. 4. Boston bookseller took a bill paynient the other day, on the back which was written—'Please don't. Spend me for ram, or butter at forty cebte a pound !" zgr The number of rebel prisoners now in our hands is semi-otEcialy stated to be 'upward of 62,0007 of which about 000 are officers. fir The banks of Li 'ork leave agreed to 14 est $W01),000. • - - A In Honolulu, Sandwich Islands, they have strawberries all the year round. There is a man on trial at St. Joseph, Mo., accused of nine murders. The African M. E. Church has three bishops and 40,000 ministers. Cucumber parings will expel roaches from their haunts. • - There are nine thousand persons an nually committed to prison in England for swell debts, by the county courts. In the Newport Asylum there is a living female child two years old, weigh. ing only eight pounds. F. P. Blair, Jr., has written a letter endorsing the nomination of Lincoln and Johnson. The public schools' of Buffalo offer prizes to the young lady pupils for the best loaves of bread. Last week a young man murdered his mother in Buffalo to obtain 8300 in gold, set fire to his house and fled. Twenty Tuscarora squaws are working in the field at Akron, Erie county, N. Y. cultivating broom corn. A national convention of Spiritualists will meet at Chicago on the 7th of Au- gust next The statement that Miss Bateman has been married to an English officer is authoritatively denied. Fifteen hundred segar makers in New York are reported to have been thrown out of employment by the tax on tobac- It is estimated that the plundercarried off and the damage inflicted by the reb els in Maryland will amount to four mil. lions of dollars. Isaac N. Bolles, Esq., for twenty years publisher of the Hartford (Coco.) Courier, died of sun stroke last Monday, aged fifty-one years. B. Rush Petriken has been appointed a member of the Union State Central Committee from Clinton county, in the place of Charles W. Wingard. Jessie Stedman, aged eighty-two years, addressed a public assembly at Springfield, Vermont, on the fourth, and died before he left the platform. The Post Office Department uses $38,000 worth of wrapping paper, $l6, 000 worth of twine, $60,000 for mail bags, and $lO, 000 for new locks and keys per annum. A man named Robert Shorts, well ad vanced in years, was cowhidod in Alle gheny, on Thursday evening last, by a woman whose daughter, it is alleged' he attempted to abduct. Milly Murray, a young woman tried in Orange county, N. Y., for killing her new-born infant, has been found guilty of murder in the first degree, and sen tenced to be hung. On Thursday last, Messrs. Bushong & Sons, distillers of Reading, sold 3000 barrels of whiskey to a well known li quor firm in Philadelphia at $1.70 per gallon. The transaction foots up to over $250,000. Joseph H. Shipley has been arrested in Baltimore, charged with inducing Federal soldiers to visit his house, in Baltimore county, .for the purpose of robbing and making prisoners of them, it being alleged that be had a squad of rebel cavalry concealed on his place at the time. There is a boy living at Tresillian, near Truro, named Edward Weeks, who, although only 12 years of age, stands 5 feet 6 inches high, is very. bony, measures 43 inches round the waist, and is of the *astonishing weight of 189 pounds, or about double that of an ordinary youth of the same age. The last surviving issue of Benedict Arnold was his son, William Fitch Ar nold, who was a magistrate in Bucks county, England, and the father of six children. Nothing directly has been heard of him since 1859—but it is sup posed he is still living. The steamer Kearsage, the conquer or of the Alabama, takes its name from Mount Kearsage, near the centre ofNew Hampshire. It is one of the sentinel outposts of the White Mountains, but not connected with them. There are now four hundred and eighty-seven national banks. There are six in Missouri, thirty-one in Illinois, twenty-eight in Indiana, sixteen in lowa, thirteen in Wisconsin, the same number in Michigan, seventy-nine in Ohio, seventy-one in Pennsylvania, thirteen in New Jersey, ninety-six in New England, and ninety-four in New York. John Morrissey, the notorious gam bler and prize-fighter, who was in this city for two or three, days previous to the boat race, for the purpose of getting bete, is said to be one of the shrewdest and most successful gamblers in the United States. How he succeeded here, we have.no means of knowing, but it is osserted that he had $lO,OOO posited to ills order here, and that ht . t Since he left Ne.w York twg as , in oa l w been instituted against him no tenn sON cover money lost in gambling„ these claims is for $11,750. 11 1 a•i' other fer $23,000.--Pittsburg p 1 i nity of view• Govern- ',, -.. d , General News Items. go. The New York Times publishes a lengthy account of a meeting which late ly took place in Canada, between certain Rebel gentlemen purporting to be "Com missioners" from Jeff Davis and Ilorace Greeley,to agree upon terms of peace.— They wanted permission to go to Wash ington and from there to Richmond. But it turns out that they had no autbori- ty to act, but were willing to submit any terms our Government would propose, to Jeff Davis. Of course the whole thing ended in nothing, nor is it believed that any thing ever was meant by it, ex cept to get up a peace diversion in fa vor of the Copperhead party of the North. But in this it will prove as mis erable a failure as was the attempt at negotiation. 615- The Richmond papers persist in asserting that General Grant is dead. They announce the fiction very soberly, saying that the flags of our shipping have been at half-mast in his honor, and that our picketsconfirm the intelligence. One of them asserts that the only con solation the Confederacy can draw from his death is the fact that it will dishear ten the Yankees, who think him a won derful General. Anyway, it don't be lieve be came to his death by a wound. Such a butcher as he is more likely, it thinks, to have died of mania-a-porn. cfir Attempts at assassination are not common in New Hampshire, but here is a case: Hon. Edmund Burke, while riding in his carriage in Claremont, last week, was waylaid by one Baron S. Noyes, who, failing to stop the horse, fired three shots from a revolver at Mr. Burke in the carriage. Noyes confesses his intent to take the life of Mr. Burke. The assault was made because M. Burke was counsel for the wife of Noyes in a proceeding for divorce for ill-usage. Mrs. Edward Edwards, residing in Mahoning county, Ohio, died last week from injuries received at the hands of her husband. It appears that the parties had been at a pie, nie, and that, a difficulty occuring between them, the wife threw three stones at her husband. The latter took up one of the stones and hurled it back at the wife, when it struck her on the forehead, producing injuries from which, in a few days after wards, she died. Cr J. Allen wishes the government to furnish him with $5OO and six pairs of good pistols, that he may proceed to Richmond and slay Jeff Davis. The man has been a prisoner at Castle Thun der and at Salisbury, N. C., and desires revenge for his ill treatment. There may be other sufferers like him who will not ask government aid. car We have already stated that the price of the New York dailies is to be raised from three cents to five on the Ist of August.. We now learn that the prico of all the daily papers in Boston will be increased at the same date. The increased cost of paper and of all print ing materials and of labor renders this course a necessity. par General James B. McPherson, killed before Atlanta, was a native of Sandusky, Ohio. and graduated at NV est Point as the first in the class of 1853. Ile received a commission as brevet second lieutenant in the Engineer Corps, and for about a year remained at West Ilfoint as assistant instructor of military engineering. tEr During the past week 3,637 emi grants landed in New York, making an aggregate since January 1 of 103,692, against 76,320 in 1863. Among the emi grants arrived this week there were about a hundred factory girls from Eng land, whose passage had been paid by the Lawrence Mill Companies, whither the girls went at once. lea- The death of Gen. James B. Mc- Pherson takes from the army one of its ablest commanders. In all the West ern campaigns he held important posi tions, and never failed to distinguish himself and do good service to the country. In the army he had the repu tation of a great soldier. Atlanta will he dearly purchased by his life. ler A company has been organized in New York with $500,000 capital, and is now making 200 pairs daily of shoe soles from vulcanized rutiber. They are moulded in a single piece, under a high pressure, with seperate rivets im bedded in the solid gum. They are said to wear much longer than leather. Cr The Philadelphia, Bulletin attri butes the helpless condition of Pennsyl vania as regards its militia forces, to venal and corrupt men of the last legis lature, who under the influence of bribes devoted themselves to special legislation and neglected the public interests. Edward B. Farrington, a printer in the Luzerne Union office, was found fastened to a buggy on the Tamaqua turnpike, dead. The horse had evident ly run away, he had been involved by the reins and wheel and dragged until dead. _.... ,crir The Phillipsburg (N:1.) ,star - d, l ' with) Mc Via at , his head or die . ' .6741)er day. Th" is 4 ..,...„,t $... , )k."l, a s igan - wart,that has • IniZ:- , 4 UAL Nk s '.o.-., 4tre,. /4, ~.- •., VY,3t l ' ' -0,-..),.....___..4 fFT M •r ' ..! .3V •gg CB 4. ,Mar SPECIAL NOTICES A nen.l.,er of years have elapsed since the introduction of Hostetter's. Celebrated Bit ters to the public. The prejudice existing in the minds of many persons against what are denominated patent medicines at first greatly retarded its sale ; but as its virtues and mer its became known, this barier of prejudice was overthrown, and the demand increased so rap idly that in a few years scarcely a village ex- hilted in the United States in which the afflic ted had not experienced the benefits arising from the use of the "Billets," and at the pres ent day there are to be found, in at/ parts of the world vouchers for the great merits of the article. No pester cure for Dyspepsia can be found. See advertisement. Fur sale by Druggists and Dealers generally, A CANDID STATEMENT. YOU COD procure of any Druggist in this city and vicinity, Dr. Tobias' Venetian Liniment. It is a sure and speedy cure for sorethroar, toothache, chronic rheumatism, colic, croups and pains in the limbs. We advise every one to give it a trial. The expense is a mere trifle-25 cents—and we are confident no person will ever be with out it. Every family should have a bottle in the house in case of sudden accidents, such as cuts, burns, scalds, &c. Its pain relieving qualities are miraculous. As for croup, it has saved hundreds; we have the certificates to prove it. Office, No 56 Cortlandt Street, New York. Sold by all Druggists. 3t3' Beware of False Profits, who promise to restore gray hair to its natural co!or, with poisonous and imperfect dyes of sulphor and lead. Cristadoro's is the only dye That is per:cetly clean, Perfectly Imitates Nature, Perfectly Reliable and Sure, Perfectly Harmless and Simple, Perfectly Poisonless and Pure, and combines in itself all the perfections of a perfect dye. Crista,toro'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. Ctusr DO CO, No. 6 Astor House, New-York. Sold every where, and applied by all Hair Dressers. Price $l, $1:50, and $3 per box, according [l:n ErM Scurvy and Scrofulous Eruptions will soon corer the bodies of those Marc men who are fighting their countries battles. Night air bad food and drenching rains will re like sad havoc with the strongest, therefore let ever• man supply himself with Hallo way's Oint ment, it is a certain one for et ery kind abin disease. If the reader of this "notice" cannot get a box of Pills ur (hutment from the drug - store in his place - , let him write to me, 80 Maiden Lane, enclosing the amount, a.,d I will mail a box free of expense. Many dealers will not kt ep in) medicines on hand because they can not make as much profit as on other person's make. 35 cents, 88 cents, and $1.40 per Mix or put. [215 A gentleman, cured of Nervous Debili ty, Incompetency, Premature Decay and Youthful Error, ctuated by a deetre to bene fit others, will be happy to fultish to all who need it, (free of charge), the recipe and di ections fur making tha simple reared; used, in his case. Those wishing to profit bv his experience, and possess a Valuable Kennedy, will receive the same, by return mail, (care fully sealed), by addressing Jour B. OGDEN', Itlap 14-3:n] 'No. 60 Nassau street, N. 'V Editor of Tirt , ,11,,rirfUan. Dear Sir: With your permission I wish to say to the rea ders of your paper that I wilt send, by return mail, to all who wish it (free), a Recipe, with full directions for making and using a simple Vegetable Balm, 'that will einctually remove, in ten days, Pimples, Blotches, Tan, Freckles, and all impurities of the skin, leaving the same soft, clear, smooth and beautitul. I will also mail free to those haying bald heads os bare faces, simple directions a::d in formation that will enable them to start a full growth of luxuriant Hair, Whiskers, or a Moustache, in less than 33 days. Respectfully yours, Thos. F. Cu AP:3IA a, Chemist, July 30-3m] 831 Broadway, N. Y. lEanA. Card to the Suffering. Swallow two or three hogsheads of " "Tonic Bit ters," "Sarsaparilla," '' Nervous Antidotes," &c., &c., and after you are satisfied with the result, then try one box of 91c1 Dr. Buchan's English .s:pecific Pills—and be restored to good health and vigor in less than 30 days. They arc purely vegetable, pleasant to take, prompt and salutary in their effects on the broken down and shattered constitution. Old and young can take themwith adyautage. Impor ted and sold in the United States only hr - - •_ J. S. BUTLER. 427 Broadway, N. Agent for the United States. P. .9.—A Box of the Pills, securely packed, will be mailed to any address on receipt of price, which is ORE DOLLAR, postpaid—mo ney refunded by the agent if entire satisfac_ tion is not given. [july 30-3rn Do you want to be Cured? Dr. Buch an's English Specific Pills cures, in less than 3 0 days, the worst cases of Nervousness, Im potency, Premature Decay, Seminal Weak ness, Insanity, and all Urinary,' Sexual and Nervous Affections, no matter from what cause produced. Price $1 per box. Sent by mail, postpaid, on receipt of an order. One box will perfect the cure in most cases. Address JAMES S. BUTLER . , General Agent, No. 427 Broadway, N. Y. EYE and EAR: — Prof. J. Isaacs, M. D. Oculist and Aurist, formerly of Leyden, Hol land, is located at No. 511 Plue-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. ETTERS REMAINING unclaimed in the _LI Post Office at Marietta, Pa., THURSDAY, JULY 28, 1864. Baker, Conrad King, John Bhasten,Mr. Sand L ukenbach, Martin Brady, llen Myer, Joseph Severson, Henry Mann,Wm. H. Renerly, Lieut. K. Reinhold, Samuel Eagle, Samuel Roberson, Annie M. Hammer, Eliza Winters, Marthe Johnson, Samuel To obtain any of these letters, the ap plicant must call for "advertised letters, " give the date of this list, and pay one cent ad vertisilig. ABRAHAbI CASSEL, P. M 3000 c P ur o e 1 1 11 D. S 77 1:tied Sij ° ; ° fo.i: 'll Friends and Relatives cf the brave SOLDIERS SAILORS, lOLLGWAY'S PILLS & OINTIERNT ALL WHO HAVE F R I E N D S 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 Heeidacke and want of Appetite Incident to Soldiers ! Those feelings which so sadden us, usual! %- 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 roust 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 cleat heat and good appeiite. Weakness and Debility induced by EM=3! Will soon disappear ty 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 recommendell 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 rigor to the while 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 ATTENTOINi Sores and Ulcers. Bbiclies and SwcDino can n•ith certainty be radically cured if th& Pills are taken night and morning, and the Ointment be freely used assisted in sue printed nstructions. If treated in any other manner they dry up in one part to break out in another. Where is this Ui a tmen t will remove the humors Prim the system and leave the patient a vigorous and healthy man. It will require a little perseverance in bad cases co insure a LAST] NG Clj RE. For Wounds etcher occasioned by the Bayonet Sabre or the Bullet, Sores or Bruises, To which every Soidier and Sailor are liable there are no medicines ao safe, sure and con venient as 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 matehletts Ointment, which should be 'bruit into the wound and smeared all around it. then cover it with a piece of linen from his Knap sack and compressed with a Itand:ierchief.— Taking night and morning 6 or S Pills, tv cool the sysh.rn sad prevent imistnation. Every Soldier's Knapsack and Seaman's. Chest should be provided with theicieyalun hie Remedies. LuvoarAtvr urrox !—None are genuine unless the words " liobtowae, Nr.w Yoaa and Loknox," are discernible as a Water mark in every leaf of the book of dirvtiens, around each pot or box ; the same may be plainly seen t,- holding the realty Me irgid.— - A handsome reward will he g ive n to an y one rendering ouch information as may lead to the detectmn of any party or prtrtesc.:unterfeiting the medicines or vending the same, knowing them to be spurious. *Sold at the Mlinufactory of Professor Hot.t.owA Y, 80 Maiden Lane., New York, and by all respectable Druggists and Dealer-, in Medicine thronghout the civilized world, in pots or boxes, at 30e. 70c. and SI.IU each. N. —Directions for the pill:ice ot patients in every disorder are affixed to each pot. Dealers in -.7:y writ ~ : nowa medicines c.tn have SHOW CAlirLi, CI ace LA Rs. Ire., sear the,::, FREE of EX pr - :E, by athiecui;rs T/10.11.4S HOLLOW : I SU Maiden Cane, New-I - uric. There is con iderable saving by tat tie larger sizes. IDec 2.6-1 v Coun.T PROCLAMATION Whereas. the Honorable ilkaity H. Lorin, mrnn non. A. 1.. llAVEsaud FEalize TON. 14:54., Associate Jadg 6 of the Cour; of CMunOu Pleas in and for the county of Lan caster, and Assistant Justices of the Courts of Oyer and Tit ;Muer and General Jail Delivery ar). Quarter SessiZ)lLS of the Peace, its and for the county of Lancaster, hive issued their Pre cept to rite directed. requiring, rite, among other things, to make public Proclamation through out my baliwick, that a Court of Oyer and Terminer and a general ail delivery, also a. Court of tinn eral - Quarter Sessions of the peace and Jail delivery, will commence in the Court House, in the city tit Lancaster, in the Com monwealth of Pennsylvania, on the Til 1 P.D MONDAY in AUGUST, 1564, in pursuance of which precept Public No'ice is hereby iren, to the Mayor, and Alderman' of the city of Lancaster, in the said county, and all the jus tices of the Peace, the Coroner and Constables. of the said city and county of Lancaster, that they be then and there in their own proper persons with their rolls, records and examina tions, and their other remembrances, to all those things which to their offices appertaining,- . in their behalf to be done ; and also all those who will prosecute against the prisoners who.. arc, or then shall be in t he jail of said county of Lancaster, are to be then and there to pros" ecute against them as shall be just. Dated at Lancaster, the 18th day of JULY 1864. F. SMITH, Al A N 11 0 0 1) : q!! r!):..q!• How Lqsr,—Flow 11Erran F.D Tust Publalted 3 - ciition of Dr. Culverwell's Celebrated Essay On the radical cure (without medicine) of Spermatorrhma. or Seminal Weakness; Invol untary Seminal Losses, Impotency, Mental and Physical Incapacity, impediments to Marriage, etc. ; also Consumption, Epilepsy, and FAS, induced by self-indulgence or sexu al extravagance. Price, in a Sealed rnvel,pe, only Six Cents The celebrated author in this' admirable say clearly demonstrates, from a thirty years successful practice, that the alarming consg . - gences of self-abuse may be radically cured without the dangerous use of internal medi cine or the application of the kntfe—pointing out a mode of cure, at once simple, certain and effectual, by means of which every saif ferer, no matter what his condition/may be,. may cure himself cheaply, privately, and radically. J' This Lecture should be in the hands of every youth and every man in the land. 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