flu Matitttian. I.'. L. Balzer, Editor. MARIETTA. PA SATURDAY, AUGUST 6, 1864. FOR PRESIDENT, ABRAHAM LINCOLN, OF ILLINOIS FOR VICE PRESIDENT, ANDREW JOHNSON, OP TENNESSEE : Mon Eltztoral gitktt SENATORIAL hloaroze bichltozaEL, Philadelphia, THOMiI2 H. CUNNINGHAM, Beaver co. =i3 = L. Robert P. King, 2. Oeo.. M. ,Coates, 3. Henry Hunan, 4. Wm. H. Kern,• h. Partin IL Jenks, 6. Citas. M. Runk, O. Robert Parke. 7. Wm. Taylor, 8. Jno. A. Hiestand, 9. R. H. Coryel 11. Ediod. Haßiday, 12. Chas. F. Reed .Elias W. Hale, 14. Chas. if. Shriner, 15. John Wister, 16. D. M , Conawhy, 17. David W. Woods, 18. Isaac Benson, 19. John Patton, 20. Samuel B. Dick, 21. Everhard Bierer, 22. John P. Penney, ;23.. Ebe'zer DIV/Wein, 24. J. W. Blanchard. DEATH.OP FATHER WALDO.—The ven erable Father Waldo, of. Revolutionary fame, is dead. The Syracuse Courier says : "Ere this item is read this morn ing, the probability is that the , venera ble Father Waldo shall have : passed from his earthly sojourn, to the promised land of the eminently good and virtuous. He is now in his one hundred and second year, and has been rapidly. sinking ,for several days past from an affection of the throat. At our latest accounts last evening, the, venerable, and respected steward of God's choice was lying in an insensible stupor, from which , there was no hope of arousing him. Even while we indite these few hues his spirit might, have passed to its Creator. Father Waldo is one of the twelve survivors ,of the Revolutionary War, and in his pas sage from life to eternity, he stands pre pared. to be garnered, like unto a sheaf of wheat fully ripe." isr English officers in India love, to Ituu,t.tha tiger, aid the tiger reciproca tink simattuies loves to hunt them. The Bombai !hies relates that Captains Wilma and'ilaweon had been hunting in the Hoondie hills and had killed nine . tigers. They were on the point a, re linquiihing farther sport when another tiger he scared up and wounded. Di rected by traces of blood and the roar ing of the brute, the two officers ap proached his lair on a patch or jangle on the hillside, when from a height the tiger sprang upon them, knocked both over, and seising Wilmot carried him off towards his - retreat, treating the tinier tunate auto as'a cat does a rat. He call ed upon Dawson to fire, which he finally did andvkilled the animal, but Wilmot was fatally:wounded and died that night. drilbree Revolutionary heroes were represented byl descendents. in direct linei•and bearing their name, on the gearsnge, in the recent engagement with the Alabama. Judge Matthew Thornton and Josiah. Bartlett, signers of the Declaration of Independence, from New Hampshire, represented by great-grandsons, Lieutenant Commander Thoreton,•and Acting hineter's Mate Ezra Bartlett, and the gallant Commo dore Freble by Midshipman Preble.— Thus are-see those great and good men "still live,"! and+ are still , at. work in en deavoring to,preserve that Government whose fooodation-atone they helped to lay. While-the rebels - were- la Mary land, one or their officers, in reply to some interrogatory, remarked." We take from our northern friends atulsympathi zero more freely than from Union people because we feel that they would special ly desire to contribute to the good cause of the south." • The logic is nnimpeach ,ble, but it is questionable whether it if those who driven away, irons act and all SUICIDE OF AN AGED MAN.—Mr. Ezra Davol, an aged and respectable citizen, was found, yesterday afternoon, lying near the grave of his wife, in the old burying ground, with blood Sowing from Me nose and month. He was immedi ately conveyed to his residence, and on examination it was found that he had shot himself, the ball passing up through the roof of his mouth into or near the brain. He remained in an unconscious state last night and during the day, and at the time of our going to press he was still alive. Mr. Davol was in his eighty .first year, and has of late, we under stand, exhibited some symptoms of men tal aberration. He was undoubtedly laboring under some derangement of mind when be committed the sad act.— Full River News. In Germantown, Peons., the other day, some small boys were sitting on the sidewalk near the railroad depot, making a kite ; and as they were shaping .the paper Mr it, a citizen passing along that way saw, among the _covering inten ded for the sticks a five hundred dollar United States five twenty bond. He took the bond and went with the boys to their home, and there learned that a woman belonging to the house had found it in the street. She did not know its character. and picked it up because there were pretty pictures upon it. The owner of the bond; living in the neigh borhood, had lost it from his pocket, and, had returned to the city after •it. Be recovered his' property.. ifir Official reports of European countries have shown more boy-children are born in war than in times of peace, and that although at the end of the wars of the First Napoleon, it was rare to find a Frenchman. over five feet three, there was a recuperation in the next age, and now the average, height of the men does not vary much -from what it was before, the Directory. tor Miss Pauline Cushman, on every evening of her appearance at the Boston' Theatre, has announced her readiness to lead a company of young men to the front. On Wednesday night she rend the list of those who responded, and Jo* among the names were those of William Whalley, Charles 'Barron, James M. Ward and-William &alien, actors. ow The Roxbury Journal states that the recent ro bbery of Mr. Appleton's house in Shawmut avenue, of that city, was committed by a young man named Morse who boarded in the family and was about to be married to*Mr. Apple- ton's daughter. He confessed the deed and says the did it in order to get money enough to be married with. Gfir A Vernl4l4. substitute broker, Wm. W. Snyde, was drugged on the Orange and Ewing cars last week, and, robbed of ten thousand two hundred dollars. Thomas Murray was caught, and half of the money , recovered. The. other robber is at large. or The Charleston Courier, of the 12th inst., says : "The number of shells thrown into the city from the commence= ment• of the bombardment np to , Satur day, the three hundred and • sixty-fifth day, (one year,) is seven-thousand and ninety-one." _ Cr A Freneh - papersays that by an accident charcoal lies 'been discovered to be a sure cure for brirOs. By 4 laying a piece of cold charcoal upon`i bUrn the pain' subsides immed lately. The remedy is cheap and simple, and deserves a trial. ier A, German •has been arrested; in New York for throwing vitriol over .e family consisting of man, wife and two children, whe were. sitting on the back step of their house. All were severely burned. le" The Barnstable Patriot says that Miss A nnie E. Jones, better known as "the pretty rebel spy," and as "Major Jones," was released, by order of Secre tary Stanton, from the Barnstable jail last week. Oar A man who was suppcised to be a . rebel spy was pursued and idiot on Fri- day last, in. Cumberland county, but it turned out that be was only, a vagrant.. He was not dangerously Wounded. Mrs. Patrick Martin, of Allegheny city, died on Monday from the effects of cbloroform, which had been administered to her at her own request, for the pur pose of having some teeth extricated. which ended wit, our bops. lies in the ►ttended by Seceeh..The ;emery care ;tided in the toy might of ,epped op to ly, "Will Vederal or The Provost Marshal General orders that all men who maim themselves for the, purpose of escaping the draft, be ' held by 'the respective district provost manduile, and their cases reported to him. lir The very beautiful foot of a young lady was found floating in New York harbor, on WednesdiY.--Exchange. We see such feet floating through our streets every day of the week. gir A match for $250 a side was late ly trotted in England between the Amer ican hOrse Jack Rossiter, and an English i gtre-named Matohleeei fifty miles in tyr4, lr A young lady -of Lowell, Mass., lnddenly, , a•few days ago,-fiti the of thinking and ' bathing in cold bile in a ithiedf perlitiration. General News Items. A ten•pound mud-turtle, caught re cently in the town of Rochester, Mass., laid fifty-nine eggs seven hours after its head was severed froth its body. An eggs-sell-ent story. By recent statistics it is proven that over ten suicides take place every day in France. Last year four thousand wretched ones put an end to their own existence. Forty farmers in Windham county Connecticut, turned out on Sunday week and got in the bay of a poor woman who has six children, and whose,husha!id is absent in the army.: Madeleine Smith, the alleged flitir deress, is the blooming, buxom wife of an artist, and , lives in London. Ten thousand Swiss emigrantri are now , at Havre and other Earopeatt ports awaiting passage to the United States. A newspaper carrier has paid $5,000 for the exclusive right to sell papers at the depcis and on the cars of the . New York Central Itailroad. The smallest pony in the world is owned by John 'RareY, of 'Ohio. It is only twenty . inches high, and weighs only twenty-one pounds. No lees. than 7,324 sheep were' killed by dogs in Ireland last year. The barbers of Troy , prosecute, any one of their craft who shaves a customer on Sunday. A petition against the.death punish ment has received the names of 30,000 laborers in. Paris. The Quebec Gazette reached the one hundredth year of its existence,on the 22d ultimo. The Prussian army is to be shorn of its epaulettes, -actiVe service having proved,tts it has done to other armies long sinCe, that they'are a great nuisance to , the wearer. . A young man in Madison county, Ky., has been arrested just as he was on the point of eloping with his aunt, a mar ried woman with three children. A young woman is in prison in Lou don for getting her Mother handsomely insured and then poisoning the old lady. The Alleghany mountains are on fire between. Blair and Cambria counties, near Cresson station. The night view is fearfully grand and lurid. Gr The residence of . Ohailim J. ner, near Martinsbnig, Va., was totally burned a few days since. , The rebet General Hood ie a Kentuck, ian by birth, and graduated froth tht Military Academy in 1852. He ,loot• a leg at Gettysburg. The ; New York Central Railroad re. ceives five thousand dollars for the ex- elusive right to sell papers on its ears and in its depots. The' Mortnons have commenced" the. publication of a daily paper in Great Salt Lake City. It is called the Daily Telegraph. sir There is a sensible enatom . pre. vailing in Lockport _of ,pouring,: sixty 4thousand gallons of .water upon , the streets every morning, thus penetrating the earth to •the .depth of three inches: Capt. Coulter, Provost Marshal near Blairaville,*was shot on Sattirday, by a man whom he was: trying to 'airest i , and seriously though not fatally. injured. • Eagenie hits destroyed high bonnets and substituted a small, 'round iliape, encircling the oval of the face, garnished with a fringe of jet, white beads or straw, falling upon the hair. The New York policemen, in additiou to their drill practice, have to alady the Metropolitan, police Jaw, and, learn. the theory of arrests and, under what cir cumstances they are justified in using the authority vested in them. Madelain Smith, Who 'poisoned her betrothed in Scotland, some years ago, ad was tried and acquitted' for it, died recently-with a broken heszt-in.lnver ness,!because, Cain-like, she was. driven from every place >of refuge—where her sins found her out. Her husband died just before her, Broken-hearted too. • Rev. Dr. Kennard, of the tenth Bap tist Church in Boston, has mached ten thousand sermons; baptiZed two thou sand and thirty-three persens, married four thousand and eighty-nine- couples, and attended three thousand nine bun dred funerals in forty-six years: Stone bullets were used until the year .1.51.4, when they were supplanted by lion. It was near the close of the sixteenth century before leaden- bullets were generally adopted. Stone cannon : ball are still u sed in some of the East ern' countries. burial register of Lymin,v ton Hants, there isthe following entry: " Angola, •1722: . This forenoon the body of Samuel Baldwin, late inhabitant of this parish, was conveyed it a vessel off to sea, and, was committed to • the deep off the Needle rocks, ruler the Isle of Wight." "This appears to have been done," says a Hampshire.papei, itc- Cordance with the . 3vish' of the• Amassed; to prevent his wife • danoing over his grave,.whicle.she threatened to 4." A SINGULAR CONTEST.-4TWO gentle men of high birth, the one a Spaniard and the other a German, having render ed Maximilian 11. many services, they each, for recompense, demadded his nat ural daughter, Melons,- in, marriage. The Prince, who entertained equal re spect for them both, could not.give any preference, and after-much delay, told them that from claims they both had to his attention and regard, he could not give his assent for either to marry his daughter, and they mast decide it by their own prowess and address ; but as he did not wish to risk the loss of either or both by suffering them to fight with offensi* weapons; he had 'ordered a large bag to ' be 'brotzght,ind he who was successful enough to put _his rival into it, should obtain his daughter. This strange combat between two gen tlelnen WM in the presence of the whole imperial court, and lasted half an hour. At length the Spaniard yielded to the g i ertnan,Andre Etbnarp, the Baron of Tetherd, who, when he had got his ad. versarpluto the bag;took him on his back, auffitslaced him at the Emperor% feet, and on the following day married the beautiful Relents. • gir The Buffalo Medical Journal de scribes a new disease which has appear eq at Cheektawitga in Erie county,,of which several persons have died. It commences with a diarrhcea, and is fol lowed by emaciation till death super vines. The autopsy revealed the cause CT Faience of the worm Trichina spiralis in the striated muscles. The same parasite was also shown in a sausage, of which =one of the dead per sons had eaten, and' without doubt orig inated from pork. The worm was - prob ably set free in 'the process of digestion, and immediately pierced the walls of the intestines ; creating the diarrhoea, and passed through the peritoneum into the muscles. It is very tenacious of life, and will resist a strong heat. The par asites were found in the muscles of the dead persons in large numbers. The medical men have no doubt that the use of pork as an article of diet was the cause of the disease. Tapeworm, it is believed, originates in. a Minna'. manner, •' Major James H. Lane, of the 31st U. S. colored troops, was recently tried by court martial, at the Ninth Army Corps headquarters, upon the charge of cowardice and conduct unbecoming an officer and gentleman, and sentenced "to be cashiered, with the loss of all pay and allowances now due or to become due, have his shoulder straps and buttons to be cut oil' an* his sword broken in the presence of his regiment, he thereafter to be confined at hard labor at the Dry Tortugas until the expiration of his term of service." ir James -Bennett, of Mercersburg, Pa., is now in his ninety-first year. He is a cooper, hale and healthy, and has lived in Mercersburg for sixty years. He has harvested on the same place for thirty-two successive years, and has miss ed but one harvest since he was; twelve years old. This year he worked for ten days as a field-hand. sr It has been , ascertained by M. Gaw, that the intensely, bitter and [tau ? Bootie taste of ,many drugs may be com pletely disguised 13y mixing them . with chloroform. his claimed that even the bitter taste of quinia and the , peculiar odor of asafoetida can be thus,destroyed air The contents" Of a chamber igen _ sil were 'emptied n eon head as he recently traversed'the streets or Mexico. Some think' that he may not have regarded this'as a pleasant mode otbeing . baptized into s his imperial office. W A western editor -says that he would as soon try to go to ,sea on a shingle, make a ladder of fog, chase a streak of lightning through werab apple orchard, or set take ,Erie on fire with a loco foco match, as to stop ,two young lovers getting married when they take it into their heads to do , so. ($" There is said to be a young lady, aged' sweet eighteen, who belongs to and resides in St. Lords, and who has done nothing but eat and sleep since she was four years' old. She is awake seven Minute's twice in twenty-four hours, 'and then talks and •eats. , The Niagara Falls correspondent of.the,New York Commercial Advertis-, er wrote • that , if George. Sanders 4144 Jacob , ThonTson failed to bring about an armiatice with &call fon a convention . of all the. States, they will endeavor to procnr43 as an alternative the nomination - , by the Dem ocracy, of ex-PresidentFience at Chicago. eir There is a surplus of femalee in Massachusetts, and's. supine of Make in -Oregon. Steps have been taken in New York looking tewards an organization to•send femides.te Oregon. l'he when , it reaches the Pacific, is expected to produce great foy. sr When a cat is seen to catch a chicken, tie it round her neck, and make her wear it for two or three days.. Fas ten it securely, for she will make incred ibie efforts, to get rid of it... Be firm for thitttime, and , the cat is cnred-,--she will never,agein desire to_touch a bird, Titans is a man on trial at St. Joseph, Mo.,"aocused of nine mailers. SANITARY FAIRS.—The magnificent SS- ries of Sanitary Fairs began several months ago at Chicago is now nearly closed. The movement was one of the most beautiful and gigantic exhibitions of patriotism ever witnessed on the earth. Its substantial results have been in the highest degree satisfactory. The following is a tolerably accurate state ment of the nett proceeds of the Fairs; Chicago, Cincinnati, Boston, Brooklyn, Cleveland, Buffalo,- iTew'York, 1,200,000 St. Louis, Philadelphia, Pittsburg, Smaller Fairs aggregate about, 150,000 Total sr The Palmer (Mass.) Joninal states that abontbixty,cattha.,lif iiinall-pox and varioloid have been treated at the State Almshouse during thepast three months 'with bat a single fatal teeth, arid that was in the..case of a man who was taken there in the last stagei, of the disease froth a neighboring town". The remedy used in all these cases was a tea made from a plant known in medicine as ear racenia purpnra, familiarly Called ladies' saddle or water cap,. the root of which is the remedial part. or Gen. Mc Pherson, who was killed near Atlanta on Friday, was engaged to be married to a beautiful and accom plished young lady of Baltimore. The despatch announcing his death by acci dent fell into her hands on its arrival. It was addreesed to - her mother, who, not being able to see well without her, glasses, passed it to the daughter en gaged to the deceased to read. Seeing it recorded his death, she instantly fain ted. The scene was peculiarly distress ing.—N. I. Express. ear The Lewistown (Me:) Journal has the following : •"l'here are a couple of spinsters in Ureene—monomaniacs in their way—who have been trying to see how many cats could be multiplied from one pair. They began with one pair when the rebellion broke out, and, as the kittens have grown and multiplied, their number now reaches the alarming number of 440 cats and kittens 1" r A correspondent tells of a chap who was drinking at a counter, and with al being tolerably tight, after several at tempts to raise the glass to his lips, suc ceeded in getting it high enough to pour the contents inside the shirt collar, and set the glass down with the excla mation. 'That's gbod.but a little too much ice, Mr. Barkeeper.' ar It was admitted, in a recent .de bate in the House of Commons, ;that during the last ten years Ireland hue lost two and a half millions of its' popu lation, and that the exodus is.siill going on at the rate of one hundred and twenty . _ thousand per annum. SPECIAL NO.TICES. la- A. number of years have elapsed since the introduction of Hostetter's Celebrated Bit ters to.the publiT. The prejudice existing in the minds of -many persons against what are den,ommated 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 deniand increased so rap idly that in a few years scarcely a village ex histed in the United States in which the afflic ted had not experienced the benefits arising from the ase of .the "Bittets;" and at the pres ent day there are to be found, in all parts of the world vouchers for the , great merits of the article. No greater cure for Dyspepsia can be . found. ill* Bee 'advertisement. For , sale by Druggists and Dealers generally, A "PAsrzaD - STATEMENT. YOU can procure of any Druggist in this city and vicinity, Dr. Tobias' Venetian Liniment. It is a sure and sneedj , Cure.for sorethroat, toothache, chronic rheumatism, colic, croups and paine im; :the limbs. We advise every one to give.ll4l4NaL The expense is a mere trifle-25 centsand we apkconfident no person will ever be with tvery-family,-should have,aottlkin the house in case of sudden accidents, such as cuts, burns, scalda, &c. Its pain relieving qualities are miraculous. is for croup, it has saved hundreds; ute, have the.certificates to prove it. Office, No 56 Cortlandt Street; New York." Sold by all Druggiats, Beware of .False Profitsi who premise to repioi*Oiy . toir to itsnMural , color, With poisonous and imperfect dyes of sulpher ,and lead.. ' ' • ' Cristadoro's is the only dye Thathrpeifectlx clean, Perfectly Imitates Nature, Perfectly Relihble and Sure, Perfectly Hirmless and Perfectly, Poisonliss and Pure and combines.in itself.all the perfections of a perfect dye. . , Crilt,lor.es Hair yresereatire, is inv,alutible with his Dye, as it imparts the,Emost softness and the most beautiful gloss and great vitality to the hair.% Manufactured by J. Carimenono, No. 6 Astor House, New-York. Sold every where, and applied by all Hair Dressers. Price $l, $1:50, and $3 per box, aecordini o size. Elm ict- Soldiers see to your hplth, do not trust to the Army Surgeons. ' Chillers, Fevers and Bowel Complaints will, follow your" slightest indiscretion. .Holloway's Pius and Ointment , itbe in every man's knapsack . Tiieliii-' French troops use ; no other medicines. * t . ' reader of this "notice " cannot get a ho Pills or 'Ointment from the drug store in his place, la him,write to me, 80 Maiden Lane, enclosing the ambunt, and I will ma' box free of expense.. Many , dealers wil y, at keep my medieines on band because the , h- , not make as much profit as on other per :' . make. 35 cents, 88 cents, and $1.40 per bo or pot. [216 IQP'A Card to the Suffering. Swallow two or three hogsheads of " Buchu," "Tonic Bit ters," "Sarsaparilla," " Nervous Antidotes," &c., &c., and after you are satisfied with the result, then try one box of Old Dr. Buchan's English Specific Pills—and be restored to good health and vigor in less than 30 days. They are purely vegetable, pleasant to take, prompt and salutary in their effects on the broken down and shattered constitution. Old and young ca n take themwith advantage. Impor ted and sold in the United States only by ' J. S. BUTLER. 427 Broadway, N. Y. $ '75,000 120,000 M'Agent for the United States. P. S.—A Box of the Pills, securely packed, will be mailed to any address on receipt of price, which is ONE Doti.na, postpaid-1110- ney refunded by the agent if entire satisfac tion is not given. [ July 30-3 m 147,000 300,000 120,000 100,000 Kr Do you want to be - Cured? Dr. Buch an's English Specific Pills cures, in less than 30 days, the worst cases of Nervousness, Im potency, Premature Decay, Seminal Weak ness, Insanity, and all Urinary, Sexual and Nervous Affections, iv" Matter froM what cause produced. Price s,l per box. Sent by In t , pOStPgid, on_reciiiit of as order. this: bi" ' tontperfect tie'etire in most cases. 4 . Oildreis - - - ---- JAM xs S. BUTLER, GAgral.4geriL.s4l,4,27 Broadway, N. Y. 575,000 1,300,000 350,000 $4,437,000 4 :81" Editor of The /Variation. Dear Sir : With your permission I wish to say to the rea dereof your 'paper that I will send, by return mak, to all who wish it (free), a Recipe, with full iirections for making and using a simple yegetable Balm, that will effectually remove, in ten days, Pimples, Blotches, Tan, Freckles, and all , impurities of the skin, leaving the same soft, clear, smooth and beautiful. I will also mail free to those having bald heads or bare faces, simple directions and in formation that will enable them in:start a_full growth of luxuriant Hair, Whiskers, or a Moustache, in less than 30 days. ' Respectfully yours, THOS. F. CH &PHAN, chemist, July 30-3m] 531 }headway, N. Y. Er A gentleman, cured of Nervous Debili ty, Incompetency, Premature Decay and Youthful Error, quitted by a desire to bene fit others, will be happy to futhish to all who need it, (free of charge), the recipe and di ections for making the simple rein dy used, in his case: Those wishing to profit by his experience, and possess a . .Nraluable Remedy, will receive the same, by return mail, (cute fully sealed), by 'addressing JOHN B. OGDEN, MUy 14-3m] 1 % . 1 . 0.60 Nassau street, N. Y 113 - EYE and EAR:— Prof. J. Isaacs, M. D. Oculist and Aura% formerly of Leyden, Hol land, is located at No. 511 Pine-st., Philadel phia, where persons afflicted with diseases of the'Eye or Ear will be scientifically treated and cured, if curable. Artificial Ryes 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. qa_kpit, -s.ttibintt anb Gortbrogrtt WOULD most respectfully take this means of informing his friends and the public generally that he has commenced the 'lnswing of DEEDS, MORTGAGES. JUDGMENTS, Ind in fact everythins in the Corivt-ranciNr. line. Having gratuitous intercourse with a member of the Lancaster Bar, will enable Min execute instruments of writing with accuracy. ltd He can be found at the office of " Tn r. MARIETTIA N," XI Front street, or at his res idence on Market street, = a square west of the "Donegal House," Marietta. It iff Blank Deeds, Mortgages, Judgments and Leases always on hand and fur sale. WINES & upuofts. H. D. BENJAMIN; DEAL ER IN WINES &I LIQUORS, Picot Building, Marietta, Pa. . • MS leave to:-inform the public that he Swill continue the WIN E LIQUOR busi ness, in all its branches. He will constlptly keep on hand all kinds of Brandies, Wines, Gins. Irish and Scotch Whiskey, Cordials. Bitters, 3•c., BENJAMIN'S Justly Celebrated Rose Whisky, ALWAYS ON HAND, A very surerior OLD RYE WHISKE-Y ust received, which is warranted pure. Ate- All If. D. B. now asks' of the public is a careful examination of hisatock and pri ces, which will, he is confident, result *in Ho tel , keepers and others finding it •to their ad vantage to make -their purchases from I lin- Glatt Flerr-sr_ Formerly Iteeseye, OPPOSITE M A IIrETTA. HIS old, R Ferry —one of the oldest, and most safe, crossings on the Susquehanna River— is now In charge of the undersigned, lo ;has refitted theold and built new boats, which will enable him to do ferrying with safety and die. patch. No unnecessary delay need be epdured. Sober and _experienced Ferrymen always eq geggd, No imposition in charges as-ilic fol lowing list will show: Farm Wagons, each Horses, per head - _ horeektol , ; :25 Two-horse Carriage and two persons, 1:40 = Buggy, horse'anditwo personsi :50 _Foot Passeng,ers, each, - :12 .Stock-ofall kindsiafthe old charges, -All Luggage , over.fifty- pounfitt,N2s cents per 100 pounds extra: JOHN EC' July 15; 1863:4 ITINE ANDliquaßs. Sukrior'oll3ißrandr,Old-itye Holland' Gin, Old-MaderisAisbon Port Wines. Pittsburg Whiskey always - on lu lownet market pricear- Vezy. . a very low figure. DIFFENBACH. (Mir) A LARGE LOT - OF BUI F SHADES at remarkably:Jou, 10 eloeeoot _ Joriu SPAY illarket . . CHIME:Lot ofllooka for chili inikatructable Pletionreßooka ; Paper Books, Stationary, Peas, ;Pet, &a, at LANDIS& T' MO LAND: I Just recetv• and Irish If E ted pure, at ): Amain's: T)RINIE r New Crop New=Orlean —the very best Lir Cokes. by SPANGLER 8r PATTERSON; TCE COLD. CREAM MEAD m Lebanon County- noney..at W ()EMPTY Molasses. Barrels, For sale at J. It. DIF trY one or those >beaptifpi H41" . 6' at . Cameo. 92ilan genuine. H.' *1:00 cast too ENEJ /or m l tad Vlll2,nv GEM