lite "i; ariettiatt. P. L. Oaker, Editor. MARIETTA. PA SATURDAY, SEPTEKBER,IO,IB64. FOR PRESIDENT, ABRAHAM JANCpLN, OF ILLINOIS. FOR. VICE PRESIDENT, ANDREW JOELNSQN, OP 'TENNESSEE. ottulott Elntaral I,ititet spfLTORIAL. hlo*Torr MelldxaEL, Philadelphia, THOMAS H. CIYttIfINCHADIE, Beaver co. REERESE ; 1. ROW P. K in g , 2.` - Geo. M. Coates, 3. Henry Buram, 4. Wm.. H.. lam. Bartin ;13; Elias W. Hall, 14. Chas., FL Shrtner, , 15. John Wister, 16::D. 11110moughy, 17, David W. Woods, 18. Isaat Benson, 19. Jahn Patton, • ~;Robfrt Parke. 7. Wm. Taylor, 120. Samuel B. Dick, 21. Everhard Bierer, ,22.40hn P. Penney, ;23. Ebe'zer Isl 2 .lunkiii, , 24. Bianthard. 8. Ino. A.Biestand, t /I. R. .cOrYeN 11. Edwd. 12. Chas. F. Reed; ifir In consequence' of the rain on Sunday last, the scholars of the M. E. school will repeat their.pieces on Sun day morning and evening next—to-mor row: Sr In consequence of his inability to obtain. a, suitable room, Mr. Clawges has ;been compelled to abandon his pro ject.of opening a select school, until the coming spring, when he.willbe enabled to secure one of the:public school rootas. , fr We would Call attention to the iiiveitisemeet of the Farmer's and. Gar dener's exhibition, on, Thursday. next. We are promised something very fine. , We, hope to see a large display and hope also that it will , not be confined to the fruit grOwers, or business fruit men, but that every individual who may have anything .to exhibit will not hesitate to bring it. forward. A mistaken feeling of.prida has prevented many, from ex hibiting what they may think• not so fine AS some others may have ; this is a se rious ertor—,bring anything you have; and show, thereby,"that you,are intereb ted7in the,cultnre of everything , good or needieL7 Let as show what we can, do; for something ie expected as we already have a reputution - forfine fruit, at least, and , 'now let us add vegetablek, flowdrs, handy-week, Stc., ~sari Mcssrs. David Roth ,and A, H, summy,mre,appointed a coTAiittee to visit p s a, J. W. Yisher's liegiment of "Mundra,d bays, Man" and selurethirty savn ,volunteers (the quota dr : this bo: rent 0 414 P last. 50 P, 000 „ ea- ,I In for which they were authorized tQ,pa $450 a piece. Several committees anvassed ourrborough during last week n d ra i se d thei"needinl7 for. that purp6 . 3 .. Thus, it will be.seinr, that Marie to is out of the draft.H . liar, The gnion Co i met on Wednesdny I I mty Convention at and nominated ttie fop9ring t,,ickle, „ OWlin, Thilidderis Stevens, Associate, ow Judge, A. L. Hayes, , House : of e ," Representatives :—.B: Bil liOgelt, R;4 l W. Shenk, Day Wood; Charlel yanues. Qom r wisioper, Jacob B. Shuman: Prison; Inspectors, F. LI. Ranch, Q ..ofefey, 1 directors ,of the Poor, Thomas S. good, Jacob . Rohver, Auditor, -- D. S. Clark. A continittee waited. tipon Mr. Ste vens, Mei. his.nomination, and conduct ed .liimi ,, to the convention, where he mitde . a veilablelid loyal speech. 'The tieket is an'unexciptionable . . . After repeated efforts a fund large enough to clear this borough from the last draft,has been raised which will pay a bounty of four hundred and fifty dollars to each recruit mustered into the credit of,the borough. committee has been " running . . 'round .loose" to get th e . men, but up to this writing, but 12 out of the 33 have been obtained. The borough council Ilas contributed' $3OO a-man•to the fund. 1 Capt. E. D. Roath, Co. E,.107th P: V. : VOls. l ;•Was taken prisoner at the Weldon railroad engagement. We are told that his:wife, who resides in this borna649eivii4 e, leper from him, a few days since, from Libby Prison. He writes thiCtlMs far he is well treated. Sr On Saturday evening last, Messrs. Barr Siangler, N. Cassel; Levi Boughter, Groh and H. S. Lib. hart were • ehcisee l delegates to the County Convention. or Milo Clenllion,.a grarut:danghter of the late John C. Calhoun, of South Carolina, is at present' a guest of ex- Presiding Bichantinat Wheatland. liir Special attention is invited to, John Fareira'n,nOnitisement in this is sue. Ills aBsOrtmentr,of Fancy Furs, for Ladies': and Ohildren's Wear is very large and of a superior quality. Give him a call. .4„f. General News Items. On Tuesday evening the boarding house of Mrs. Shaffer, in Altoona, was struck by lightning, and a young man named Clark Minim!), instantly killed, and Lizzie Williams, daughter of T. J. Williams, of Louisville, severely injured. Both persons were on the back porch taking down clothes from nails on the outside ofthe house. The fluid came down the side of the house, and passed over the entire person of the young man, coming out at the toes of his boots. ' Dr. John Kitzmiller, of Pinegrove, Schuylkill county, a successful coal ope rator in the Lorberry region, met with an accidental death on Wednesday last. While attempting to adjust some of the harness he fell, and the horse starting, Mr. K. was di:rigged a considerable die. tance with his head down. Heleaves a fortune estimated at a quarter of a mil lion of dollars. A Washington Telegram, to the Har. risburg Telegraph says that Provost Marshal General Fry has concluded to reverse a foriper decision in relation to the three hundred dollar commutation paid by parties who were drafted during the lait conscription. The decision shortly to be promulgated will.exempt . • all those who pai d the commutation of $3OO for three years. , The Boston Transcript states that the War Department has authorized Col. Dudley, of the Massachusetts Thirtieth, to raise a brigade of colored troops in New Orleans, to be officerred by colored men. The officers will be selected by Col. Dudley, subject to the approval of Gen. Canby. The troops will not count on the quota of any State. On Thursday nigtit, Thomas Meekin, a.young man of good social' qualities, formerly connected with the Louisville theatre, was stabbed in the breast 'on the "street in that city by a woman named Susan Romaine, and so severely injured that died in `a' few minutes. Just previous to the tragedy the two had been conversing together. Thomas Duffy, of Worcester, Massa chusetts,,weight two hundred pounds, aged seventy years, recently arose in his sleep, jumped from a three-story , window into a hogshead of water , and was— saved. Ten privates have recently been tried and. convicted of desertion, and have been sentenced to imprisonment, at hard labor, in Fort , Delaware, for two or three years, and to forfeit all pay ma. allowance. • A vOluntier named 4 5 otter, who last , • one'of his ina while aervingin the Army of 915 elrotomac, swam recently' from n'Thunbull to the atiinaltioat landing in Groton, osei a 'mile / Be was brought` back in a bciat. •• Rev., Mr. Lyman, of Canton Centre, , Ct., announced to his congregation last Sahbath.that,they, must engage another, pastprois, he had made tgi his mind to , enlist as a private in the army. The world is coming to an end in 1865. Prof. Nenmayer, of Munich, says so., He' adds that a comet will Tun'. against the earth and absorb it, as one drop of mercury absorbs another. • - Richard Hall, a merchant of ,Balti more, has been sentenced to pay a fine of six thousand 'dollars, and suffer four months' imprisonment at Fort McHenry, for trafficking with the enemy. The Cheshire cheese factory consumes 1100 gallons of milk .a day, and turns out seven• cheeses weighing one hundred and fifty pounds each. About three hundred,und lifty cows furnish the milk. A block of silVer, in the shfipe of a writing deft, weighing two hundred pounds, and valued at $4232, was lately sent from .Nevada to the Sanitary Com mission. 4-. H. G. Coburn, of „Blaine, lithe been found guilty by a militaay conrt, of pro. ceeding to the front and using a pass be longing, to and intended for . another. He was tined two hundred dollars. The Pennsylvania State Agricultur al Society will dispose of $lO,OOO in premiums, at the fair to be held at Eas ton, the - latter part of September. , The American residents in Buenos Ayres, South America, are taking meas ures to eollect funds for our Sanitary Commission. The total amount of salary and per quisites of Collector Barney, of New York, for the ypar 1863, it is estimated will amount to $60,000. The French brockade of the Mexican poke has been raised, showing bow completely Mexico is in the hands of the invaders.' The Atlanta papers say that Many of the shells thrown into the city have . texts of scripture fasteneo to' them. It`is estimated that Holland and Ger manylbave taken $150,000,000 of our debt • Geo. Couch has re-established his head-quarters at Chaniberiburg. Miss Caroline Richings was singing in opera in San Francisco last month: Job Printing, of . ,every description done at the office of "The Mariettian," with neatness and dispatch,, and, at , very reasonable rates. Or A. despatch fr6m Washington says that under the President's last call for five hundred thousand men the en listments for the first nine days of the fifty between the call and the time fixed for the draft, averaged less than two hundred per day. During the sext.nine days, they averaged three hundred, and steadily increased until on last Sat urday, when they reached six thousand per day. It is estimated that during the last fifty days, fifty thousand have been recruited, an average of one thous- and per day, It is somewhat singular that very few men enlisted for two years nearly all of them going for either one or three years. . or A Correspondent of the Boston Traveller from Franklin Co, Mo., re lates the following : A Totmg woman of a respectable family, a neighbor of mine, raised with her own hands about half an acre . of tobacco—that is, she'did all the work on it, except breaking up the ground, and some assistance in cut ting and carrying it to the tobacco barn. 'For her crop she got over $2OO a cwt. for the best oft; and probably not less than an average of $4O for the inst. of it. I presume she netted considers* More .than $6OO for that half.acre. The, draft will begin first in thoipi places which are making the least efforts to raise volunteers, Bo as to give, the places which are trying to fill their quotas without a draft as much time as possible .to, do so. The paymept of bounties to recruits authorized by the 'act of quly last did not cease on the sth inst., but are still continued as they were before that day, and volupteers will be counted on the quotas up to the latest possible moment. , , sir In retaliation for the cruel usage of our soldiers who are prisoners in the South, the Administration has ordered that no luxuries be,allowed , the prisoners in Fort Lafayette and other places. Burke,'of Fort Lafayette, has inter preted this strictly, and no commtiniea tions or presents''of any kind of food are allowed to the prisoners in his charge. This does not apply to the rebel prison ers only, bat to the political prisoners arrested in the North. gar Six hundred rebel officers, pris oners of war, are to be sent• •to Charles ton'tirbor in a few days. It will be re- membered that the• rebel authorities,.af ter exchanging the fifty officers first placed under fire. at Charleston, sent six hundred bore there , for the same pur pose. These six hundred rebel prison-, era will receive the same treatment as may be opplied : to Union prisoners at tom - The Harp is scion to be intro daced;into the Church of England choirs. This mostlistorical iof instruments is finding many advocates, and the . Court. Journal ways : "Several prelates of au thority have considered the point in volved most favorably, and musicians area unit sal.° the solemn and beauti ful effect it will have in occasional ac companiment." sir. Gov. Johnsotkof Tennesseee, hay !ing obtained the requisite authority, is raising twenty thousand 'men for the purpose of clearing Tennessee or, preda tory rebel bands and guerillas. They are to be mustered into the service of the United States and a year, unlens sooner discharged, and will receive the same pay, rations, clothing, &c., that is iiaid to troops in the ,regular service: eir It is said that the , Treasurer of the Confederate States is under an indict. meat for gambling: at faroltables: 'The Examiner of the 17th Baste that if'all the money that has passed through his hands at these tables was his own, his friends can congratulate him'on the possession of a most ample private fortune. It stated that about 130 of the employes of the Pennsylvania railroad work shops at Harrisburg have iolun 7 tiered to go to war as substitutes. , Among the number are nineteen engin eers, and others from the different shops, fitting houses, wood houses, etc. igif At a Municipal *election in • Wil mington, Delaware, a few days ago, the Unionists carried the city by four hun dred, and fifty majority, electing 'every candid stein every. ward. Every officer' of the city Government is loyal. fir It takes a little overs26o in green backs to purchase $lOO in gold. In RichmoUd, it is said, s 2o n Confederate i scrip is readily give ne 'for one of ours. At that rate it would take $5,260 of "Confed" to purchase $lOO in gold. Or Gen. Scott still draws a salary of over $13,000 per annum, although retired from the service. Under the Internal Revenue Law he is taxed five per cent. 'on this, but he has just renewed'hisiii.o= test against paying' anything. lir The people of flyetowns,.fia .Con necticnt assembled lastweek And, gath,- °red eighty bushels of blackberries, which have been made into 120 gallons of syrup for the soldiers. *' Meet Persons choose their friends as they do other useful` animals, prefer. fairthose'from whim they expect the moat service: • war Gen,, ; Pia declines, the nomina tion,forSlevernor Of New :York .by the Union party,. . Poor Richard's . Reasons for buying Unite d Stat es Securities The other day we heard a rich neigh bor say fie had rather have railroad stocks than the U. S. stocks, for they paid higheriaterest Just then Poor Richlird came up,•and said that he just bbught sorb of Uncle Sam's three years notes, paying seven and three-tenths per cent. interest. My rich friend exclaim ed, "Yon I I thought you had no money to buy with." "Yes," said Richard, "I had a. little laid up, for you kat) . * it is well to have something laid up against a wet day, and I have kept a little of my earnings by me." Now - poor Rich ard is known to all the country round tri be a very prudent and industrious; and withal, wise man ; for Richard never learned anything he didn't know how to make use 'of, and his wisdom and pru dencelad become a proverb. So, when he; took out his iravings and bought the notes, more lhan one was surprised, and it was no wonder rich Mr. Smith asked why. *So poor Riehard, in a very quiet humble way—for he never assumed any thing—replied, "I suppose, Mr. Smith you know a great deal better than ; do ,what to do with money, and how to in vest ; for I never had much, and all I got I had to work hard for. Bat I have lookedlound a good deal upon my neigh bors, and , seen what they did with their money and I will • tell you some things I sail , and what I thought of it. One very -rich- man was always dealing in money, and he made a great deal, but was never satisfied Withoui high interest. So he lent most of his money to some people who he thought; were very rich, at a very high rate; and he often told. how Much he got, till one day the people he lent to went to smash. He got back - about ten cents on a dollar of his money. I know another old gentleman, who had some bank stock and he went to the bank and got ten per cent. dividend. The President and everybody said it was the best stock in the country—paid ten per cent. But what did the old man do but sell his stock the next day I Why? why? said everybody. Because, it pays too much dividend. And in six months the bank went to smash. Now, that I `know to be a fact. Well, Mr. Smith, you say railroad stocks are best, because they pay high dividends? Can you tell how long they: will pay them? I like railroads. I helped to build one, and I go in for useful things. But I tell you what I know about them. One-third of the railroads don't pay any dividend, and two thirds (and some of them crack ed up, too,) do not pay as mach as Gov ernment stocks. Now that brings me , to the Governinentsecurities, and I will tell you why prefer them. I take it you will admit, Mr. Smith, that in the long run the investment which is best should haVe - these qualities : First, it should be perfectly secure : secondly, that the income should be uniform and permanent—not up one-year and down• the nest; and thirdly, that it should be marketable, so when your wet day comes, and you want your money, you can get it back. And I think these notes or bonds have got these qualities more . than any other,kind of personal proper ty you can name. • Try it. "First, then, I have been looking into that great book you call the Census Sta tistics. I used to think it wasn't worth muck; but since I. began to study it, I tell you, I,found. out a good many things very useful for me to know. I found out, by, looking l at the crops, and the facto-, ries and shipping, &c., that we (I don't mean the. Rebel States) are , :making a thousand millions of dollarsa year more, than we spend. So you see that (since the increase of debt isn't halt that) we are growing rich instead of poorer, as John Bull and the croakers; would have us think. Then the debt will be paid, anyhow, no matter how long the war is. Besides, did you ever hear of a Govern ment that broke before the people did? Look into your big-histories-, Mr. Smith, and,yOu will, find the people break be fore the- Governments.' Well, then, I call.that stock perfectly. secure. "Secondly, you want the income uni: form and permanent. Well, .I want you to, take up : a :list of banks,- railroads,. mines, insurance cornpaniesanytlfing you choose—and tell me (honor bright, nowi),how many have. :paid , a. uniform income for ten or twenty years : Not' one in a hundreA, Mr. Smith, .'and you ' knOw it. - "Now here is the Government will pay you without' varying a tittle. :Now I like something that gives me my income . . every year. , "Thirdly, Yon want something Which is marketabtefttny day in the year: Now if you:will ask any bank-President he will tsll.yon that • Government stocks are the only, kind of property that ,is always . Oect,t/e,,becattap they will sell anywhere in the world., , "Now, Mr. Smith, thisis why I put I my little, savings in Government stocks. I conk,* too, that .I wanted,to help that dear old country, which.is my home and :my:country." "Lconfeso," said Mr. Smith "I hadn't 001414 of all _this. :; There. is a good dealfif ; sonse in what you say, and I will go so far as to put two .or three thousand dollars ip 'United States, stooks. It can do no. harm." , • • We .left Mr. Smith going , towards the bank" and Poorltichard returning home with that calm and placid air which in dicated'the Serenity of 'hie •didipaition and the'consciorieness.of doing right to= ' wards; his coult,ry)and! his fellOW man. , A or "Did two men ever agree upon terms of peace while at blows with one another ?" asks Mr. Vallandigham. Per haps not ; but two men have pounded away at one another till one of them was glad to succumb. Grit is a good thing ; but there are few men who. when soundly flogged, will not own up, and, if they have been misbehaving, agree to put themselves on their good behavior. That is all we ask the South to do ; and, as they wanted to administer this Gov ernment as if made for those who owned negroes, we intend they shall agree to have it administered neither for the benefit of slaves nor 'their masters but of freemen. Sir Mr. Benjamin, Davis' Cabinet Secretary, lias leek eiate ment of the interview had with Mr. Jac ques and Mr. Gilmore, a t Richmond, in reference to peace. His statement is nearly similar to theirs, but be SaYsihat Davis declared that the- separation of the Union was already an 'accomplished fact, and that he had no authority to receive proposals for negotiation, except by, virtue lit' lila 'office as President of, an Independent' Confederacy, and en this `basis alone met preposils be made to him. This shuts .out all , prospect of peace by negotiation with the rebel au thorities. fir Col. Philip Herbert, of the 4th Texas cavalry, died at Kingston, Louis iana, on the2Bth ultimo, from the effects of a wouhd received at the battle of Mansfield, April 8, 1864. This is the former memberof Congress from Cali fornia, who wade himself notorious in the winter of 1857 by the assassination of an Irish waiterat a hotel in 'Wash ington city. At the ontbreel of the re bellion he' cast his fortunes with the rebels, and joined a Texas regiment, in the command of which he received a wound at Mansfield which finally proved mortal. fir A letter- from the Army of the Potomac says: Captain Newberry, who commanded the 12th United States in : fantry, was captured, and known at the time to bs unhurt. On our men recover ing ground which had been lost, he was found mortally wounded, having been shot through thebody. He says that a rebel officer on ,finding that they were beitig driven back, took a musket from a private and deliberately shot him. He lived long enough to be taken to the hospital, where he shortly died. fir Jesse D. Bright, expelled in 1861 from the U. S. Senate for proved dislop alty,'though a resident of Indiana. and representing, in part that State, but who has been lately residing in Kentucky, onlis negro estate there, has sold out all his possessions. there. freed his ne• groes, given them each a sum sufficient to commence the world witb, end• has, with his family gone to Europe, there to remain' until after the war. eir•Judge Ephraim Marsh, President of the Morris Canal and Banking Com pany, who by his influence raised the company from the lowest ebb to one of the most profitable in the country, died at Schooley's mountains on the 28th ult., in the 68th year of his age. Be was one of the leading men of the State of New Jersey, and was also widely known beyond the limlts of the State. Bewas the owner of Schooley's mountains. ar Governor- Oartin's prWclamation, announces that the orgaurzation of the Pennsylvania State Guard is to be com menced immediately. Of the corps of fifteen regintents authorized by the act, threW regiments of infantry, two squad rons of cavalry, and four hatteries of field artillery will be recruited at once, and if not filled within thirty days, a draft for'the deficiency will be Ordered. Or August Belmont, the "chairman of the National Democratic Committee;" ' is a Jew. 'a :Booker; and, Agent :of the Rothschild of Europe. > Here is another proof of,the identity between the gold gamblers and our ene mies' abroad The `tigetai — of the iielnist banking hpasmpfidespotism, is chairman of the , Nation&Committee of coppOr heads ! is?,The rebel Gen. Hood, who corn-, •mands it Atfarite, is described by aper-- . son who has recently seen him as a mwhitehea'ded, homely, sindle•shanked p fellow, about thirty-two years of age, and over six feet tall`; had been pretty swell hacked to pieties; one leg gone, au iarm useless, a' lot of bruised ribS, and throken collar-bone." eir The Richmond Despatch Calls the plating of the sides of the Kearsarge 'with chains, taking a "foal advantage," which woad not have been allowed. in the days cif "chivalry," Modern chival 'ry uses . ` its chains for the necks and limbs of human beings. Gir It is said that Mrs. General Grant is now the guest of Mrs. General Meade, in Philadelphia; and that arraegements are being made-for her permanent resi .denee there, iniji - that after the war is over the General will take tip his' home in the Quaker sir Why does the letter R hold an enviable position?' Because it is .never found in sim.but.always in temperance, industrY,,virtue presperity. Tt is . the begining of - religion and the end of ,war: 4 . A MURDEROUS REBEL MISSLE.-A. young man, named Kinney, formerly a Trojan, but recently belonging to a west ern regiment, reached Troy a few days since. He served for a long time under GeneraiSherman, and, was wounded at the battle of Altoona. The circum stances iltending his injuries are such as we do not re collect to have seen re corded daring the war. Young Kinney was shot in the lower part of the leg by a bullet, apparently an ordinary rifle ball. It lodged in the limb, but did not prevent his walking to the rear. He had just seated himself in an ambulance, half an hour after being hit, yhen the bullet exploded iu his leg; Shattering the limb thrribly, making four distinct .openings, and carrying away-a quantity of bone. Despite the severe - shock, the young 'hero travelled to his home in Troy, and it now undeetle care of one of our surgtOns ,:with a chance of recov ery. r • The Secretary of War in the fol lowing official pizette, states thtit 2 !,wo hundred thousitit - frign haverakriady en listed, and that three hundred thousand are to be fuinished by the draft He further states that, with one hundred thousand more men Gen. Grant will be able to end the rebellion before winter, and that the balance of the troops raised by the draft will be used to garrison the forts, and take care of the guerillas. Words cannot add to the 'emphasis of this announcement. It should arouse the nation. gar The President of the United States, in view of recent victories which Divine Providence has vouchsafed to our army and navy in upholding' the Union and Constitution,lereeonimands that on to-morrow (Sunday) in. ail, the churches of the United States, ,our de vout acknowledgement be rendered to the Supreme Being, in whose hands are the destinies of nations: ' . ' far Governor Brough has issued a proclamation to those persons in Ohio who are Preparing to resist the draft, warning them to desist from such a pur pose. Seventy girls have been found acting as officers' servants, disguised as men DIED On Tharaday morning last, ANICEM, ymmgest child of Susan and the late Peter Baker, of this borough, in the 11th year of her age. The funeral will take place from the rtaidence Of Mrs. Baker, at 2 o'clock, this (Saturday) afternoon. LETTERS REMAINING unclaimed in the Post Office at Nanette, Pa., Tnuastm r, SEPTEMBER. 8..1864.. Aux, Miss Mary ' '"Lead, Len. Esn., „. 13eechee, .Leimbough, Jcstie Billing, John . Nen, Adam - Burger, John Otto, Mrs. Elizabeth 2 Fisher, Mrk Amelia Quigley, James Greenblot, Henry Roberts, Joseph Guise, Mr. George Smith, Mrs. E. Gable, Mr. - Israel Stormer, J. K. Hall, Miss Clemenda Shumaker, Granville Knight, Mrs. Mary Stegir, John Leed, Mrs. Addie Spangler, Mrs. Sophia Lead, Peter Smith, Miss Mary Ir To obtain any of these letters, the ap plicant must call for "advertised letters," give the date of this list, and pay One cent for ad vertising. • . .ABRATTAI I ,I CASSEI., P. M. .., A TYENTION ! -SPORTSMEN ! ! I Eley's Gun Caps,.Eley'slGun VVadds., Detpont's. Sporting and Glazed Duck Powder; Baltimore Shot; Shot Pouches, Poivder Flasks, Ikc,,,at. • , : , JOHN SPANGLER'S.' , °TICE.. Public Notice is' hereby given N that my wife, Mary Gruel, has left rry bed and board without any , cause or provoca tion whatever, therefore, I caution all persons 'against trtistingher on my account, as I will pay no debts of her contracting, J. GRUEL. Marietta, September 3, 1864. 4-30' Mack Hawk ..Iron Ore Wadher: THE undersigned havinejustcompleted new paterns for the Manufaiture 'of th'e eele • brated Black Hawk' ron Ore Washer. He has remove-'several objections to the old pat ern, and now feels certain of beingable . to wash one-third more iron ore' per, day, and much • cleaner. Machines manufactured and put up anywhere desired at the shortest no tice, andithe working of the'machine gnirlan teed._ He can refer, by permission, to Col. IMnia.Myers; of I o'egal Furnace, Marietta, and to Isigrea L. an.. r Esq., adjoining. Mari etta... Address . • . SAMTJEL.HOPKINS, Marietta, Lancaster. C 9., Pa The faUnt Conflex. Reflector Lantern, THIS is the most' desirable Lintern 'in the market It buFns Coal ; 011 4 without a Chimney, chatting rieitlier smoke nor viten. It gives a pure white.light., It stands quick 'rotitlons ro any direction.. The flame is regulated.from thd,outside. It is neat and compactln form and size. It is free from soldeniffilie - iippil. Arta, and is otherwise very substantial in its structure. PRICE, (NE DOLLAR. For sale st,JOHN SPANGLER'S =Hardware Store. OriWet street. MIQUAL or REGVLAR TIMEKEEPERS 1 -1 4 can bellied nf &'E.'J. ZAHN, COI North Queen-dit t - , and.Centes,Square, Lancas ter, Pa., in the shapelsf Equilibrium Levers -the best article of Swiss leVdra now in the mar ket. They are lower inprice than any Watch of equal quality and pst as true fortimekeemng TEWELRY.-A large and selected' stock - o 0 fine jewelry, ,Of ~tbe latest patterns from the best factories'in the countit cannf4 found at L. 4. E..T 'ZAHN'S, Corner of Center Square..and North Queen Street, Lancaster, Pa. „ , ALARGE LOT., Of I 4IITI , Y -WINDOW SHADES at remarkably low . prices— to cloileout. JOHN SPA NGLER Market Street, Marietta. ICKORY & Oak IVeod, 4:).Corda each _ Oak Wood: Orders MIN e accompanied. with the. calfh..when they wil promptly fillet. Spaugler & Patterson. jje,AVE & STE.VF.DP*Celebrated Famil Dye Colors, warranted to be fast, fo sa at • • THE GOLDEN'MaRTAR. CHOICE HAVANA - SE G'A R S , andthe • best Chewing and Smoking -Tobacco at WOLFE'S. . . EIVIPtY Molite§i3ji Barsejs, T For' iaMat J - . IgYFENBAcirz, p 0 LEpPS jong,celebrated LI • ' `. a.';')i %BENJAMIN.