The Mariettian. (Marietta [Pa.]) 1861-18??, October 08, 1864, Image 2

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    pariettian,
F. L.
.I'ct7r,er, Editor,
MARIETTA. PA :
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1864
FOR PRESIDENT,
ABRAHAM LINCOLN,
OrILLINOIS
FOR VICE PRESIDENT,
ANDREW JOHNSON,
OF TENNESSEE
Milolt Eltzteral 'aitlttt
SENATORIAL.
MORTON MCMICHAEL. Philadelphia,
Manias 11. CUNNINGHAM, Beaver co.
=I
OE=
1. Robert P. King,
2. Geo. M. Coates,
3. Henry Bun/se,
4. Wrn.. H. Kern,
5. Bartin H. Jenks,
6. Chas: M. Runk,
6. Robert Parke.
7. Wm. Taylor,
8. Tno. A. Hiestand,
9. X. H. Coryell,
11. Edwd. Halliday,
12.• Ckas. F. need,
Wtio Go FOR M'CLELLAN.—VaIIan
digham, the traitor goes for McClellan
Wall, the notorious New Jersey Cop
perhead and traitor, is for McClellan.
Every )pan wbo claMors for peace
and disgraneful submission to traitors,
is ' a McClellan man.
Every man who utters the standing
lie that the "Abolitionists" commenced
the war, is for McClellan.
Every rebel General, Colonel and
Captain, is in favor of the election of
George B. McClellan.
Every' Knight of the "Golden Circle"
is for McClellan.
Every officer who has been dishonora
bly dismissed from the army, will vote
for McOlellan.
Every contractor who has been do
tented in defrauding the Government
hazzas for McClellan.
'Every deserter from the, army is for
McClellan.
• Every man who voted against the law
allowing the soldier a vote, goes for
McClellan;
Every man interested in the rebel
lobo; such as the British' rebel agent,
Augnstus Belmont, of New York, is a
warm friend of McClellan.
Stich is , the character of the leading
supporters of McClellan.
WATCH Ina POLLS !—We would red
mind the Union men in this State to
hive committees appointed for every
election /district in the State, -whose
special duty it is to note every deserter
from the Union army, and every man
who failed to report himself after being
drafted: All these men will vote the
copperhead ticket, "and our friends
should be on the alert. They can as
sist their country materially by giving
proper information which will lead to
their arrest.' We repeat again, there
fore, "Watch the Polls."
MCCLELLAN'S PAY.—The Louisville
Journal is unfriendly to McClellan, even
while it flee his name. It says
"We think that the Federal officers,
military and civil, who have nothing to
•
do should be placed on a reduced scale
of duties."
This rccOmmenddtion is a direct advi
sal that the government should chop
off Mr. McClellan's pay. He, has for a
long time had less than nothing to do,
and has multiplied his labors by doing
wrong. _Besides, he is rich ; thanks to
New York copperhead generosity, and
lives finely in Fifth Avenue.
Major Harry White, of the Sixty
seventh Pennsylvania, and a member of
the Pennsylvania Senate, and who was
capturq about fourteen months since,
arrived at Chattanooga on, Saturday,
having been exchanged in the special
arrangement qbetween Sherman and
Hood, and without the knowledge•of the
Richmond - suthoritieS, who haVe hereto
fore refused to exchange hini at any
time. '
ler Edward Everett heads the Lin 7
coin and Johnson electoral ticket in
Massachusetts, Daniel S. Dickinson in
Ne4"York, David Tod in Ohio, and
Thomas Cunningham in Pennsylvania.
All•tliesegentlemen,-foni years ago op
posed the election
, of Mr. Lincoln. 'This
simple falit;showa ih r ata great accession
to the Union forces haii`takdn place.
Ur General. 'John Coclirano, 'late
cans44ate for Vice President on-.,the
Fremont ticket, addressed a large meet
ing, at Plp,trpipa, League. Hall, in Phil
! del , hia ; evening .
PreSident'LinColn pftt r a rep
resentative recruit into the army.' J. S
Staples, of Strouds,burg,..ilionroe count
Pennsylvania, was the : man selected,: t
bear the Presidential musket. *:t.
gir A retired sportsman in - Paris ha:
opened a store'for the'sale of game to
the French cockneys who go. out to
shoot but can hit nothing.
A single battery threw nine hundred
shells into Atlanta in one day.
Fort Morgan is being put in condi
on for strong defence.
Crinoline has been abolished at the
opera in Paris under penalty of fine.
The income of the four Rothschilds
of Europe is estimated at $6 ; 000,000, a
year.
The enemy are endeavoring to place
torpedoes in the channel above Fort
Morgan.
Rebel officers, now prisoners in our
hands, say they think Richmond cannot
long stand the siege now in progress.
In Portland there is a match factory
that will this year pay an internal reve
nue tax of $240,000.
A man in Broadway, on Saturday
night, had his eye put out by a rocket
stick.
Governor Dennisonhas accepted the
position of Postmaster General, and
enterd upon his duties on Saturday
last.
13. Elias W. Hall,
14. Chas. H. Shr i ner,
.15. John Wister,
Mrs. Major Booth has been honorably
discharged from the charges that she
had accepted bribes while acting as a
government searcher.
16. D. ild , Conanghy,
:17. David W. Woods,
:18. Isaac Benson,
'l9. John Patton,
20. Samuel B. Dick,
21. Everhand Bierer,
22. John P. Penney,
23. Ebe'zer
24. J. W. Blanchard.
The Selma Appeal says , that Henry
S. Foote, looks on the McClellan party
as a peace party, and counsels a ready
welcome of peace overtures.
At Vicksburg, the rebel authorities
having sent a Union family to our lines
as "traitors" to the "confederate" cause,
and confiscated their property, General
Dana has sent a family of rebel procliv
ities to the "confederate" lines; confis-
cated their house, and given the use of
it to the exiled Union family,
A man in St. Louis, who has constant
ly invested in lotteries, and invariably
lost for the last five years, was one of
the first men drafted in that place the
other day. He says his luck has come
at last.
, It is stated that over three thousand
rebel deserters have already availed
themselves of Grant's proclamation as
suring them of Union protection and
employment.
The Boston Transcript learns that
Mrs. General Lander, formerly Miss J.
M. Davenport, the accomplished and
well-known actress, has decided to re
sume her•profession next November.
James A. Hooper, while walking down
Broadway,-in New York, on Tuesday,
with his wife, felt a pull at his shirt
bosom, and on looking to see the cause
he discovered that his diamond breast
pin, valued at $lOOO, was gone.
During theten months ending May
31st, 3,327 Union prisoners died in
Richm i ,ond prisons. A Richmond paper
says teat 8,000 prisoners died at Ander
sonville in the months of July and Au:
gust last.
The War Department has decided
that a drafted man may furnish a substi
tute after he has been accepted and is in
camp. When the substitute is accepted
the government will discharge the draf
ted man and permit him to return to his
home.
The 211th regiment P.' V., while
marching through Washington on Fri
day, came to a McClellan flag swinging
across the street, whereupon they filed
off and carefully marched around it in
silepce. The "straw" was delicately
pointed.
In the New York City Controller's
report appears the charge for the din
ners of eight men employed to count the
votes at the last charter election.
They met for ten.days, and the bill for
their dinners comes to $l3OO, or $162.50
per man, 0r , 16.21 for each single`dinner
for each man.
General News Items.
Information has been received at the
Navy Department, of the capture by the
United States Steamer Magnolia, of the
blockade running steamer Matagorda,
about seventy-five miles off Cape Anto
nio, Cuba. She was &Om Galveston for
Havana, and her cargo consisted of,cot
tol the deck board of which some 200
bales was thrown overboard. She is
said, to be ,a splendid steamer.
The Wheeling Intelligencer announ
ces the marriage of Edward. Washington
Hall and. Miss Lucie Clevetop, of San
ford's opera troupe, on. Sunday evening,
and states that on the. following Tues
day the newly wedded Mrs. Hall gave
her new "hubby" the slip and ran off
in the company of a captain, with whis
kers, who had been casting 'sly glances
at her on several evenings while execu
ting her beautiful pirouette and delight.'
ing large audiences.
The McClellan journals make a great
ado about the enormous losses of Gen.
Grant during the present campaign.
The National Intelligencer states them
at 68,200. But the - official reports of
General McClellan and others sill:it that
ha,
.lost, in ; the. P,eninsula ,campaign,
70,835 men-2635 more than Grant,
erg' according to ccipperh9adfiguring.
While McClellan's sacrifice of life did
las no good;-Grant-has broken Lee's
array, (bad ilaCed us in grail) of ,
Rich
mond.
TWO IMPORTANT STATEMENTS. —Jeffer
son Davis made two statements to Gil
more and Jacquess, which, taken to
gether must disturb the equanimity of
the Northern peace party. One is that
the South will accept no terms short of
independence ; the other is that the
Southern hostility to the North will
last as long as the present generation
of Southerners. Even then, if peace be
made by disunion, peace will only lead
to new wars in which the South will be
in possession of all the strongholds
which we now hold. Peace means the
giving up of what we have gained at a
sacrifice of 500,000 men and $2,000,000,
000, and it means also a similar expen
diture in the future to place ourselves
where we now are.
a' The cry in politics, , "As goes
Maine so goes the Union," says the Bos
ton Traveller, is not true ; and several
times in the last forty years Maine has
gone one way and the country the other.
Of late years, as Pennsylvania has gone
so has gone the election for President,
and so it is likely to be this year. It is
to the 11th of October, and not to the
Bth of November, that we look - to - see
wbo will be the next President. If any
party would secure the great prize they
will look oat for Pennsylvania, and let
all else go till then. If Lincoln carries
that the whole Democratic party will
squat. It will operate on the country
as the capture of Atlanta did on Maine.
• - Or The Pennsylvania Railroad Com
pany, to increase the acoomodation of
the public, have added another express
train to their lines. It leaves Philadel
phia at BP. M. The cars upon this
road are all being overhauled as to their
doors.—The doors will not in the future
be locked; but they will open upon the
inside of the car, and be furnished with
a contrivance preventing anybody from
opening them from the outside. This
will answer the same purpose as locking
them. The object of locking the doors
was to prevent way passengers from get
ting into the 'through cars." When
this is done, people are obliged to en
dure the annoyance of producing their
tickets at every station.
or Lieut. Gen. Grant in returning to
the army from his brief visit to his fam
ily at Burlington, N. J., was delayed on
the road between Philadelphia and Wil
mington by a railway accident the loco
motive having run off the track. The
disaster might easily have been foreseen
if the railway managers had only looked
at the name of the locomotive, which
was "Gen. McClellan." The engine
could not go ahead properly any more
than its namesake. ,
er General Gordon who was killed
in Sheridan's great battle in the She
nandoah Valley, was a graduate of Yale
College in the class of 1849. He was a
fair scholar and a man of agreeable man
ners and usually fine appearance. He
studied law and settled in Savannah,
Georgia, and rose rapidly in his profes
sion. Be was a Brigadier General in
the Rebel service at the time his
death.
or The New York Herald, which
supports McClellan, says Pendelton
must write a letter defining his position,
or Belmont must call a new Convention
for the nomination of a' new candidate.
Pendelton's record is very bad, it says,
and on that or on the Chicago Platform
Union men cannot vote for him. But
Pendelton stands upon his record, and
will neither write a letter or make a
speech.
ear The proprietors of the Chicago
Times office have discharged their entire
force of printers, and put a force of forty
young women in their places. ' These
young women, it seems, have been learn
ing the art of type setting in private
rooms for several months, preparatory
to this event. The affair has caused a
great sensation among the' printing -fra
ternity of that city.
ear The Taunton Gazette mentions
the death of boy at that place, caused
by frequent bathing in impure waterol
He absorbed the poison through the'•
skin, abscesses formed, and he died af-.
ter two weeks' sickness. Such cases
are not uncommon where boys bathe in
ponds that dephd for a supply of water
on the rains and not on springs. In dry
rieasons the water becomes corrupt and
poisonous.
a- A ponderous gold guard chain
has just been completed at, a chain and
jewelry manufactory in Springfield., for
a man inNew York, who has a fancy
for "big things." It is four feet long,
weighs a pound and a quarter, big.enough
to chain an os with, and costs about
$9OO. Rather loud, that !
Ifir Atlanta is the place which' John .
C. Calhoun, many years since, said
would become the greatest inland city
of the South, and the capital of a South
ern Confederacy. The would-be prophet
hadn't a glimpse' of Sherman and his .
soldiers in his dreams.
sEr The burning of the cathedral at
Santiago, Chili, has taught its inhabit
ants a lesson. i A firm in Boston •has
sent there a hand-engine, two hose-car
riages, and 2,200 feet of hose, and are
about supplying an order for two more
carriages".
iar . We ciip the following paragraphs
from the fashion article of the Now York
Tribune :
The blocked streets, the thronged
sidewalks, the fine display of new fall
goods in the shop windows, and the eag
er curiosity of the sightseeers as they
pass from one object of attraction to
another, all indicate that the fall trade
season has opened, and is marked, in its
commencement at least; with much of
that activity which belongs to the differ
ent phases of metropolitan life. Curios
ity, indeed, seems to be a stronger in
fluence than usual in the minds of the
thousands of lady shoppers, who make
their persevering way from one establish
ment to another, examining styles and
mak ingii3quiries, but much less frequent
ly making purchases than formerly.
Shall I buy a new dress and cloak at
present prices, or shall I, wear my old
ones ? is a question which is occupying
the attention of a great many women
just now, who have rarely before bestow
ed a thought upon the subject, except
to take it for granted that new styles
must always be worn with the new sea.
son. But with butter at sixty-five cents
per pound, and skirting muslin at eighty
cents per yard, causes reflection, and a
doubt, and the doubt is . increased by a
visit to various dry-goods establishments
where silks are exhibited at frightful
prices.
What is to be done? Wear the old
clothes? Certainly. Almost every
woman has a stock which could be made
to last two or three years, and some
much longer, if she would only go to
work and make the most of it. Her
clothing might not be in the newest
fashion, but the little sacrifice of pride
and vanity should be amply compensated
by the pleasure of exercising her taste
and ingenuity, and the knowledge that
she had refrained from adding to the
burdens imposed upon father or husband
during the struggle with the enemies of
our nationality.
ar The demonstration made against
the nomination of Gen. McClellan by
the out-and-out secessionists of the
Democratic party, accompanied with
the swift threat 'of another convention
and another ticket—has all faded away.
—All these men—Vallandigham, Voor
hees, Harris, Long, Powell, Seymour,
Ferd. and Ben. Wood, and the rest of
them, have, upon private assurances
given'them, quietly gave in their adhe
sion. They look upon the letter of
McClellan as just so many words, mean
ingless and useless. It is just as the
Chicago Times, an out-spoken disloyal
journal, says, that although McClellan
may have added a plank of his own to
the peace at-any-price platform, yet,
should he be elected President, that
plank will not be used.
eir• Last week three men, were killed
by the flight of a single bullet carelessly
discharged from a gun in a bar-room in
Illinoistown, Illinois. A , re-enlisted
regiment of veterans had just arrived,
and among them were some fresh re
cruits. In the bar-room one of the vet
erans, with gun, was showing a recruit
the drill, when by accident the fugle
man's gun went off. The- ball entered
the forehead 'and passed through the
head of the recruit, next through the
chest of John Brady, standing behind
him, and then lodged in the abdomen
of a third man, a German blacksmith.
a- Winchester is one vast hospital.
—There cannot be less than five thous
and wounded in the town at the present
time. Every hospital, vacant store and
house is full, and overflowing and the
groans of suffering humanity is really
awful. Our men bear their suffering
nobly, without a single complaint, and
as each fresh despatch arrives from the
.front detailing additional victories, they
are raised to such a degree of enthusi
asm that they really long for the hour
to arrive when, with .restored health,
they can again take their position in
the ranks of our victorious army.
';Two more Pennsylvania Engl.:
meats• have arrived at Washington.
Discharged veterans returning home in
s'quads of eight, ten, and fifteen, state,
that their ranks are being filled by sal
chars, who, after a brief respite at home,
have re-enlisted. They assert, for every
soldier now returning, there are ten
fresh men to take his place. Quite a
number belonging- to the cavalry arm
of the service are arriving, most of
whom belonged to Pennsylvania organ.
izations.
0' The silver from the Masonic jew
els forindin the rains of the Winthrop
House in Boston,•after the fire several
months ago, was sent to the United
States mint, and half-dollar pieces coin
ed freak it, which have been sold to ilia
members of the different lodges, encamp
ments, &c. These are the only. fifty
cent pieces coined this year.
Sikr • 'A citizen of Washington having .
contributed $lOO as a reward to the
first man of our army who will 'unfurl
the stars and stripes in the city of Rich-
Mond, the money has been sent to .
Lieut. Gen. Grant for that Purpose.
.
lir The principal hotels in Washing
ton have•raised the 'price of board to
four dollars and a half Et day, notwith
standing the recent decline in the price
of provisions.
Arc the Germans wrong in wanting our
Bonds !
Not a bit of it ! No shrewder, thrift- I
ier people, in matters of money, exist on
earth. Our Jersey people and New
England people are a frugal, industrious
people, but they can't save money like
the Germans. All Germany is a great
savings bank. It is true that their,
working men are not so rich, on an aver
age, as our working men, because they
don't get more than one quarter of the
wages of our men. But a German can
save money, and he knows when it is
safe. Now these shrewd, thrifty Ger
mans want our bonds. They want them
by millions. They turn aside from the
great beggars of the world in Europe,
and come to a Republicans. They
treat the notes of Napoleon and Joseph
and Maximilian. , with indifference, but
want to discount all the American notes
they can get. The _tondo F Times says
this is 'all wrong—that the Republicans
in America are all bankrupt, and the
Germans must be crazy to slight British
and French beggars, and go begging,
themselves, to America. Are they cra
zy? We asked Poor Richard what he
thought about it. "Why," said he,
"how can they be crazy, when they are
doing just what I did a little more than
a year ago, when I put my little savings
into Government six per cents? Now
see what I got by it ; just count np. I
have received six per cent. in gold,
which averaged 100 per cent. in curren
cy, making 12 per cent, income. Now,
to-day, my bond is salable in the New
York market at 10 per cent, premium.
Put these together, and to-day I have
22 per cent. for one year's use of my
money ! . What do you . think of that?
You know, as well as I do, that there
are thousands of people who did this,
and to-day they have 22 per cent. on
their investments. Why, 1 saw Miss
Jones, our school-mam, go to the bank
and buy a $5OO bond. Pow she got
the money I don't know, but these Yan
kee scoolmistresses are firstrate hands
at taking care of themselves. Well,
now, count up. If Miss Jones sells her
bonds to-day she gets her $5OO back
safe, and she gets $llO clear gain. Can
you sharp fellows down there in Wil
liam street downy better ? You know
I told Mr. Smith, the banker, my ideas
' about that, and he boug - ht $5,000 six
per cent. bonds, and you see be got
$l,lOO for a year's use of his money. I
met him the other day, and he said,
'Poor Richard, you are right ; I begin
to think, the Government can't take
tare of itself, and us too. For my part,
I mean to bay some of the 7.30'5. The
rate of interest is high enough, and in
three years they will tura into six per
cent bonds again." Yes, Mr. Smith, it
is right, on the, money side ; but, it is
right on the country's side too. Help
your country, or it can't help you.
Now, I say the Germans are not 'only
right, but they 'would be right if they got
half that interest. They cannot make a
quarter of it at home." So thought
Poor Richard, and so think we. When
we think of the German opinion of our
situation and our financial strength, we
must remembet: that they are far better
judges of our condition than we are, or
our enemies are. They are lookers on,
at a great distance. They have none of
our enmities or prejudices. They can
examine the facts disinterestedly. They
do ;. and the.result is a verdict that the
American Government is stable—its
ability and integrity in meeting its finan
cial engagements unquestionable. This
verdict too, is founded on a series of
facts which are unimpeachable, and well
known to every intelligent American.
Take two or three of the most import
ant: 1. The United States doubles its
population each twenty-five years. The
population of the country, which in 1850
was twenty-three millions, will in 1875
be forty-six millions. But the rebel
lion ! says some one. How much has
the rebellion diminished the strength of
the United States ? Take this aston-•
ishing fact, that if all the Rebel States
had been sunk in the Pacific Ocean, the
United States would in 1875 have
population equal to that of the whole in
1860. In other words, fifteen years will
supply the total loss of the eleven
nal Rebel States ! What can impede
the progress of such a country. 2.
The wealth of the country increased 127
per cent. in ten years ! Now let it in
crease but 80 from 1860 to 1870, and it
will amount to ten times all the loans
of the government. The German knows
what he is about. He will get the lar
gest income from loans in the world, on
the safest security. No such opportuni
ty has occured before for the investment
of money, and in all probability will
never occur" again. If the American
does not know mil take advitntage of
this, the German and Frenchman will.
LETTERS REMAINING unclaimed in the
Post Office at Matietta, Pa., THURSDAY;
OCTOBER, 6, 1864. 41 ,-
Br eneman, J. B. 3 Lehr, Andrew B. 2'
Fisher, Mrs. Amelia Mattis, Silas
Fisher, Mrs. Barbara Peck, Miss Sue
Knight, Mrs. Mary . Strausser, Jacob .
Lenis, Mr. George 2 Zook Miss Barbara
113— To obtain any of these letters, the ap
plicant mast call for "advertised letters," give
the date of this list, and pay. one cent for ad
vertising.
ABRAHAM CASSEL . P. M.
. Envelopes,
LARGE stock of Paper and v
A of the best_ quality just received and for
sale at The Goitlett Mortar. '
ROGER'S Celebrated Pearl Cement an
' Oil Paste Blacking at ,
• " TH4 GOLDEN M ORTAR,
SPECIAL NOTICES
Ita-A. Card to the Suffering. Swallow tw.
or three hogsheads of " "Tonic Hi,.
ters," "Sarsaparilla," " Nervous Antidotes,"
&c., &c., and after you are satisfied with
result, then try one box of Old Dr. Buchan'. ,
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. Inmo - r
ted and sold in the United States only by
J. S. BUTLER. 427 Broadway, N. V.
il'Agent for the United States.
P. S.—A Box of the Pills, securely "Packed,
will be mailed to any adiress on receipt of
price, which is ONE DOLLAR, postpaid—mo
ney refunded by the agent if entire satisfac
tion is not given. [july 30-3 m
• .
111:r Editor of The Mariettian. Dear Sir:
With your permission I wish to say to the rea
ders of 'your paper that I will 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 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 to start a full
growth of luxuriant Bair, Whiskers, or
Moustache, iu less than 30 days.
Respectfully yours,
THOS. F. CHAPMAN, Chemist,
July 30-3m]
. S3l Broadway, N. Y.
ltd To the Young or Old, Male of Female,
if you have been suffering from a habit in
dulged in by the youth of both sexes, which
causes so many alarming symptoms, it unfits
them for marriage, and is the greatest evil
which can befall man or woman. See symp
toms enumerated in advertisement, and if you
are a sufferer, cut out the advertisement, and
send fer it at once. Lelays are dangerous.
Ask for Helmbold's, take no other. Cures.
guaranted. Beware of counterfeit and imita
tions.
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, 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 JAHIES S. BUTLER,
General Agent, No. 427 Broadway, N. Y.
•I& EVE and EAR:—Prof. J. Isaacs, M. D.
Oculist and Aurat, formerly of Leyden, Hol
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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.
February 6, 1564.-ly.
U To CONSUMPTIVES.'Consumptive suf
ferers will receive a valuable prescription for
the cure of Consumption, Asthma, Bronchitis
and all Throat and Lung affections, (free of
charge) by sending their address to
Rev. EDWARD A. WILSON,
Williamsburg, Kings co. N. Y.
September 24, 1864.3m]
PUTD.IIIIII
It is the only reliable self-Adjusting Wring
er. No wood-work to swell of split. No
thumb-screws to get out of order.
Warranted with or tortb-out Cog-Wheels.
It took the First Premium at Fifty-seven
State and County Fairs in 1863, and is, with
out an exception, the belt Wringer ever made.
Patented in the United Slates, England,
Canada, and Australia. Agents wanted in
every town.
Energetic agents can make from 3 to 10
Dollars per day.
No. 2. $6.50 No. I. $7.50. No. F. $8.50.
No. A. $9.50.
Sample Wringer sent and express paid on
receipt of price.
Manufactured and sold, wholesale and re
ail, by the
PUTNAM MANUFACTURING CO.,
No. 13 Platt Street, New York, and Cleve
land, Ohio.
S. C. NORTHROP, Agent.
WHAT EVERYBODY KNOWS, viz
That Iron well galvanized will not rust;
That w simple machine is better than a com
plicated one;
That a Wringer should be self-adjusting,
durable,
and effluent ;
That Thumb-Screws, and Fastenings, cause
delay and tz (ruble to regulate and keep in order ;
That wood soaked m hot water will swell,
shrink and split ;
That wood beuriegs for the shaft to run in
will wear out;
That the Putnam Wringer, with or without
cog-wheels, will not tear the clothes;;
That cog-wheel regulators are not essential ;
That the Putnam Wringer.has all; the ad
vantages, and not one of the disadvantages
above named; -
That all who have' tested it, pronounce it
the best Wringer ever made;
That it will. wring anything from a thread
to a bed quilt without alteration;
We-might fill the paper with testimonials,
but insert only a few to convince the skepti
cal, if such there be ; and we say to all,. test
Putnam's Wringer.
Test it thoroughly with any and ALL others,.
and if not entirely satisfactory, return it.'
_Putnam Manufacturing Co : '-
GENTLEMAN: I know from practical experi
ence that iron well galvanized with ziTIC will not
oxidize or rust one particle. - The Putnam
Wringer is as near perfectas'passible, and
can cheerfully recommend it toZbethe best in use..
Respectfully yours.
WHEELER..
Cleveland, Ohio.
Many years' experience in the galvanizing
business enable me - to indorse the above state—
ments in all particulars.
• • JNO. C. LEFFERTS,
No. 100- Beekmann Street.
New York, January, 1864.
We have tested Putnam's Clothes Wringer
by practical working, and know that it will
Jo. It is cheap ;it is simple; it sequires no.
room,' whether at work or at rest a child can
operata it ; it does its duty thosoughly ; it
savestime and it saves wear and tear. We
earnestly advise all who have mach washing
to do, with all . intelligent persons who have
any, to buy. this Wringer: It will, pay for it
self in a year at most.
Hair. HORACE GREELY.
May 28, 1864: 6m.1 ,; .
CHAMPC .„
AGNE and other Table Winea
guarranteod to be_pure,.and sold us low as
can be bought in . Philadelphia or New-York
ii. D. Bragaautr Picot Building.