the Wariettian. F. L. Ba,lcer, Editor. MARIETTA. PA : gfatuidag,_Mituemluts 1.e,18'64 Tan ELECTION :—Pennaylvenia„ has, from all accounts, gone Union by over ten thousand. Lancaster county gives Lincoln 5600 majority ; Berks county gives McClellan 6775 majority. Maine, New Hampshire, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Illinois, Maryland, Tennessee, Wisconsin, Ohio, Indiana, West Vir ginia, Minnesota, lowa, Michigan and Kansas, have all gone Union, by deci sive majorities, with the strong proba bility of three more states, making nineteen, whilst McClellan has only Kentucky and Delaware for certain with the probability of New Jersey. Was there ever a more complete route ? New York is claimed by both parties ; the Cope by 1500 ; the Union party tlaim it by 8,000. A NORTHITSBTERN CONFEDERACY.- Judge Advocate General Solt, who had been appointed to make the investiga tion, has published a report making eight columns in the Washington Chronicle, in relation to the secret as sociations and conspiracy against the Government in the Western and North western States. The actual number of persons in these secret lodges he sup poses is 500,000, which is the 'number Vallandigham stated it to be. It is an armed force, the arm's being purchased in Eastern markets, and consist of re volvers and carbines. One of the prin ciples of the Order is that . Federal au thority cannot coerce a sovereign State, the 'Federal power being without sover eignty itself. Another is that when the Government is administered contra ry to the strict letter of the Constitu tion it is the inherent right and impera tive duty of the people to resist the authorities and compel them by force of arms to act constitutionally. The spa. eific purpose of the Order at prisent is to encourage desertion, to resist the draft, to circulate disloyal documents, to give intelligence to the enemy, , and aid him by recruiting for his army, and furnishinthim witkarnas and ammuni tion, and aiding in destroying Glarn ment and private property, and tMes teblishment of a Northwestern Confed eracy "in alliance with the South. Judge' Bolt professes to have abundant and reliable testimony establishing these facts. sar A special despatch from Wash ington to New York stated that Gen. McClellan had sent his resignation to the War Department on Tuesday night, but an answer was received from the Department on Wednesday morning stating that no such letter had been re salved by that department. sir Mere than 79,000 trees. shrubs and herbaceous plants were planted in New York. Central Park last year. The cerriage.drive now completed is about eighty miles in length, and walks about twenty miles. or Emma Jana Long, the girl twelve years of age, of Paterson, N. J., who stole a child, and after robbing it of its' clothes, threw it into a well, has been convicted of murder is the second de gree. ar Governor Seymour hae been de feated fin. re-election for Governor of New-York, byFentio, Union candidate, by over 7000. Thie State ie certain for Lincoln. Gr The Bank of Phoenixville, Bank of (Mester Valley at Coatesville, and Bank of Chester County propose to go into business under the National Bank ing Law. lir Mrs. William Dennison, of New Orleans, has been sentenced to tivelve month's imprisoriment in the workhouse of that city, for aiding soldiers to 'de sert. sir Hon. John' P. Elton, one of the Union Electors at large for the State'of Connecticut, elected on Tuesday last, died on Thursday morning. It is said the Rotbschilds, for w hom August Belmont is, agent in this country, have $100,000,000 invested in the math ern confederacy. sr The Philadelphia .Age, of Wed nesday last, admitted that the election of facUlellan was • hopeless from the first. fill' Just as we were about: to go to pressorellearned tbat•M " cClellan Ras re signed and the President accepted it. lllir Three Blares, who sued for _their freedom,,mnre set free et Baltimore last ek. under the ; new Cloriatitutimn. , . .. Fernando Wood has been defeat. tta 4 06444- by WV' "A. Drihse, . -..-.. . GEN. GRANTS FATSER.—The Cincin nati Gazette announces that Mr. J. R. Grant, the General's father, was one of the Vice-Presidents of a Lincoln meet ing recently held in that city, and was called up by the enthusiastic crowd. He made a few remarks, which, for the noise and his feeble voice, could not be heard, and closed by inviting Cincinnati ans to the grand Union meeting in Cov ington, at which Dr. Breckinridge de livered an address. Gen. Grant's father was an old Henry Clay Whig. So was Gen. Grant, himself, but he did not like Fremont, and refused to support him, and cast his vote for Buchanan in 1856, and Douglas in 1860, while the "old man" voted for Fremont and Lincoln. But father and son will both support the same ticket this fall. or The comments of the Richmond Examiner on our October elections are highly amusing. Its sapient editor confesses to utter disgust of the entire system of popular suffrage. We doUbt not he vastly prefers the old Virginia mode, which restricts the right of suf- frage to property holders, or even the South Carolina arrangement, by which the choice of President was not enjoyed by the masses at all (black or white), but was vested in the members of the Legislature, always wealthy and aristo cratic slaveholding nabobs ! They will relish the November vote still lehs. eir The Governors of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Ala bama and Mississippi held a meeting in Augusta, Georgia, on the 17th, and passed resolutions which declare that it is necessary that every male person of suitable age, and without, regard to color, shall at once be put in the south ern armies, and that all details of men as special agents, provost and other guards throughout the country shall be at once called in and placed in the ranks. or Miss Elizabeth Maria Black, the fat girl of Pliceniiville, died on Sunday, the 23d ultimo, at the age of 13 years, 6 months, and 17 days. When at the age of 12 years Miss Black weighs. 250 pounds. At the time of her deat she weighed 230 pounds. Ihr The forthcoming report of the Secretary of the Treasury will refute the popular error in supposing that Eu ropean trade balances have been against us since the war commenced. Last year our exports exceeded the imports many millions. lir Some years ago the celebrated stallion Commodore was imported to this country by John Minor Botts, at•a cost of $24,000. He was sold a faw days ago in Louisville, Ky., for $305. Commodore is seventeen years old. t Ari ingenious Parisian has inven ted a boat in which persons can bathe, the water flowing through it, and moves about at the same time. A sorr of floating cradle, with a tent roof and sides, and a bind of band propellor. gar A man named George Heimbach came to his death by suffocation from gas in his room at the Lake House, Mil. waukee, last Friday night. On retiring he blew out the gas, instead' of turning it off. fad' A correspondent from Illinois says that "all the different crops have been enormous, and in consequence business of all kinds is exceedingly brisk. Corn sells from the field at 50 cents per bushel." sir A. little girl, eight years of age, who was gathering sawdust in a mill at Wheeling, West Virginia, a few days ago, had her hand cut off just above the wrist by a circular saw. air The largest valley in the world is the Valley of the Mississippi. It , con tains 500,000 square miles, and is one of the most fertile and profitable regions of the globe. 4 Letters have been received in New Orleans from prominent Rebels in Richmond, stating that the archives and other Government property were being recently removed to Lynchburg. 'Sr The Hartford Currant commemo rated its centennial anniversary on Sat urday, and issued to its subscribers a fac simile of the specimen sheet publish ed one hundred years ago. ir A. 'little girl residing in White. water, Wisconsin, was strangled to death a few days'ago in endeavoring . to Swann* a raw oyster. •Gir The rebels are thieving and mur dering in a small way in Kentucky, and some have been shot. They bnined an old riegro. Sr Specimens of new fractional cur rency, to supersede that now in use, have been prepared at the Treasury Depart= Col. Sam. Medary, of the Colum bus, Ohio, Statesman, died in that city, last week. lir A. "respectable" funeral in New York costs live hundred dollars. sr Butter is sold in_ Canada at ten and twelve cents per pound. Three Beulah eardinsle hive died nose-spring: or About three weeks since, a child two years old, in Huron township, Can ada strayed from its borne and got lost in the woods. Although upwards of two hundred neighbors turned out to search, it was not found until a week ago, when it was discovered suspended by its clothing to a snag, with its head downwards and one foot and a portion of its leg gone. It appears to have been climbing over the log, when it fell off and caught by it's clothing. It was in a thicket not over a hundred yards from the house, and was passed x num ber of times by those in search. air At the trotting park in Provi• donee, R. 1., on the 24th, a man weigh ing one hundred and forty poundstider took to run around the mile track in sixteen minutes, dragging a sulky weighing ninety-five pounds, in which was seated a man weighing one hundred and seventy pounds. He accomplished the feat in eleven minutes and thirty reven seconds. Cr General Birney died in the deliri um of fever. His last words have a po litical value that should make a Union war cry throughout the Loyal State. Rising suddenly in his bed, his eyes blazing with the fire that consumed him, he cried with a trumpet voice, "Boys, keep your eyes on that flag !" and fell back dead. Mr. Merriam, lately deceased, who probably watched the weather, and made close and accurate observations with in struments, for over thirty years, than any man living, declares that in all his experience, he has never been able to perceive that the moon has the least in fluence upon the weather. tom' A number of citizens of New York, desirous of enhancing the thanks giving of our soldiers before Petersburg and Richmond, have started a movement to send one thousand , barrels of apples to the front. The Government has reed to provide free transportation Cr President Lincoln has approved of the sentence of the Military Commis sion in the case of the New York State agents, Donahue and .Ferry, which is imprisonment for life. This sentence will be immediately carried into execu 'en. / sir General Custer, who, at the O. - break of the war, ranked as First Lieu tenant in the Fifth Regular Cavalry, and has now the stars of a 4 Major-c —oDarol ie only twenty-four years of age, and a splendid specimen of the finished . sol dier. fir A. young man named Dead has been under trial in London, on the charge °flaring thrown his sweetheart into the river to rob her or a purse of money, The . evidence,bowever, was not sufficient to convict him, though her purse was found in his pocket. ar A Frenchman has discovered that by putting tan in potato hills when plan ted the potato rot may be prevented, and that potatoes kept in a cellar with tan are equally preserved from disease. sr By the free State Constitution which went into effect in Maryland on the let inst., the shackles of slavery were knocked off of over 100,000 human beings. fir The French gentleman who at tended the ilippophagic banquet at Lyons, and ate horse fried, roasted and stewed, declare the feast to have been a success. se - The Sanitary Commission is hold ing its quarterly meeting in Washing ton. Its whole receipts to this time have been nearly seven million dollars. ear A Paris correspondent of the London Post says the ladies of Paris are now coloring their hair a light red, that being the fashion. rikr Ile Buehler Hotel, at Harrisburg Pa., has been pirehased by G. J. Bolton its present occupint, for thirty-seven thousand five hundred dollars. sr The proprietor of a travelling show in England has been fined £2, for permitting a negro to eat a rabbit alive. A lady kissed General Grant at Havre 'de Grace. He blushed, but stood it pretty well—perhaps better than Mrs. Grant will. ar Major Fraser, well known to all Parisians, is jnat dead. He was an odd stick—used a coffin for his bedstead, and slept in it regn!arly. wir Early has issued a lengthy order, attributing his recent defeat to the de sire of his troops for. plunder. Sir A young girl, of fourteen years, committed suicide a few days since in New York. or The public schools of Buffalo of fer prizes to the young lady pupils for the best loaves of bread.- eir They tell of three sisters married to one man, in Salt Lake, and all four seemed pleased with the arrangement. .4r If a young woman hopes ever to have the honor of 'giving the mitten; she learn to knit. liord rohneraton ooniploted oightiothjesr on the 20th °October. Pen, Vastt war %tiEssntz Mr. John C. Knox Rea elected a Judge of the Supreme Court of Pennsyl vania by the Democratic party, and sub sequently made by them Attorney Gen eral. He was an earnest supporter of Lincoln and Johnson. Mr. Tod was President of the Conven tion which nominated Stephen A. Doug las for the Presidency. Be has since been Governor of Ohio, and stumped that State for Lincoln and Johnson. Mr. Joseph Holt, of Kentucky, was always a strong Democrat, and was Bu chanan's Postmaster-General. He is now Mr. Lincoln's legal adviser on points of military law, and was a strong advo cate of his re-election. Every man who is put into the United States service in Concord, N. H., has his photograph accurately taken. On the back.of it his, descriptive list is placed, and it is then filed away for fu ture reference. From a tree that measures about a foot in diaMeter, belonging to Abraham Huggins, of Sheffield, was gathered, this year, 22,750 apples, averaging nearly 1200 apples per bushel. The Erie Gazette says. legal proceed ings are about to be commenced against several persons in that city, of foreign birth, on the charge of voting for many successive years without, being natural ized. Right. A thick pamphlet has just been pub lished to prove that Presidents Harri son and Taylor were assassinated by poison in the interest of the South, and that the mysterious National Hotel epi demic in 1857 was the result of a simi lar attempt on the life of Mr. Buchanan. The Great Exhibition Building of 1862, in Hyde Park,Loodoe, is in pro cess of demolition. Charges of powder , fired by an electric ma%hine, are used to destroy it. Our military authorities have forwar •ed to the Confederates a comiiiete list of all the rebel prisoners now in our hands, and blank books have been for warded to the South to receive the names of all the troion prisoners in reb el prisons. The Davenport Brothers are in Eng. land. The Queen patronizes them. The lord of the back . stairs-in-waiting reports that the Queen asked them why such - clever knot-tyers and un-tyers didn't stay in America to help it out of its present snarl. Among the acts passed at the late session of the Alabama Legislature was one which makes the crimes of negro stealing, horse stealing, burglary, rob bery and arson punishable with death by hanging, without discretion of the jury. Gen. Sherman, in answer to a note, asking whether be had expressed the opinion how ninety men out of every hundred of his army would vote, says he is entirely ignorant of the political bias of the men in his army, and he would "as soon think of tampering with a soldier's religion as with his prefer ences for men." Mayor Alexander, of Springfield, Mass., has made a wager with a Demo crat of that city, that in the event of McClellan's election, tind within fifteen days thereafter, the mayor is to give the AlcOlellanite a wheelbarrow ride a dis tance of two miles, between the hours of I and 5 o'clock in the afternoon. Fifty pears on a stem eight inches in length are exhibited at a Fair in San Francisco. Tile papers there boast of two fruit crops in one year, and they say three crops are not uncommon in the interior. In Chester county not less than thirty mills are at work manufacturing s orghum syrup. The price charged is 25 to 30 cents per gallon. A Mrs. Crosby is building a new ope ra house in Chicago, four stories high, with a marble front, and capable of seat ing 3,500 persons. It is announced that Prince Freder ick of Schleswig-Holstein-Noer will marry the daughter of a rich American gentlemen. One hundred and seventy-five profes sional bounty- jumpers have been arres ted in Indiana and sent to the front in irons. A man in Detroit had a woman dill fame put in prison for robbing him, and then married her to get her out. A drafted man committed suicide by drowning himself in the river at nati on Friday last Hon. Robert J. Walker returned to New York from Europe by the Persia. Eleven boys were arrested in Portland last Sunday for Sabbatb_breaking. The Atlaritic cable about to be laid will= bear four times its own weight. Government pays $75 apiece for arti finial legs furnished to maimed soldiers. The New York `. nits now hold about twenty-five millions in gold. Two-thirds of the product of the oil wells of America isahipped abroad. A-new edition of "Robinson Crime" is befog published. THE NEW CONSTITUTION",—The Circuit Judge to be elected under the new Con stitution of Maryland,• as well as the Judges of the Court of Appeals, are to serve for fifteen years, or until they shall have attained the age of seventy years, whichever may first happen, and be re-eligible until attaining said age. Judges of the Orphan's Court and State attorneys are not to be elected until 1867, and sheriffs not until 1865. Jus tices of the peace are to be appointed by the Governor, and constables by the county commissioners for the counties, and by the Mayor and City Council for Baltimore city. The legislature is to meet on the first Wednesday in every second year thereafter. The pay of the members to be $5 a day. lir An unknown man, who endeavor ed to smuggle a ride on the Great Wes tern Railway, recently, met with a hor rible end. He climbed upon the top of a passenger car unperceived, and when the train stopped blood was seen trick ling down the side of it. On examine. tion it was found that the man was dead, having evidently been struck by one of the bridges. Ms skull was completely crushed. gar A lady named Lydia Elliot fell into a kettle of boiling sorgburri, at Keithsborg, Illinois, last week. She managed to drag herself from the kettle to a trough filled with cold water, in which she immersed herself. Death soon put a period to her horrible suffer ings. Gottschalk, the pianist has been made a knight of the order of Charles the Third, by the Queen of Spain. fir Sixty thousand officers are now in the 11. S. Navy. CLeTHES-WRIBiGER. It is the only reliable self-Adjusting Wring er. No wood-work to swell of split. No thumb-screws to get out of older. Warranted with or with-out Cog-Wheels. It took the First Premium at Fifty-seven State and County pairs in 1863, and is, with out an exception, the be•t Wringer ever made. Patented in the United States, 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. 1. $7.50. No. F. $8.50, No. A. $9.50. Sample Wringer sent and express paid on receipt of price. Manufactured and gold, wholesale and re sit, by the PUTNAM MANUFACTURING CO., No. 13 Platt :Street, New York, and Cleve land, Ohio. • S. C. NORTHROP, Agent IN'IIAT EVERYBODY KNOWS, viz: That Iron wets galvanized will not rust That a simple machine is better than a com plicated one; That a Wringer should be self-adjusting, durable, and e ffi ci ent; That Thunth-t-strews,' and " Fastenings cause delay and t; ouble to regulate and keep in order; That wood soaked in hot water will swell, shrink and split; That wood bearings 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 essenttal ; That the Putnam Wringer has aQ the ad vantages, and not one of the disadvantages above named; That all wiio have tested it, pronounce it the best Wringer ever made; That it wilt wring anything from a thread to a bad quilt without alteration ; We might lilt the paper with testimonials, but insert only a few to convince the skepti cal, if such there be ; and we only to all,' test Putnam's Wringer. Teat it Morougldy with any and ALL others, and if not entirely satisfactory, return it. ' Putnam Manufacturing Co : GENTLEMEN: /know from practical experi ence that iron well geileanized with zinc willnot oxidize or rust one particle. The Putnam Wringer is as near perfect as possible, and I can cheerfully recommend it to be the best in use. Respectfully yours. JNO. W. WHEELER. Cleveland, Ohio. Many Years' experience in the galvauizing business enable me to indorse the above state ments in all particulars. JNO. C. LEFFERTS, No. 100 Beekman Street. - . - New York, January, 1864. We have tested Putnam's Clothes Wringer by practical making, and know that it will do. It is cheap ; it is simple ; it requires no room, whether at work or at rest ; a child can operate it.; it does its duty thoroughly ; it saves time and it saves wear and. tear. We earnestly advise all who have much 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. • - HON. HORACE GREELY. May 28, 1864..6m.1 F RANKLIN HINKLE, M. D After an absence of nearly three years in the Navy and Army of the United States has returned to the Borough of Marietta and re sumed the practice of Medicine. rir Especial attention paid to Surgical cases in which branch of his profession lie has had very considerable experience. Orrice in his private residence :—entrance at the Hall door. Another Call for 5000 Men, Who want their Faces Shaved clean, their Hair Cut and Beads Shampooned in the most scientific manner, can do so by calling in at the Market Street Barber Saloon, opposite Libbart's Drug Store. ACHOICE Lot of Books for children called indistructable Pleasure Books ; Sclool and Paper Books, Stationary, Pens, Pen holders. &c., at LANDIS Sr. TROUT. rj , ICHAIRY & Oak Wood, BO Cords each II Hickory and Oak Wood. Orders must be accompanied with the cash when they will be promptly filled. Spangler & Patterson. 1 - 17 - ILC OX'S Celebrated Imperial Ex tension Steel Spring. Skeleton Skirt, With pdf-adjustible Bustle. The latest and best in 'use, just received at DIFFENBACH'S . • uIipURYEA'S REFINED MAIZENA, Prepared from Maize, or ludian Corn;for pary purposes. Pot sale at J. A. DIFFENBACIPS. • iILINIt long coJelnatedlGlN ; BIL DI BENJAMIN. L LYONS' PURE OHIO CATAWBA BRANDY, AND SPARKLING CATAWBA WINES. EQUAL in QUALITY and Cheaper in ri te than the Brandies and Wines of the Old World. For Summer Complaint, Cholera Infantum, Bowel Complaint, Cramp, Colic and Diarrhoea. A sure cure guarrantied, or Ike money reunded In support of the above statements, are pr e . seated the Cettilicates of Dr. James R. Chilt on, New-York; Dr. Hiram Ccx, Chemical In. Spector, Ohio ; Dr. James IL .Nichols, Chem ist, Boston; Dr. E. N. Jones, Chemical in. Spector, Circleville, Onio ; Prof. C. T. Jackson, Chemist, Boston ; Dr. Charles lipman Thep. ard, Charleston, S. C. ; and J. V. Z. Blaney, and G. A. Mariner, Consulting Chen ist, Chi. cago, all of whom have anylyzed the Catawba Brandy, and ci'rnmeod it in the highest terms, for medicinal use. Analysis of the Mass. State Assayer. [11353.) When evaporated through clean linen it left no oil or offensive matter. In every repect it is a PURE spirituous liquor. Tne oil which gives to this Brandy its flavor and aroma, is wholly unlike fusil or grain oil. Its odor par takes of both the fruit and nil of grapes. With acids it produces ethers of a 'high fragrance. The substitution of this Brandy for Cognac Brandy will do away with the manufacture of Fre-rmons spirits, bold under this name bath at home and abroad. Respectfully, A. A. Rains, M. D., State Assayer, .16 Boyleston-at. BY THE LAME, IN 1564 1 have analysed " L. Lyons' Pure Catawba Brandy," with reterence to its composition and character, being the same as that produced in past ears. A sample taken from ten casks afforded the same ;results with regard to puri ty ; a slightly increased amount of the princi ple on which its flavor depends was determin ed by comparison with lamer samples. The indications of analysis show that thla Brandy is produced by the same process as most of the imported Brandy. Respectfully, A. A. Harts, M. D., State Assayer, 16 Boyleston•st. Boston, July 30, 1864 [Mass. MANUFACTURED ONLY BY H. H. JACOB & CO. [To whom all orders should be addressed]. 3m] DEPOT, 91 Liberty-st., New-Fork E. k H. T. ANTHONY & CO., Manufacturers of Photographic Eaterials, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, 501 BROADWAY, NEW-YORK N addition to our main business of Phot.- I graph Materials, we are Head Quarters for the following STEREOSCOPES & STEREOSCOPTIC VIEWS. Of these we have an immense assortment, in cluding War Scenes, American and Foreign Cities and Landscapes Groups, Statuary,V. Also, Revolving Stereoscopes, for public st private exhibition. Our Catalogue will le sent to any address on reteipt of Stamp. PHOTOGRAPHIC ALBUMS. We were the first to introduce these into the United States, and we manufacture immense quantities in great variety, ranging in mice from 50 cents to .50 dollars each. Our Album. have the reputation of being superior in beau ty- and durability to any others. They will be sent by mail, ranE, oe, reteipt of price. itrFINE ALBUMS MADE TO ORDER. 4.4 CARD PHOTOGRAPHS. Our Catalogue now embraces over F I V THOUSAND different stibjecti,'(to which ad ditions are constantly being made) of Por t•aits of Eminent Americans, gre.; about 100 Major Generals, 550 Statesmen, 200 Brig.-Generals, 130 Divines, 275 (2ulone's, 12.5 Authors, 100 Liuut. 7 Colonels, 40 irtists, 250 other Officers, 125 Staze, 73 Navy Offices, 50 Promi'ent Women MO Prominent Foreign Portraits. 3,000 Copies of Worics of a rt, including reproductions of the most celebrated Engravings. Paintings, Statues, &c. Cata logues sent on receipt of stamp. An order for one dozen Pictures from our Catalogue will be filled on' receipt of $1:80, and sent mail, Feu. Photographers and others ordering goods C. 0. D will please remit layer cent. of the amount with their order. gi H. T. ANTHONY & CO., MANUFACTVRERS OF . PHOTOGRAPHIC IYlaTeitta.ts, 501 BROADWAY, N. V. 113-The prices and quality of our goodscso not tail to satisfy. [l2ms. The Peoples' oab CHEAP HAT, CAP AND Fur tore, NO. 20 NORTH QUEEN STREW', LANCASTER, PA. Shialt,z cYc ]Eircitlaer, FASHIONABLE HATTERS A general assortment of Bata, Cape, and LADIES FURS OF ALL THE LATEST STYLES, constantly on hand, which will be sold at the lowest rates for cash. All goods in our line manufactured to order HENRY A. SHULTZ-1 [Tour/ A. SHULTZ Lancaster, November 5, 1864.-tf. tETTERS REMAINING unclaimed in the i Post Office at Marietta, Pa, Tattasn , iy, NOVEMBER, 10, 1864. Billings, John Leicht, Jacob Cochran, Miss C. Lily, Miss Maggie 2 Bichles, Miss Amy Maloney, Stephen Epple, John Miller George T. Horning, George Strickler, Caroline Hongendouble ' J. S. Singel, E. J. Hovener, Mr S. 2 Tyson, William lank, Conrad 2 White, George 1 , 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. ABRAHAM CASSEL, P. M. W 00D-LEAVE AT PUBLIC SALE. The undersigned will offer at 'public sale on TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15th, 1869, at 2 o' clock in the afternoon, on the promises, the Wood-leave on a TRACT OF' LAND, con taining 15 or 16 ACRES, divided into lots as follows No. 1, containing SIX ACRES. No. 2.-3 Acres and 10 Perches. No. 3.- 3 Acres and 60 Perches. No. 4.-3 ACRES. The Tract is_well situated, being near the crossing of the road from Maytown to Hiest and's Mill and the Marietta and Colebrook road. Persons wishing to view the Tract previous to the sale, will call on the subscriber residing near the same. Tenn's at sale. JAMES B. CLARK. November 5, 186440'. S TRAY STERR.. 0 ) Came to the residence of the undersigned, re siding in Conoy township, about two miles east of Bainbridge, on Friday, Nov. 28th, A GREY STEER., with two white spots across his back, about 2 years old;' The owner is requited to 'prove property, pay charges and take him away, or he will be sold according to law'. - OHN HALDEMAN. N'ovemher 5,1884.3t* BRANDlESbrande—guarranted to be genuine. " H. D. Benjamin.. IeIOWE & WTV.E.IPS Celeblated RetoilY Dye Colon, warribied to be il y at TINE GOMA* . MORT I •