The Mariettian. (Marietta [Pa.]) 1861-18??, November 26, 1864, Image 2

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    thenatiettian.
F. L. Baker, Editor.
MARIETTA. PA :
gfaluidag.,,,frau.emlcet.9 6,181'4.
a- Judge Emanuel Shaeffer, of Lan.
caster, died on Sunday evening last a
week, at Newburg, Cumberland coutty,
Pa., where he bad gone as a delegate
to the Elderibip of the church of God,
which met on the 31st ult. Judge
Shaeffer Was an active and successful
business man, and enjoyed the confi
dence and esteem of all who were
brought into intercourse with him. Het
was for many years engaged in the Sad
dle and Harness making business, from
which he retired only a few months ago.
He held the office of Associate• Judge
iu the Court of Qnarter Sessions of this
county before' the office was made el. et•
lye, and was for a dumber of years Presi
dent of the Lancaster Savings' Institu
tion.
lir The New York Tribune declares
its belief that the Union party was
cheated out of thirty thousand votes in
that State, at the late election, and de
mands an investigation, in which all
parties are invited to assist, in order
that the guilty be brought to punish
ment. At Al bany, suits have been
commenced for forcibly obstructing the
polls against Union voters, by which an
opposition member of Assembly was re
turned as eleeted, but whose seat will
be contested. In Philadelphia, all the
officers of the eighth precinct of the En
to rious Fourth ward, have been arrested
on the allegation of fraud connected
with the election.
dar At the late Presidential election,
r. Samuel Wenger, aged 88 years, re
/ siding in West Earl township, this
County, voted for Abraham Lincoln, and
banding in his ticket remarked that he
Considered hie ballot for Lincoln of as
much service in suppressing the rebel
lion as if he bad killed a rebel. The.
Same old gentleman, when two years
ago an appeal was made for linen for
hospital purposes, having no linen rags
to contribute, gave his "wedding shirt,"
which he had preserved for over half a
century,. with the observation that it
could not be pat to better use.
ifir A communication has been re:
ceived by a Liverpool friend of Garibal
di to the effect that the General has de
clined to receive the yacht for which
funds were subscribed by a number, of
the reFidents of Liverpool, and which,
loaded with presents from private indi
viduals in various parts of the country,
was about to proceed to Caprera.
ar One of the Middletown, Conn.,
clergymen at a recent torchlight display,
exhibited a traneparencv over hie door,
with a quotation from Genesis' xxii. 15 :
"The angel of the Lord called unto
Abraham ont'of Heaven a second time."
"Long lobo Wentworth," as he
is popularly styled in Chicago, has been
returned to Congress, on the Republi
can' ticket, by a majority of twenty-five
hundred over McCormick, the reaping
machine man.
liF One of the city fathers of Pitta
burg, Pa., was robbed of 845,000 in New
York. on Wednesday night, while in
company with a couple of abandoned
wretches. The guilty party are under
arrest.
sr Three Russian officers have lately
been degraded for having engaged in a
duel, and one of them, seho gave the
provocation, has been deprived of his
Otis of nobility,
er A wife in Minnesota enlisted with
her husband in 1861, fought with Jain'
eighteett battles, was wounded thrice,
and has now, left the service, ass her bus.
band has. been killed.
or If there wee no women in the
world men couldn't 'Manage to make a
ehift, and' there would ire' no use for one
if it were made.
D. D. Home, the "spiritual medi.
em" who moonily cheated a sensation in
Paris, is giving poetical readings in
Boston.
,or The Swedish journals bre
,all clam
oring_ for the abolition of capital punish
ment in that•country., It grew out of a
recent execntioo at Stockholm.
sir The handsome sum of $32,000 has
been raised for the widow and orphan
children of the late, Major. General Bir
nay.
ijar The citizens of Lowell, Mass.,
have purchased &sword for Gen. Butler,
at a coot of seven hundred dollars.
Er Last political conundrum : How
did'Gen. McClellan receive the news of
hie defeat? With resignation.
or Three hundred millions of dollari
have been paid to soldiers for :bounties,
Ft) far, daring the war.
FEEDING ON GREENBACKS :—The Cin
cinnati Gazette relates a most singular
circumstance which took place in that.
city a few days ago, and by which a
man lost $214 and a cow lost her life.
The story goes that a drover, walking in
front of his herd, in taking some tobac
co from his pocket, inadvertently drop
ped a roll of Treasury notes amounting
to $4OO. One of the cows, either be
cause of hunger or a desire to appropri
ate her owner's money, picked it up,
and after adequate mastication swallow
ed the precious morsel just at the mo
ment that the drover, through one of
his assistants, became aware of the fact
that he had lost his money, and that the
cow had eaten it. An immediate search
discovered some small pieces of the
notes about the teeth and lips of the
avaricious ruminant, but deglutition had
placed the money beyond the present
reach of its owner. The cow was now
too valuable to be sold, at least on the
hoof. Digested "greenbacks" would
baldly pairs current and yet all he had
were in danger of becomindthus worth
less. He conceived the notion of taking
them from the stomach of the cow.
Proceeding to a slaughter house she
was killed, the stomach opened and the
money found.. Thus far the theory
proved a success, but the c °edition of
the notes was Rtill such as to render
them unfit for the ordinary uses of cem
mem. The mass was washed, straiten
ed out, picked to pieces, overhauled and
minutely, examined. There it was, re:
covered, but with an immense falling off
in its appearance and dimensions. Af
ter cleansing it the drover took his
money to the Collector of Internal Rev
entre, where by patching, the unfortu
nate drover succeeded in saving $lB6
out of the four hundred that had been
eaten. Tbe meal was rather an expen
sive one to both the cow. and her own
er for it cost the life of one and $214
of the pecuniary wealth of the other.
More than fifteen )ears ago a ne
gro woman escaped from slavery in
Maryland, and located in Hartford,
Connecticut. A few days ago a contra
band arrived in Hartford from New
Orleans, and, while wandering about
the streets, met the woman and recog
nized her as his wife. She did not re
cognize Lim, and it was only after he
had repeated. circumstances which hap
paned when they lived in Maryland that
she• was convinced that he was her hus
band. They were again married, and
are now keeping up a domestic establish
ment of their own.
iler Mrs. Stephen Berry, of . Machias.
Maine, was awakened out of sleep a
few nights ago, and cried out that some
one;bad cut her throat. A light was
procured and she was found covered
with blood on,her neck breast and arms.
On close inspection it was found that
a rat had attacked her in her sleep. and
had When the side of her neck and oar
severely. While attending her, one of
the children began to cry in an adjoin.
log room, when the, rat, was found to
have attacked one of them.
ear The great Catholic Cathedral of
St, Peters and St. Paul, in Philadelphia,
was dedicated on Sunday last. It has
been eighteen years in course of erection
and cost over one million of dollars,
which was raised from amongst the poor
est of the catholic denominations in
Philadelphia. It has a brown stone
front of 136 feet on Logan Square, and
is the shape of a cross. It is the larg
est church in America.
ear General McClellan has really re
signed from the army, and General Phil
Sheriden been promoted in his stead.—
The New-York World, Little Mac's or
gan, to announcing the fact,- says: "on
the Bth instant, the day of the election,
Gen. McClellan addressed a letter to the
President resigning his commission in
the army." .
fi r There are two amendments pro
posed to the Constitution of the United
States. One is to abolish slavery for
ever in the United States; the, other is
to provide for the election of the Presi
dent and Vice President of the United
States by the direct vote of the people,
not, as at present, by an electoral col
lege.
Or Dr. Hinkle has, as will be seen
by reference to oar advertising columns,
re-opened his family drug store; where
everything usually found at such a store
will be on sale fresh, just from the city.
dar A rat attacked a lady while asleep
at Machias, Maine, a few nights ago,
and'bit her severely in the neck and ear:
It also attacked a child in an adjoining
room,
ijr MO:Leila° has received the small
eskvote of any Presidential candidate
since the election of 1804, when Pickney,
the Federal candidate, had only fourteen
votes.
or It is said that 'The Poems by
Three Sisters," lately published in Lon
don, are by the three daughters of Mar
tin P. Topper.
• oar The Dayton Empire contains the
nerd of Mr. Vallandighism, anteduricing
that he "has resumed the. practice of
lir The plias or Egypt has about
two hundred stallions - And brood •mares .
in his stable.
Num." 108 YEARS OLD.—Schuylkill
county beats Sturbridge, Mass., and
Conneaut township, Crawford county,
Pa., places noted for the great age of
two citizens who voted at the late elec
tion. On the Bth of November, Bernard
Eisenbuth. a resident of New Castle
township, this county, aged one hundred
and seven years five months ana twenty.
three days, voted for Abraham Lincoln.
Mr. Eisenhuth voted for Washington..
and at every Presidential election from
that peri , )d to this. It seems that be.
fore the late election he always voted
the Democratic ticket, but since the
commencement of the present war one
of his daughters has read • the papers
pretty regularly to him ; he judged Mr.
Lincoln's Administration, and declared
that Mr. Lincoln was just like Washing.
ton, and that he would vote for him.
Mr. Eisenhuth was born in Lebanon,
Pa., and was a member of the Lutheran
Church of that place. He has lived in
the woods of Schuylkill county during
the last fifty yeah. He has had eleven
children, six eons and five daughters.
[lie youngest living daughter is fifty
years of age. Ile has been a very hard
working man: Up to the time of ex.
periencing an accident some three years
since, which dislocated his hip-joint, he
could.walk thirty miles a day. If be
lives until the 16th day of next May,
Mr. Eisenhuth will be 108 years old.
If any section of the country can pro.
duce a parallel to this case, we should
like to hear of it.
sir As the result cf a bet on the
election, the principals performed a
"wheelbarrow feat" in Springfield on
Friday. The loser of the bet did the
wheeling, with a half-dozen bladders
around his neck, as per agreement,
while the winner eat in the wheelbarrow,
tranquilly smoking a cigar. Preceding
them were drummers 'and fifers and a
, 'banner" appropriately inscribed. A
large crowd witnessed the ludicrous die
play, Subsequently. the parties were
arrested and fined $6.15 for obstructing
the side-walk with their barrow—a joke
not anticipated.
sir The New York Journal of Com
merce, which supported McClellan, is
sick of politic., and it announces,that it
will henceforth have nothing to say on
the subject. The Louisville Journal is
also sick. The proprietors have kicked
ont Paul R. Shipman, and Geo.' D.
Prentice takes the helm. But the loyal
people have no more confidence in the
latter than the former. Both have pro
ved recreant to the Union cause. They
made their bed with rebel sympathizers,
and they will not soon be able to cheat
Union men again. ,
All Flunkeydorn in England is
ecstasies over what they .call the roy.
baby. During its jouraey from Berl
to London it was followed by a "Jenk
pis" from the Loud on Times, who chron
icled all its acts, its crowing, the tender
cares of•its nurse, etc. The cow that
fed it has been bought by a mayor of
Hull, who is said to be crazy with loy
alty to the Crown. An old show and
some necessary articles of toilette be
longing to it have also been purchased
by admiring mammas as souvenirs Dhar
mehtes.
tar Mies Mary Bedell, of Coxsackie,
New York. while driving a nail, a few
days ago, accidentally struck the end of
her forefinger with a hammer. It was
but slightly hurt, and she continued
about her work. Three days afterwards
the forefinger began to swell, and it be
came very'sure. Medical aid was pro
cured. but it continued to grow • worse,
when mortification of the whole arm set
in, and she died on the tenth Asp after
the blow with the hammer.
ge- For the purpose of deciding bets
on the October Home vote, the Union
and. Democratic State Central Commit
i,ees have respectively addressed circa
hint to the Chairman of their respective
Cotioty Committees for the official count
of each 'county. This is the only way to
get at the result, al the law does not re
cognize the 'home vote" as an official
fact, and consequently it was, not return
ed separately.
s r About five months ago a jolly
son of Erin arrived at Pittsburg from
Ireland, and in,September last enlisted
for a year, receiving some $4OO bounty.
The money or a great part of it at least,
he invested in a passage certificate fur
his wife and family, and a few days since
they arrived here from Ireland—six
“boancing boys" and a woman still in
her prime.
fir' The electors of President and
Vice President meet on the first Wed
nesday (the 7th) of December, at the
capitols of their respective States, to
east their votes, which are sent to the
President of the Senate, (the Hon. Han
nibal Bamlin',) and counted before'both
Houses of Congress on the second Wed
nesday (the Bth) of February. 1865.
sr The President has issued a pro
clamation to the-effect that the block
ade will be raised from the first of De
cember all articles not contraband
of war, at Norfolk Vs Fernandina and
Pensacola, Fla.
The Chicago Journal says that
nearly three hundred conspirators ha*
been amend in that city.
pen, Paistr anti .45 eosins
Only four towns in Massachusetts vo
ed for McClellan.
Geo. Canhy is sufficiently recovered
o resume business.
The population of Boston, by the new
corporatioa census, is 164,783—1e5s
than Chicago.
Orange, N. J., the home of McClellan,
gave 102 majority for the Union ticket
—last year onlj 9 majority.
Gov. Brown, Of Georgia, in his mes
sage, advocates the right of each State
to negotiate a peace for itself.
The first lighthouse in Morocco has
just been erected. It is an evidence of
the increasing improvement of the peo•
pie.
Gen. Banks, it is said, will shortly re
turn to and resurqe his duties at. New
Orleans and the Department at Louisi
ana.
A monster Union celebration was
held at Memphis, Tenn., on the
inst., in honor of the re-election of
President Lincoln. •
Twenty wild animali, including a roy
al Bengal tiger, arrived at Boston, on
Saturday last, on the ship Golconda,
from Calcutta.
A report says that 8000 of our prison•
ers are at Savannah, and are rather bet-
ter treated than at Andarsonville, and
that 25,000 are at Miller, Georgia.
It is a significant feet that the late
Presidential canvass has been the means
of depriving the army of its two ranking
major generals—McClellan and Fre
mont.
Gov. ,Gilmore of New Hampshire, put
four substitutes into the army last week.
representing himself and three of his
sons. This is an example of patriotism
that cannot be too extensively followed.
The Christian Commission has recall , .
ed a valuable contribution to its treasury
in the shape of a solid silver brick, vir•
gin pure, from the mines of Nevada.
Its intrinsic value is about $3,000.
S. M. Clark, Superintendent of the
Printing Departmdnt in the Treasury,
has nearly completed the necessary
plates and machinery for the issue of
three•cent notes.
Archbishop McOloskey,of New York,
has followed Archbishop Purcell, of
Cincinuatti, and advised a celebration
of Thanksgiving Day in the churches of
aarch•diocese. He also recommends
special prayers for a speedy peace. \
The rebels acknowledge the election
of Mr. Lincoln, and the Richmond Lis.
patch says that the Yankees, in re-elect
ing him, have imposed upon thernselves
a tyranny for which alone they are fiat
by nature.
he rebel Semmes is reported
have left Liverpool on the 3d ult., with
a crew and armament for his new ship
Ranger. The U. S. steam frigate Niag
ara is cruising off the French coast,
hopes of meeting him. . .
=ERR=
Charleston and Fort Sumpter co)tin-'
ue to be shelled by our guns steadily
and with effect. The city would appear
to he pretty generally used up, there
being scarcely a point in the built up!
portions entirely safe from our missiles-.
The Little Rock (Ark.) Uncoilditita
"
al Union of Oct 27th says that the en
thusiasm in that State for Jeff Davi is
fast dying out, and those who have ben
hitherto ardent in his behalf are grow
ing sullenly neutral. i
Deserters and refugees are comingjiu
more than ever since the election. Tfiey
say that many who were waiting to 'see
the result of the election, hoping for
McClellan and Compromise, will now
come over, The result of he election
is the hardest blow rebeldom has yet re
ceived.
NA few days ago, the rebels believing
that Atlanta bad been entirely evacua
ted by our forces, sent a reconnoitring
party, who, penetrating the city, com
menced to plunder, when the whole par
ty—ninehundred in number —were cap
tured and sent to Nashville prisoners.
It is thought that Mr. James Brooks'
(of the New York Express), claim of
Congressional election will be success
fully disputed by Mr. W. E. Dodge, the
Union candidate. It is contended that
fraudulentvotes gave the result on
which the friends of Mr. Brooks assert
his election over his competitors, and
that these votes should be ignored.
Tho Boston Board of Trade has ap
pointed a committee to adopt some
suitable measures to testify to Capt.
Winslow the grateful appreciation of
the Boston merchants for his gallant
conduct in destroying the Alabama.
The Kearsarge is to be thrown open to
visitors for the benefit of the National
Sailors Fair.
A telegram from St. Louis reports
that information has been received there
announcing the wounding, perhaps mor
tally, of Maj. General Canby, while as
cendibg White river, Arkansas. The
General was 'on the gunboat Cricket,
and While standing on the deck'was fir
ed at by a guerilla frem the shore, the
bell striking' him in the groin and pass
ing through hirhody. •
LITTLE MAC'S RESNEATTON :-WP clip
the following article on General McClel
lan's resignation from that high-toned
journal, the Philadelphia North Ameri
can : An official order from the War
Department announces * that the resig
nation of General McClellan was accep
ted on the day it was received, and or-.
dered to date from the Bth of November,
on which it was written. All the solici
tude, therefore, of his friends lest he
. should fight in a war to which he is so
much opposed was unnecessary. The
President was not anxious to go through
another such a course of anxiety and
trouble as General McClellan occasion
,ed him. The latter had full opportuni
ty, and failed disastrously, dismally, dis
gracefully. His career only served to
bring the military pretensions of the re
public into contempt while it lasted,
which even the magnificent victories at
the west and southwest could not obvi-
ate
Simultaneously; with the publication
this order, a San Francisco paper
aches ns containing a report of a re
)
arkable speech delivered in that city,
pending the electoral canvass, by Major
General McDowell, which contains at
least one strange revelation. It seems
that the President, worn out by the long
delay of the campaign in Virginia, de
jected on account of the attacks upon
him in Congress end in the press, and
the low condition of our finances, sent
for Franklin•and. McDowell to say to
them that as McClellan was sick; be
wanted them to prepare some plan of
action, and that something must be
done. They had three different inter
views with the Presiderit, in which each
General submitted a plan, McDowell's
being for an advance by the northern
route from Alexandria, 'and Franklin's
along the York river peal's:ale.
While these interviews were pending,
the President and Secretary of State
each went separately to General Mc-
Clellan's headquarters to consult him,
but he pretended to be too sick to re
ceive them, and they were sent away.
Yet McClellan's long report of his cam
paign shows that on that very day he
wrote his dispatch to Buruside ; and
McDowell states, on authority which he
knows to be reliable, that McClellan,
although he refused to see the President
or Secretary of State, did receive a pri•
vale gentleman, at the request of the
reporter of the. New York Herald.
Moreover, it appears that no member of
the Medical Staff was in attendance on
N.celellan—that, in fact, so far froin
being dangerously sick, as was given
out at the time, he was not sick at. all.
To appreciate properly this deliberate
insult to the Chief Magistrate and
Prime Minister of the republic, we must
bear in mind that both were, up to that
time, the warm and earnest admirers
and friends of this upstart. It was ex
treniely difficult for any one to get
either President Lincoln or Secretary
Seward to do or say anything calculated
to interfere with McClellan, and it was
owing to this very , fact that the Admin
istration was suffering under au iuteuse
dissatisfaction of the public, and espe
cially among the Union men. The
whole responsibility of the lociF delay
rested not upon McClellan, but upon
the two men whom he shammed sick
ness to escape seeing. It is not difficult
to understand the reason of such extra
ordinary conduct. McClellan had his
eye upon the Presidency. Well, be
bas secured a Democratic nomination
and has been beaten terribly.
His public career in the army is ended
by his resignation. Th'e passion of po
litical preferment has entered his soul,
and be hopes to get to the Senate from
New Jersey. Should he succeed in
doing so he will then sink down to his
natural level, for the bold debaters of
that historical arena will go through a
dozen important mancenvres before he
will be able to make up his mind what
to do about any one of them. As for
keeping himself in the pasture as a
Candidate for the Presidency during the
remainder of his life, the trial he has al
ready gone through is enough to satisfy
his Democratic friends that they can
make nothing of him. .
ter "The Lady's Friend" for Decem
ber is on our table, and is truly a splen
did one. The opening plate "The Suo + a,
Birds' Christ-nuts Visit," is a gem, and
the frontispiece of tice volume is very
handsome and a double fashion plate-to
gether with very - high-toned reading
matter. No lady" shotild be without
this magazine. Price $2.50 ; 2 copies
$4.00; 9 copies $]6.00; 21 copies $35.00.
Specimen numbers will be sent to those
desirous of making up clubs for 15 cts.
Wheeler §' Wilson's celebrated • Sewing
Machines are furntshed'as Premiums on
certain terms. Address Deacon & Peter
son, 319 Walnut street Miladelphia:
gar A prize.fight took place at Scran
ton, Pa., on TuesdaY, between two men.
named Harris and Martin. The latter
was badly "punished" but while ' the
fight was progressing a number of Uni
ted States'detectives appeared upon the
ground and arrested nearly all those in
attendance.
G a r Green. the Malden Bank' murder.
et.; says he intended to do nothing . but
trlghten the clerk when` he sent bullet
throngh his head.' Be was merely play.
ing the faice' be `Murder."
TOUCHING INCIDFNTS.—Many incidents
of a sad and touching interest transpi r ,
ed during the Coroner's investigation of •
the late railroad catastrophe near Lafay,
ette, Indiana. Several of the soldier s
killed were returning home, expecti ng
to be married in a few d iya, and lette rs
and photopraphs of their intended wires
were found upon their persons. o c ,
man had upon his person the letters of
his wife. She wrote in fond and afi re .
tionate terms of his expected retort ! ,
and the glad anticipations of the Lula
ones. Be had stopped at Indianapolis
and bought a number of toys. The de.
lay in purchasing these tokens of affec.
tion cost the fond father his life.
CAN SHE HOLD Otrh--.The Weekly
Phoenix, of Phoenixville, Chester couc.
ty, says that a young lady of East Vie.
cent, that county, had an offer of m ar .
Hap from a young gentleman, as follows •
That if General McClellan was elected
he would marry her, to which she a t .
ceded, and if he was not elected she was
to remain single four years longer.
Four years is a long period in life of a
marriageable young lady, and we have
some doubts that—if she is handsome,
and receives very many proposals—sh e
can hold out.
Cr There is in California a colony o!
Mormons who reject polygamy. They
have just held a meeting in San Fran.
else°, under the title of the - Conference
or the Reorganized Church of Latter.
Day Saints." The San Francisco 130 b
letin says that their numbers in Califot.
nia and Nevada are as follows : Mem
hers, 367 ; elders, 48 ; priests, 11;
teachers, 2; children blessed during
the year. 100 ; baptisms, 36 ; cut off, 1.
fur Workmen, while engaged digging
a cellar on Winter Hill. near Bostou, a
few days since exhumed the remains
five Revolutionary soldiers, identified
by colonial buttous found with the re
mains. Winter (fill was a fortified
point during the siege of Boston, and
the remains are probably those of soi•
diers garrisoned there.
tr A Mr. Knapp, keeper of a
Beer saloon in Lancaster, quelled a
on the Presidential election night r,
turning a hydrant upon the pugilist.,
which had the effect of soon clearing
the saloon.
sr John G. Worth of Warwick
towaship has been appointed by tb-
County Commissioners, Mercantile Ap
praiser for thin county.
5 prtial 3tOtirt,s
rrA CARD TO INVALIDS.—A Clergyinu..
while residing in South America as a
sionary, discovered a safe and simple reinei r
for the cure of Nervous Weakness, nariy Cc
cay, Diseases of the- Urinary and Seminal
ns and the whole train of dis.n.l.ns
on by baneful and vicious habits. Great
bars have already been cured by thiJ ne.'
remedy. Prompted by a desire to br.!neii:
afflicted and unfortunate, I will erne
cipe for preparing and, using this medicine, .
a sealed envelope, to any one who ne:•6
FREE OF CHARGE. 1.7" Please ilIC'O3
paid envelope. addressed to yourself.
Address JOSEFFI T. INMA.N,
Station D, Bible House, New- V.O
D3' Matrimonial t ' Ladies and Gentlcm. -
If you wish to marry, address the uriiiersi t :;i
who will send you without money and w,:'
out price, valuable information that will
ble you to marry happy and speedily,
Live of age, wealth or beauty. This ioMm,a
Lion will cost you nothing, and if you wish.
marry, I will cheerfully assist yon. All le
tors stric:ly confidential. The desired
'nation sent by ri turd mail, and no questi.2.
asked. Address SARAH B. LAMBERT,
12-3m.] Greenpoint, Kings co., N. S.
EvE and EAR: - Piof. J. Isaacs, M. D.
Oculist and Anne, formerly of Leyden, Ile:-
land, is located at No. 511 Pine-st., Philade:-
phis, where.persons afflicted with diseases u
the Eye or Ear will be scientifically tressed
and cured, if curable. Artificial Eyes insert.
cd without pain. No charges made foreseas
ination. The medical faculty is invited, ill
he has no secrets in his mode of treatment.
February 6, 1864.-rY.
£a" To Corsunrrtves. CousiiMptiVe suf
ferers will receive a valuable prescription for
the cure of Cnnsumption, Asthma, Bronchitis
and all Throat and Lung alfections, (free
charge) by sending their address to
Rev. EDWARD A. Wil.solt,
Williamsburg, Kings co. N. Y•
September 24, 2864.3m]
LIETTERS REMAINING unclaimed in the
Post Office at Maiietta, Pa., THU/07)1r
VEMBER. 24, 1864.
Apple, Rev. B. F. Lily, Miss M.
Askins, Mrs. Lydia Lead, Lenard
Bechtold, William Leed, Mrs. A.
Bonner, Miss Emma Miller, George T,
I3arnheart, Lewis Mcßride, Sarni.
Channey, Charles More, Mrs. L.
Caite, Mrs. Kate Menges, Jacob
Denney, Messrs. John McKAin, John
G. & Co. Mallen. James
Dimman, Miss S. Markell, Capt.
Doband, Timothy Pheifer, Michael
Furk, Miss M. Snyder, John H.
Graham, Miss Alice Shull, Mrs. Eliza
Gray, Miss 37 Souder, Mr. H. 8.
Mile, Miss Barbara Stevens, Mrs. S.
Jones, Thomas W. Tyson, Robert
Leitzenberger. A. Wearer. John L. 2
Longennecker, J. S. . Witmer, Mrs. A.
Lowe, Mrs. C.
iEr 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
vertisiug.
ABRAHAM CASSF.L, P. M.
toiSTltAY.—Came to the premises of Henry
,_4 Sultzbach deceased, residing at the ed4e
.1 the Borough of Marietta, oa Wednesday,
'November 23d instant,
THREE HOGS,
two of them quite large—one a Sow, would
• eigh over WO pounds a piece, the third s
hoat. Twe are White—the one has 2 black
.ots across his back. The owner is required
prove property, pay charges and take them
way, or they wil
GEO.I be
W. sold
SU LTZBAC. according tn H law.
November 95, 1864-3V'