• „ • El `_-, he arttilatt, _ . . F. L. faker, Editor. MARIETTA. PA : Oalufidatt, ,fanuafy_ 1, I 4 Hon. Edward Everett died at-his residence in Boston, very suddenly, of apoplexy, on Sunday morning last, aged 'lO years and 9 months. Mr, Everett was first a minister of the gospel , ; he was in Congress in 1824 and continued there for ten years ; in 1834 was elected governor and was re-ejected for four successive terms; was Minister to Eng land under Presideite •Harrison ; he de clined the Mission to China; in 1843; was appointed Secretary of State on the death of Webster ; was sent to the U. S. Senate in 1853 but resigned in. 1854, on account of ill health ; in '55 and '56 he delivered his celebrated oration on Washington for the purchase of Mount Vernon i at the late Presidential elec tion was at the head of the electoral ticket in Massachiiimtts: He was, un questionably, the most finished scholar in the United States. Cr The general impression in Mexi co appears to be that•Maximillian's role has so many obstacles in its way that it cannot stan3 more than six months. Maximillian has set aside the church party, which was the means by which be went to Mexico, and has exiled two of its principal leaders. He wishes to conciliate the liberals, ; but in that he will certainly fail, and he will remain without any hold on the Mexican people. His principal trouble is, just now, his want of money, and of credit to borrow any. ar The annual pew renting of Henry Ward Beecher's Plymouth Church, in Brooklyn, took place last week. Mr. Beecher explained that, by the'practice here adopted, one-third of the „seats paid two-thiids of the income. The first choice was gained by Mr. Clanin, at $4OO premium, with $l2O for rent. The first 150 pews. sold yield, in rent and premiums, $32,000. The whole in come is upward of $48,000. The con gregation voted to raise the pastor's salary to 812,500. The sexton has $2,- 500. air Port Fisher was captured by our forces on the 15th instant, after a most terrible bombardment of a day and a half by. the' fleet under Com. Porter. One account states', that 1200 prisoners were captured, another makes the num ber 2500, this, victory will, stop , block ade running, and is only preliminary to the capture of Wilmington. Truly, the end of the rebellion hastens, -and "so mote it be.!! ifir An important witness in a case before the , Superior Court in session at Northampton, Mass., being absent . . last week, the sheriff was-sent after The, offieer.returned and said• he had found the man, and wanted to know if the Court insisted on his presence. The answer was.yes; but after the offi cer explained that he was sick with the small-pox, the Court suddenly changed its mind. Sir On Wednesday the 11th inst., Hon. James Guthrie was elected Uni ted States Senator, in place of Lazarus W. Powell whose term expires with the present session• of Congress. Mr. Guth rie was chosen on the first ballot, re ceiving sixty-five votes, to fifty-six for Gen Rosseau. Franeis P. Blair, sr., has , returned to Washington from Richmond, but what was the result of his mission• to Richmond in convincing Jefferson Da vis that he should quit fighting, has not yet been made public. gar Mr. Young, '•dispatcher of the railroad company at Sunbury, was mur dered on Sunday night. After he was killed his body was thrown upon the track, and mutilated by a train of care that passed by. Subscriptions to the' , amount 'of $4OOO were raised yesterday in Phila- delphia, for the Savannah sufferers. In Boston $3700 have been raised. It is the intention in Boston to raise a sub scription of $25,000. • • The, principal basinei3s done in Legiolattire kit week, was.the offer ing of a resolution •by Representative Smith, that the pay, of the members shall be twelve hundred dollars apiece. far Gottschalk, the pianist, is about to leave this country for Havatina, to remain. His farewell concert took place in Philadelphia, yeaterdaylvening. tr General Jim Lane has been re elected by the Legislature of Kansas, U. S. Senator, for 6 years from the 4th of March next. Sr Ge'neral Dan' Sickles and staff have gone to California. ' Mr. Jacobs, the exiled Lienten ant Governor of Kentucky, who is now or was lately in Richmond, evidently does not relish life in the confederacy, to which he has given so much aid and comfort.—George D. Prentice, editor of the Louisville Journal, who returned from Richmond on the 2d instant. brought with him a letter to the Presi dent from Jacobs, in which he begs to be allowed to return to his home in 'Kentucky. The President, in the natu ral goodness of his heart, has granted his request. It is to be hoped that he returns both a wiser and happier man. Ur More than a year ago, the Hon. R. J. Walker, in his Thanksgiving ad dress in London, made.the fullowing re markable prediction : "And now the Union troops hold Chattanooga, the gieitlinpregnable fortress of uorthwes tern Georgia. From Chattanooga, which may be regarded as the great Geographical central pivot point of the rebellion, the armies of the republic will march down through the heart of Geor gia and join our troops upon the sea board of that State;and thus terminate the rebellion." wir A fellow calling himself Cobb has been arrested at'Detroit, Michigan,- by a couple of New York detectives,..as being one of the gang who set fire• to the New York hotels. He was stop ping at one. - of the' first hotels in that place• audit is thought was maturing plans to go into the firing business again. EVidence was; found on his per son to criminate him. He is said to r'egistered'his name in New York as Signey . Staunton. He is a souther ner- e' Thee Richmond papers ridicule the peace mission of theallairs, the Ex aminer Calls the senior Blair "an offi. cious busybody in a state of second childhood," and styles the twain "fresh Yankee spies," The Whig declares that the object -of the mission is to break up the Confederacy by alienating the state separately, and that the Blairs richly deserve hanging. • ear The Lockport (N. Y.,) Bee anj nouncee the death of an eccentric ind vidnal named William ,Golly. Be alone, kept a grocery, and willed property, varied at $lB,OOO, to his rela tives in England. ,Be kept his specie, in an old boiler buried in the cellar. Among the deposits in this. pivate vault were fifty thousand three-cent pieces. Whir. Eludsoh Guerney, .has lately died in England, leaving a fortune of more than two millions sterling, or ten millions of dollars. The most of it is said to have been acquired as a. member bf'the firm of Barclay & Perkins,,the great brewers. The probate duty (or government tax') on his mill amounts to Upward - of seventy-five thousand dollars. ofir San Francisco supports forty-five periodicals, viz. , ten dailies, twenty-two weeklies, . eight monthlies; one , semi weekly, one tri-weekly, and two annuals. Three are derman, three Spanish,_ and two French, and one, is owned, edited and supported principally by American gentlemen of African descent. pgr Rev. A. G. Marlatt, President of Irving`Female College, Medhanicsburg, Cumberland Co., Penn's. died at the College on Sunday' evening, Jan. Ist, 1865. He was buried on Wednesday morninglast with Masonic honbrs. Mr. M. was well known as an able minister of the Methodist Episcopal Church. ea - Three brothers were drowned in Cincinnati, on . Slonday, of last week; the youngest broke through the ice the sec ond shared the same fate ,in trying to rescue him, and the oldest, frantically rusbing•to their assistance, also sunk beneath the ice, and all disappeared to gether. sr The friends of Rev. Henry Ward Beecher, at Peeksville and vicinity, who were recently edified by thatgentleman's enthuiiastic - eulogy on the- apple as a frui), made him a New Year's present of 4 huge apple-pie; two and a half feet in diameter, and cooked most delicious- .rir The Constitutional Convention of Missouri on Wednesday passed an erdi naade' abolishing Slavery throughout that State tO 'take effect, immediately. Mfsithiti is therefore a free State hence. forth aid forever. The vote stood 60 for' FriedOm to 4 Tor 'Slavery. John Steel, the wealthiest man :in Pennsylvania, made so by oil trane ,actions ( his receipts mere $3,000 ,per day, ),died, a few days ago, in Philadel , phia, - ,from injuries received from the kick ota horse. ow Jeff. Davie kas'a sister-in-law at Vicksburg, who illuminated her resi deuce in honor of the election of Abra ham Lincoln President of the United States. Eir In Paris the Cat is the most use . ful of all domestic ['labials. The skin makes kid gloves ; the far makes squib. relmnilltand the flesh makes rabbit pies. Gir Queen Nictorm having mourned for Prince Albert three years,- thelLou don:Ti - mes tells her it is•now quite time she should think of 'her suitjects claims. lOtn,„ 4 . 3azte aub Scissors The State debt of New York is $4B ; - '120,000.. John B. Gough, the lecturer, has an income of $BOOO a year. The Sultan of Turkey has prohibited the Circassian slave trade. A very poor family in Cincinnati has fallen heir to a fortune in Europe of seven millions of dollars. The City Council of Baltimore is con sidering the question of providing public schools for colored children. Who thought, four.years ago, that it would come to this so soon. Two citizens of Baltimore, convicted by a military commission, on the charge of aiding soldiers to desert, have been sentenced to three years' imprisonment at hard labor in the Albany peniten tiary. The gold medal authorized by Con gress to be struck for General Grant, after the fall of Vicksburg, is finishsd; and has reached Washington. The time and manner of the presentation has not yet been determiaea npon. An old actor, Louis Kramer, has just died at Geneva in a singular way. He was playing "King Lear," and in his excitement swallowed a. portion of his artificial.beard, which stuck in hie wind. pipe and choked him. Gen. Sherman' poeitivelY refuses to grant any furloughs to either cifficera or men of hie army. One of the chaplains in our army, of the Episcopal church, is• a lineal descen dant of Martin Luther. There are 250 captured rebel flags stowed away in the War Office at Washington. The King of the Sandwich Islands has decided upon the Episcopal as his established' religion. A California editor has been presen ted with a 'sack of potatoef,.containing three only, each weighing two. ,~~,, Lincoln 'received for President 2,202: 510 votes ; McClellan, 1,792,648—L1g' coin's majority, 409,862. The beggar: ••.. •• -do no :sk for pennies. Their petition is put thus : you give mettp• dollars to buy a loaf of bread ?" • Deeerteis from Fort Fisher report that that fort was about surrendering on the 25th ult., when attacked by Butler, and was only prevented from doing so by the retreat of our troops, The citizens of Colambui and of Ohhi generally, have,resolved to make Gener al Sherman a complimentary present of sloo,ooo,in -United States stocks. Major General Godfrey Weitzel, has been granted' thirty days leave of ab sence. The General is about to be mar ried to a young lady resident in Cincin nati. Green; the , .Malden murderer, was not hanged on Friday last, according to the sentence. Gov. Andrews still seems to be unsatisfied of his sanity at the time the act was committed, and wishes to submit the matter to a new Executive Council. A man named Scott, originally from Lower Canada, died in Kingston; Upper Canada, recently, at the great age , of 116 years. Although feeble in body, he retained his general health and clear ness of intellect to the last. " It is rumored that a convention of States is called for in the South to over throw the rebellion and make a surren der. The Richmond Enquirer is given as authority. The plan is now generally adopted in General Grant's army, when burying the dead, to place in the grave with the body a sealed bottle, containing a paper, on shich is written the name and other particulars respecting the dead. Gen. Grant has testified his sincere appreciation of Gen: Sherman by sub. scribing $5OO to the testimonial to the latter now being gotten up in the shape of a homestead in Ohio. A European correspondent says little Commodore Nutt and little Minnie Warren aie to be married soon in Lon don, Marie Antoinette is the Empress Eu genie's. passion. She has a drawing room at the Tuileries filled with relics, portraits, autographs and furniture of that unfortunate queen, and has agents constantly employed in hunting np every thhig associated with her. During the recent cold snap, a man living in a block at Hartford, shift off the water of the block so that, it should .not freeze up in, the pipes, and , in the morning found that one of his neighbara had been up all night trying to thaw out the pipes. ' Ex-Congressman John H. Gilmer, of Virginia, has in the Richmond Whig a three•column letter recommending his State to take active and . independent steps fOr peace. He takes ..groind against the emancipation of slaves in the army, and says "Confederate eman cipation is worse than Federal'. or coer ced ereancipatton. - - SAD SUICIDE:—Mrs. Jennie L. Tol man, of Richmond, N. H., committed suicide on Monday. She was the young wife of Alfred Tolman, who was murder ed recently in a bowling alley in Keene, and excessive grief at the untimely death of her husband, produced an aberration of mind which led to this fatal result. She left a letter to her mother, and also one for the clergyman. in Winchester who attended her husband's funeral, sta ting the reasons for the rash deed. "I go to join my hnsbay. He was kind and affectionate to me, and life is noth ng without him." A whale was caught in Septem ber in Davis' Straits, and in its body was found imbedded a large piece of harpOon, on which was engraved "Trav eller ; Peterhead, 1858." This was t! e name of a vessel lost about eight years ago, in Cumberland Straits. Notitts la• INFORMATION FREE !—To Nen= Stifferers.—A gentleman, cured of nervous de bility, incompetency, premature decay, and youthful error, actuated by a desire to benefit others, Will be happy to furnish to all who need it,.(free of charge) the receipt and di rections for making the simple remedy used in his Case. Sufferers wishing . to profit by the advertiser's bad experience, and possess a sure and valuable remedy, can do so by addressing him at once at his place of business. Tke re ceipt, and fall information—of vital import anee—will be cheerfully sent by return mail. J B. OGDEN: - • No. 60 Nassan-st., New-York. P.'S.—Nervous sufferers of both sexes will find this information invaluable. 3m A CARD TO 114VALIDS.—A Clergyman, while residing in South America as a mis sionary, discovered a Safe and simple remedy for the cure of Nervous Weakness-, Marty De cay, Diseases of the Urinary and Seminal Or gans and the whole train of disorders brought on by baneful and vicious habits. Great num bers have already been cured by this nobic remedy. Prompted by a desire to benefit the afflicted and unfortunate, I will send the re cipe for preparing and using this medicine, in a sealed envelope, to any one who needs it, FREE OF CHARGE. 11 Please inclose a pre paid envelope, addressed to yourself. Address JOSEPH T. licmAN, Statton D, Bible House, New-York. 3 EYE and EAR:—Prof. J. Isaacs, M. D. Oculist and Aurtst, formerly of Leyden, Hol land, is located at No. 511 Pine-st., Philadel phia, where persons afflicted with diseases of the Eye or Ear will be scientifically treated and cured,if curable. Artificial 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, 1864.-ly. EXECUTOR'S SALE OF TOWN PROPERTY. Undersigned, Executor of Lawrence Ripple, late of the Borough of Marietta, deceased, will expose to public sale, - ON FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1865, At "The Hermitage," Hotel, at the Lower Station, Marietta, the following Real Estate, late the property of said deceased, viz : ONE LOT OF GROUND, . . situate and lying in that part of said Borough of Marietta laid out by Jacob Grosh, Esquire, and numbered on the ground plan thereof, by Number 151, late the residence of said de ceased, on which is erected A Iwo-story Frame Dwelling House, Frame Stable, and other necessary out-build-. ings, Pathp at the front door, &c. ALSO, LOTS NOS. 147 and 14S, in the same part of said borough, fronting on what is known as "The Pike, ,, only a short distance west of the residence. ALSO, LOT NO. 49, situate and being in that part of said borough laid out by John Myers, and fronting on Pike street, neat what is known as " Battle Row." Sale to commence at 6 o'clock in the even ing, when terms and conditions will be made known by A. N. CASSEL, Executor. Marietta, January 21, 1865. 2.5-ts S. S. RATIIVON, Merchant Tailor, and Clothier, At F. I. Kramph's . Old Stand, on the Cor ner of North Queen and Orange Streets, Lancaster, Penn'a. GRATEFUL to the Citizens of Marietta and vicinity, fot the liberal patronage heretofore exteudee., the undersigned respect fully solicits a continuance of the same; as suring them, that under all circumstances, no efforts will b e spared in rendering a satisfactory equivalent for every act of confidence reposed. CLOTHS, CABSIN ERNS AND I r ESTINGS, and such other seasonable material as fashion and the market furnishes, constantly kept on hand and manufactured to order, promptly, and rea sonably, as taste or style may suggest. ALSOp—HEADY-MADE CLOTHIAO, Gentlemen's Furnishing Gooods and such articles as usually belong to a' Mer chant Tailoring and Clothing'establistunent. • WINES & LIQUORS. H. D. BENJAMIN, DEAL EH IN WINES & LIQUORS, Picot Building, Marietta, Pa. BEGS leave to inform the public that he will continue the WIN E di LIQUOR busi ness, in all its branches. He will constantly keep on hand all kinds of Brandies, Wines, Gins, Irish and Scotch Whiskey, Cordials, Bitters,te.,' BEN/441111PS Justly Celebrated Rose Whisky, ALWAYS ON ru,atD. A very superior OLD RYE widsirEY wit reeeived, which is warranted pnre. E All H. D. B. now asks of the public is a careful examination of his stock andpri ces, which will, he is confident, result in' Ho tel kecpers and others finding it to, their ad vantage to make their purchases frbm 1 Another-Call. fox 5000 Men, Who want their. Faces Shaved clean, their /lair Cut and /leads Shampooned in the most scientific manner, can do. so by calling in at the Market Street Barber Saloon, opposite Libhart , s Drug Store. OGE,POS Celebrated Pearl Cement and IV Oil Paste Blacking at TFLOGOLDENDIORT2tR. HOICF. HAVANA ST. GARS, snd the V beat Chewing and Smoking Tobacco at WOLFE'S. TO LANDLORDS!, Just received, Scotch and Irish WHJSKIES, wanua ted pure, at H. D: Benjamin's: ihJ-`• • R EEVES' Original, Genuine and RELIABLE - E3 1 ---7 { S I _PS_ Fur the,Growth, Beauty and Preservation 111 E NAM. [ESTABLISHED 1860.] Price 75 Cents Per Bottle. of Mrs. L. M. Neil—hair FIVE feet in length brosia IS months MRS. WALLAPE E. MAXWELL Her hair is four feet and ten inches in length —the result of - using Reeves'•Ambrosia about two years. - These photographs taken from life, have been awarded:to extend the knowledge , of the merits of this. wonderful discovery. , . Hund reds have seen these ladies and he:lathe Mots from their own lips; Mrs. Maxwell's Texlimonial. New-York, December 23, 1862. Knowing positively that Reeves' Ambrosia produced . a beautiful head of hair for Mrs. Lizzie Shepherd, of Brooklyn, New-York, I was induced, thereby, to use it thoroughlY. I needed something for my hair, it being :Short and thin ; had used one half-dozen bottles when I could plainly notice an increase in its length, strength and beauty. An experience • of about, two years has proved a complete success. My hail is new, by measurement, four feet ten inches in length, reaching nearly to the floor. I have allowed my.photograpb to proclaim the merits of REEVES' AHBROSIA fo.the WORLD. Mrs. WALLACE E. MAXWELL. AU enterprising Druggists have these Photographs and keep. for this, REEVES' AMBROSIA AT 75 CENTS PER BOTTLE. Druggists wlio may not have our preparation, will send for it—if applied to. k -.7Frineipal Depot, 62 Fulton-st., N, Y. For sale In Marietta by DR. HINKLE. COLUMBIA INSURANCE CO, Of Columbia, Lancaster County, Penna. FOURTH ANNUAL REPORT.. Whole amount insured, • $2,604,435 68. Whole amount of Premium Notes, 255,931 46 Bal. Cash Premiums, January 1, 1863, $2,120 31 Recipts for premiums, less Agt's commiss ions in 1863, 9,382 43 Receipts for AsseSsments . less Agt's commissions in 1863, 2,385 02 _ ---- $13,867 79 Losses and expenses paid in 1863, $70,133 32 Bal. of. Premiums, Jan. 1, 1864, 3,754.47 $13,887 79 A. S. GREEN, PRESIDENT, GEORGE YOUNG, Jr., i7ecretary. MICHAEL S.- SH UMAN, Treasurer. DIRECTORS: Robert T. Ryon, John Steacy, John: Fendrich, H. G. Minich, • Samuel F. 800 Lein, Michael S. Shuman, Michael S. Shuman . , S. C. Slo.ymaker, George Young, Jr., Nicholas Mi Donald. Edniurul Spering, Amos S. Green. 1 1 1 ]1e. Giatz Formerly Keesey's, OPPOSITE , MARIETTAt.- THIS old Ferry—one of the oldest and most safe crossings on the Susquehanna River-- is now In charge of the undersigned, who :has refitted the old and built new boats, which will enable him to do ferrying with safety and dis. patch. No unnecessary delay need be endured. Sober and experienced Ferrymen, alwaysen gaged. No imposition in charges as the fol lowing list will show : Farm Wagons, each $3:00 Horses ' per head :25 Single horse and rider, :25 Two-horse Carriage an two persons, 1:00 Buggv, horse and two persons, :50 Foot Passengers, each, :12 Stock of all kinds at the old charges. All. Luggage over fifty pounds, 2o cents per 100 pounds extra. JOHN ECKERT , JACOB I-LARLEY, SUCCESSOR TO STAUFFER & HARLEY, No. 622 .Market i Street, PHILADELPHIA. Dealer in Fine Gold and Silver , WATCHES, SOLID SILV.E'R-IWARE, Fine Gold fewe ry, and the best make of Silver-Plated Ware Constantly onhand a large assortment of - 0e above goods AT LOW PRICES. Watches and tme'Clockei repaired by skill ful workmenf also, 'Jewelry repairing ; graving and all kinds of air-Work to order at short notice. -' 03- Don't forget the old stand, Number 622 Market street, Philadelphia. April 9; 1864 . .-3 in 3 and F] ID7OWARD ASSOCIATION. rt PHILADELPRTA, iseases of the Nerv.ous, Seminal, Urinary and Sexual Systems—new and reliable treat ment—in tteports of the Howard Associatiot. Sent by mail in sealed letter envelopes, free of charge. Address, D. J. Sxua.rN Horror"- TON, Howard Association, No. 2 Smith Ninth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. , . DR. WM. B. FAHNESTOCIC,"' OFFICE oPPOerrs Spangler & Patterson's Store. } Faint . 7 TO 8 A. X. OFFICE "lons. ~ 1-! TO 2. " 6TO7P. M. ' A TTENTION I SPORTSMEN ! ! ere Gun Caps, Eley's Gun Wadds, j Dupont's -Sporting and Glazed Duck PolLer Baltimore Shot ; Shot Pouches, Powdir Flasks &c„ at • JOHN SPANGLER'S. HICKORY & Oak IVood, 50 Girds each Hickory and Oak Wood. Oidere mist •be accompanied with the caeh-when they will belpromptly filled. Spangler & Patterson. TOB PRINTING of every , deseiiption J ecuted. with neatness and deskatch,attbe office of The Mariettian. T YON'S Periodical Drops and Clark's Fe ' jjmate Pil lap at - , . kr,•Wor* FiSli'S LAiliP rfErtliWG :"..11i:' Boiling—Frying—Slew'inz— N.`e p, WITH THE VLAME THAT I IGJ!r THE h • • • fly the flame of a comm at the cost of a cent's Worth 01 • 0. comfortable breakfast can be cootie, ; . —N. Y. Tribune • • • Simple in construction. c.a.,' in order, ready for use in a moment • This prepa ration can ex hibit livingev teences of its excellence. See Photo :mph and read ortiflcate of hs. William ,!tton—hair vet and one :;:ch in length —nied Reeves AMBROSIA shout twenty [ninths. A LSO Photograph convenient to have on hand. • • gist's Circular. • • • Fish's Lamp is one of it n popular novelties of the day ? • • utility of it is unquestionable, a great sa; is made in heating and cooking small and can be made to cook meals fm many persons, which is actually done on ambulance cars which carry the sick *Atli,: • Scientific American. • • • For family use, hospital tent. lie. rack, picnics, fishing, nursery, or sick it is an article of comfort beyond all prop,,.: tion to its cost. • • Hall's Journal of • • • I have tried the .apparatus. my wife and I proclaim the same a most va u : able and indispensable article, and we ri „,„ 'wonder how we could have so long done out it. • • Ed. Goal Oil Circular. • • • An economical contrivance f • getting up heat at short notice for nursery 1,-; geleral household purposes, • • • important point is the saving in cost ove r fires. •- • • N. Y. keening - Port Prices from Two to Six Dollars. rapacity from One to Four Quarts. Three. Articles Cooked at: one time. with one Burner. iffill= OP "C 7 CD , 0 G. 79. Arranged for Kerosene or Coal Oil, or Ga, A. Descriptive Pamphlet of thirty pages Lt. nished gratis. THE UNION ATTACHMENT, Price N) Cents, To he attached to a Common Kerosene L. or Gas Burner, by which water may be bud,;, and food cooked ; also arranged to suppoil shade. Every Fainily needs one. EH WM.' D. RUSSELL. Agent. No. 206, Pearl St., New York. • ltd Agents Wanted. 13- Two of these Heating Lamps can t. seen at John Spangler's Hardware. AGRIGULTUfifiI CWIEAL Eb.'s Okra? MITLIZEAS. ABU LETTE. This Fertilizer is compose.] of night soil and the fertilizing element, urine combined, chemically and mechanical., with other valuable fertilizing agents and sorbents. - Ifis reduced to a pulverized condition, rea• dy for immediate use, and without loss of 3r3 highly nitrogenous fertilizing properties. Its universal application to.all, crops ahl soils, and its durability and active . qsalibe > , are well known 'tu be all that agricultuil.,6 can disire. Perez $25 PER TON. CHEMICAL COMPOST: This Fertilizer is largely composed of - animal mbuer, such as melt, bone, fish. leather, hair and wool, together with chemicals and Moronic fertilizers, which decompose the mass , and re tain the nitrogenous elements. It is ttidrough. ly impregnated with urine, 'and the thinner portions of night soil. It is a very valuable fertilizer for tiela crop, generally, and - especially for potatueN and garden purposes. Its excellent qualities. strength end cheap ness, have made ii very poptilar with all who have used it. Prise, 825 mu Tow. 11REE & FRUIT FERTILIZER. H i 3 highly phosphatic fertilizer, and is Dar ticululty adapted fur the cultivation of tree,, fruits, lawns and flowers. It will promote very vigorous and healthy growth of wood to.l fruit, and largely increase, .the quantity and perfect the maturity of the 'fruit. For hob house and household plants and flowers, 0 will be found au indispensable article to cure their greatest penection. It- sill prevent and cure diseased conditionaot - the peach and grape, and is excellent for grass and lawns. The formula or method' of combink 05 constituent - fertilizing ingredients Inane rr. nerved the highest approval of eminent cher,. ists and scientific agriculturists. PER TOlf. DHOSPHATE OF LIME. The Agricultu ralj_ Chemical Company manufacture a Phosphate of Lim( in accordance with a new and valuable formula, by which a very supe rior article is.produccA, so far as to be ttitut.ted at a less price than other manufacture:: charge. Practical tests haVe proved that its value, at a fertilizer, is equal to the best Phosphate of Lime in the market. Price 445 rr It 'I 'Es. TERMS eA3ll.—Curtage and Fseight be paid by the Purchaser. AGRICULTURAL CHEMICAL CO.'S WORS• 7 , At Canal Wharf, ou the Delaware. .office, 413 i Arch St., Phiktdephia, Pa. R. 13. 'P 'IT'T~, General Agent. The Company's Phamphiet Circular, em bracing full directions for using the above Fertilizers, sent by mail free, when requeeted. tribts ! stobts AA); a/hang/05 OPPOSITE HARRY WOLFE'S As the season for St o v es is fast approaching I would call the attention of all wishing to purchase Parlor, or. Cooking Stoves, to my large and well selected stock, which em braces the best and most desirable Stoves that the Eastean markets afford, and which were purchased early, which will enable me to dis pose of them advantageously to buyers. Among the leading Parlor and Cook Stoves are the following: Parlor Stoves. Co . Oking Stoves. Meteor Gas Buruer, Galleo, Columbia do. • Royal, Oval do do WaverlY. Dial, Wellington, Gem, Lehigh, . , Tropic Egg, Charm, Monitor, Summer Rose, Also, the Vulcan and Sanford's Heaters, a very desirable article fer heating two or foor rooms with very little, if any, more fuel than an ordinery parlor stove would consume. Ranges for cooking, constantly on hand, at of whicliWill be sold on reasonable terms. rtir Call and examine before purchasing elsewhere.- W.. WOREALL, SITR9ZON DENTIST , /laving removed to the Rooms formerly octopit - ' by Dr. Stinenizei, adjoining Spongier 4r Pat tersorh Store; Market Street, where be is now prepared to waiton all who may ftel 444= disposed to pationize him. Dentistry in ill its branches co• tied on. TEETH inserted on the most approved . principles of Dental science. All operation on the mouth 'performed in a skillful Bpi wcirlammlikts lmsnrier--on fair principles sna ON TEEir SEASONABLE TERMS. Having determined upon a:permanent loca tion at this tolsws*, would . ask a continuation of the :liter • ronitge heretofore extended to him, for which he will render every poso" hie satisfaction.' ' 112 Itties administered to properpersend. The Patent gonfiei 'Refledek Legere. TE-i*is the most desirable Lantern in th e market. It burns Coal Oil without a Chinirr7, emitting - neither,arnoke.nor mien- It gives a pul . , white 101. It stands qieielt motens /11 any direction. The Sarno is regulated from the outside. It is neat and compact in form and size. , It is free from solderin the upper parts, is otherwise very substantial in its structure. • PRICE, ONE DOLLAR. Pol l ee& at JOHN SPANGLER'S Hardware Morel, on Market street cHAMPAGNE and other Table Wino guaranteed tope pure, and sold ae low Bg can boboughtio Philadelphian/ New-York 11. D. BENJAMIN Picot Building. MISCRIPTICAPI reeeiyed for ill the lea' 0 in Periodicabnpf the day ott-The Golden Mortar. RANDlES—alltipinduarranted tube genuine: , D. Beniano.