the illatiettiatt. F. L. Baker, Editor. MARIETTA. PA : Zifattaedag_, ~/tLay. b, 1815. BOOTH'I3 PAINS AND DEATH :-A con ftributor in Forney's Press gives the fol lowing analysis of the cause of Booth's death : The ball from the cavalry re volver entered on the left side, back of the head and below it, and passed out on the right side. He fell a helpless mass, unable to move, exclaiming : "I am finished I" He was carried out of the: burning barn and laid upon the grass, and survived the wound four hours. He requested several times to be turned or moved from side to side, on his stom ach, and asked to see his hands. When raised, he gazed upon the helpless dead members, exclaiming, "Useless—use less," and asked more than once of those about him "to kill him," thus to end his pain and sufferings. Such a wound would produce complete paralysis of the arms, legs, and lower portion of the trunk, while respiration and the action of the heart would continue. The mind was clear land undisturbed, save from the shock of the wound and pain ; but the brain was uninjured. It was a liv ing active mind, with a dead, helpless body, with the most excruciating, agon izing pain that a human body can be subject to ; the nerves of organic life and circulation were uninjured ; and the on ly muscles over which he could exert any volition were those of the head and face. From the moment the ball latrack hiM he was dead and helpless, with a mind clear, in intense suffering, a living witness of his own just punishment for his atrocious deed. Was there not the avenging hand of God upon him from the moment he exclaimed, upon the stage of Ford's Theatre, "I am avenged !" In the leap upon the stage . the fibulm, the small bone of the leg, was fractured. 'For ten"days and nights the forests and swamps were his home, with pain, and dread, and anguish. Could the end of such a life have been more painful, more dreadful, more appalling.? Was there not in it all the hands of an overruling Providence? )( gir A project is now on foot at Wash ington; which is being pushed forward with considerable zeal, to erect a monu ment to the memory of the late Presi dent Lincoln. Many of the merchants; and citizens generally, have signified their willingness to respond liberally. fib' The, confederate Major Taylor, one of Jeff: Davis' commissioners to Washington early in the war, is paroled for ten days at Louisville, to enable him to leave the United States--he having refused to take the oath of allegiance. .cls is a son of Zachary Taylor. The rebel Senator Hunter fled from Richmond on hearing of the assas sination of Mr. Lincoln. He knew full well who was to succeed Mr. Lincoln and with a lively presentiment of what might come, he left for parts unknown. 7 a .. It ib said that among Mr. Lin coln's papers has been found a package of letters Marked, in his own handwrit ing, "Assassination Letters " While many of themthreatened his life, others warned him of plots to take it. sr A correspondent of the Boston Advertiser says there is no truth in .the statement that J. Wilkes 'Booth was to 'be married soon to a daughter of Sena tor Hale, nor was there the slightest foundation for the assertion. The remains of President Lincoln arrived at Springfield, Illinois, on Wed nesday morning, May 3d, and deposited in the Capitol building. It is said' the appearance of the corpse had very much changed. Mr. Seward was born in Florida, Orange county, New York, May 16, 1801 arid is therefore aged nearly 64 years. Mr. Frederick Seward, the eldest son of Secretary Seward, is about 35 years old. cr. Mr. Seward's physicians have lit tle hope that his mouth will ever recov erits symmetry. It is likely to be aw ry, and probably power will be lacking entirely to close the lower jaw. ar The, Jersey Oity Times says Ed win Booth will petition the Maryland Legislature to Chadge his name to Abra ham M. Lincoln. a. A set of porcelain, captured from Jeff. Davis's mansion at Richmond, has been presented to Piesident;son. eir A negro man has been drawn as juror in PrOvidenee, Rhode Island, and will take lib seat among the Others. eir Two men- have been shot dead in St. Louis for exulting over the aisaiiiin ation of Mr. Linbbln. ;sr The leading pri3ss of tbs:*Countiy is terribly severe SlierininVe Sur render, qe some call it. ; itgv The Grand Jury of Franklin coun- BOOTH'S Boer.—Many tales are afloat ty, Pa., is about to present bills of in- in Washington as to the disposition of the dictment against General McCausland body . of Booth. By some (who declare and Harry Gilmor, for arson and murd- I they witnessed what they relate) it is er during the time when Chambersburg j said that, after Surgeon General Barnes was destroyed by the rebels, and that concluded the autopsy, the body was under these indictments Governor Cur- tin will make a formal demand for the surrender of these men as fugitives from justice. Harry Gilmore is a refugee from Maryland, and if the loyal Gover nor of that State can only lay hands on him, he will be glad enough to deliver him up to justice. If found in Virginia we entertain no doubt that Governor Pierpont or General Halleck will give him up, as well as McCausland, who is a Virginian. We are pleased to ' hear that it is the determination of Governor Curtin to make an effort to bring these wretches to punishment. 'Rev. Dr. Brown, editor of the American Baptist, has in his possession the key of the notorious rebel prison, Castle Thunder. It was brought to New York by Rev. Solomon Gale,- of Tolland, Conn., and it is intended to dis pose of it by auction for the benefit of the orphans of our volunteers. The; key is by no means a formidable looki4 instrument, being about the size of ordinary door-keys. It has appari seen much service eir Some time ago Slidell, thet rebel representative in Paris, gave a mort gage to a French banker for 1 : $ 1 60,000 upon his property in New fleet's. The banker now claims the property un der the laws of Louisiana, and i suit is to be instituted in the Unite& States Court, and it will be made a t t case.l Interesting and important legal points will be raised under the Confisvtion act, the decision of which will goerl similar cases in the . future. eir Evidence discloses that there were ten conspirators in the assassina tion plot; that at a . meeting held in Memphis they selected by lot the assas sin of the Presid%nt. Our authorities have a letter which says : "It becomes your happy lot to destroy this tyrant. You can select the cup, the blade, or the bullet ; but you know the cup has v i ce been tried. and it failed." A Mrs. Dunbar, of Terre Haute (lnd.,). said that she was glad of Presi dent Lincoln's death, and ferashe near the grave would take pleasure in danc ing on it. This the loyal women of the neighborhood could not bear, and a doz en or more went to her house and forced her to take a flag draped in mourning and proceed up town, shouting, at inter vals, "Hurrah for the Union !" or When J. Wilkes Booth played in Buffalo three years ago, he broke a plate glass window in the store of 0.. E. Sib ley, where a lot-of rebel trophies were exhibited. He was arrested, paid the damage and a fine of fifty dollars, and the affair was kept out of the papers. He broke the window in hia rage at see ing the exhibition of weapons taken from the rebels. CT A New York lady has been awar ded by the Courts a:verdict of twenty five hundred dollars damages, in conse quence of injuries received by being thrown violently on the street while stepping from a second avenue car, the vehicle being started before she had se cured her footing on the pavement. gar A paragraph is . going the rounds, to the effect that "since the Ist of Feb ruary all receipts of whatever amount must have on a two, cent stamp," &c. This is incorrect. No change has been made lo the law, and only receipts for $2O or over need the •stamp. >l(r At Arlington, Vermont, a young Copperhead was expressing his satisfac tion at Mr. Lincoln's murder, when a physician clapped over bis mouth astick ing plaster, which be had been quietly warming, and thus stopped the flow of hi treasonable sentiments. The clergymen of the Episcopal churches in Richmond are not ready yet to pray for the "President of the United States." so their churches were closed • by military order on the 16th. t Gen. Lew Wallace has prohibit ed the wearing of gray clothes, called student's uniform, in Baltimore, ae being offensive to soldiers and loyal citizens, Blondin recently lost X 12, 0 .00 by the failure of Coleman, hie former agent, and bas.been obliged to appear again as a gymnast tO retrieve liims.elf. Car At Zanesville, Ohio, a cake o soap weighing 2,500 pounds was manu factured: 'lt took eight days to cool, and is valued at $BOO. air Married, the other day in Sweden, a lad sixteen years old and a widow thir ty-eight. She has a farm; and has taken the boy home. Ifir An.lrishman once ordered a pain ter to draw his picture, and to represent him standing behind a tree. Gir Lords Philippe, during his reign over France, escaped many attempts upon his existenee. Allar.Three of thelour candidetes for the Presidency in 1860 are now dead— Douglas, Bell, and Lincoln. The Empress of Medico rid ea , ' ; it phaeton ilpit,v4hy : kOA, dissected, and each piece enclosed with a heavy weight in a cloth and sewed up. That this disjointed body was lowered from n gunboat, in front of the navy yard, in a small vessel, which performed a crazy sort of circuitous trip down the Potomac, and, in a short time, without landing, returned to the navy yard mi nus the dissected body. Another re port is that Edwin Booth and Mr. Clarke, the assassin's brother-in-law came to Washington to make applica tion for permission .to take the body. to Booth's mother, who desires to have the privilege of quietly burying her son's re mains, and that the authorities refused this request, and will not permit any one to knqw what is finally to be the dispo sition of the body. It is said that over one hundred persons—some of them well known7-4retorrgint-to.....Washing r tenrhve beef arrested, upon disclosures made In 4 r art by Harrold, Booth's accomplic: GI- A most excellent bust of the I; President Lincoln was made at Spring field, Illinois, after his election to the Presidency, and before his inauguration, by T. 1). Jones, the Cincinnati sculptor. It is the best one ever taken of Mr. Lin coln, and becomes of great interest, as it is a fine work of art and a capital like ness. John Nicolay, Esq., the late President's Private Secretary, said till was the "historical bust of Abraha Lincoln." A more appropriate memio rial of the murdered President than t o is cannot be had. r ur ntly The edltor of the'Tistminister arroll County, Md.,) Democrat, one Joseph Shaw, was mobbed for disloyal ty on the night of the assassination, and the material of his office destroyed. He was warned away by the citizens, but on ;Monday he returned. The same night the citizens waited upon him, requesting his departure, when hp fired upon them, wounding a young man named Bell. The enraged populace then fell upon Shaw and killed him on the spot. cir A Baptist clergyman from Bening. ham, Mass., preached in Midford last Sabbath morning. Neither in prayer nor sermon did be recognize the great woe that was oppressing the heart of every hearer. The omission was so clearly intentional that at the close of the first service a committee of the church waited upon the unfaithful preacher and ordered him to leave town immediately, which he, of course. did. An affectionate husband. There is an undertaker in Newborn who is also an embalmer, and when his wife died he exercised his art upon her remains in his best style, and now keeps her in his room to exhibit as a specimen of his art, tapping her upon the forehead to show its firmness, and saying, •"This is all there is of my poor ,Betsy." The work of erecting a tomb to receive the remains of our late Presi dent, was commenced.at Springfield on Wednesday, April 26th. The ground selected to receivethe•honore d body is styled the "Mather lot!' A magnifi cent monument will be erected, The photographic plates taken of President Lincoln, whilst in his coffin, in New York, have been destroyed. Mrs. Lincoln desired it. The reason as signed is that the features of the corpse were shrunken and had assumed an un natural appearance. A woman in Paterson. N. J., is said to have hung out signals of rejoic ing on the reception of the taws of President Lincoln's death, and went in to mourning for Booth, the murderer. Mr. Ephraim Potter, of Wantage, N. J., has a breed of turkeys of extra ordinary size, some of which, at one year of age, weigh thirty pounds. The eggs weigh over five ounces each. A couple of scoundrels in Burling ton county, N. J., have been , collecting subscriptions for a monument to Presi- dent Lincoln, and pocketing them. A sum sufficient to erect a ceno taph in the cemetery at Dubuque, lowa, in honor of President Lincoln, is being raised by dime.subscriptions. A. twelve year old boy, who was punished in a Roxbury school the other day, avenged himself by setting fire . to the school house, Payne, the assassinator of the Seward family, has made a full confes sion of his crime. -- Three of the loyal States—Cali fornia, Oregon, and Nev Ada—have no national blinks. The names of live lawyers who en. tered the rebel army have been removed from the court rolls at Baltimore. ' There is , a paßer collar manufac tory in S i pringfielib.M.assachusetta i that turns out ten thousand collars a day.:. All oer, national coins are‘to have the motto : "In God we trust". Well executed counterfeit $5O greenbacks are in:circulation, General Grant was 43 years old on 'the 28th of April. - ' .._. The cemetery at Richmond is said , to contain ` sixty thonsand new graves.— -- The kiirat of• oar army- ,Phil. Sheridan, is 'only 33 years old. Qtbe Elora fit a Nut—%b XI It is thought that the United States Senate will refuse a seat to John P. Stockton, assumed to be elected Sena tor from New Jersey. He had only for ty votes, While there was forty-one against him.—Such a case has never arisen before. As an indication of the terrible wear and tear of horse flesh in the city of New York is stated that over a hundred dead horses per week are sometimes re muved beyond the city limits. George H. Hoyt, the young lawyer of Boston, who went to Virginia to defend John Brown on his trial, is now Lieut enant Colonel of the sth Kansas naval- A statue of Napoleon I. in white mar ble, ordered by the late Duke de Morny, has justbeen placed in the library of the Legislative Chamber of Paris. A movement has been started in Cal ifornia for a subscription to purchase a homestead for the family ofJohn Brown, , ho are residing at Red Bluff. Tharlow Weed has removed his resi . • .ce to New York, and has rented the ouse of Mr. Raymond, of the 7imes, w ose family are going to Europe to re sit for a year or two. `he widow of the Duke de Morny is to . are a yearly'pension of $5,000. Poor Brigham Young is a widower. neof his wives died on the 22d of last month. She was the handsomest of all Brigham's wives except six. The latest novelty in London is an electric tooth brash to cure the tooth ache. Gen. Wm. H. Adams, a well known citizen of western New York, died in Albaby on Friday. He was one of the original builders of the Erie canal. Extensive improvements are being made at Saratoga for the coming season. Some of the hotels are to, have large ad ditions. The labor in the Maine State prison last year paid all the expenses of the institution, and left a surplus of 540,- 000. Among a large batch of rebel officers who arrived at New York on Sunday was Col. Alfred R,hett, of Fort Sumpter notoriety. Hon. Henry J. Raymond and family will leave for Europe in a few weeks, to be absent during the summer. Clark Mills is making bronze statues of the President and Cabinet, illustra tive of the emancipation proclamation. Paran Stevens, the New England ho tel king, is building a magniEcent pri vate residence at Newport, Rhode Is land. Gen. Grant celebrated the first anni. versary of assuming command of the ar my at Culpepper by the taking of Rich mond. According to a Russian custom, the wife of the lite Duke de Morny cut off her hair and put it in his coffin, as a pledge not to marry again, Extensive hospitals *are to be erected upon Oraney Island, near Old Point, for the vast number of rebel sick and woun ded who have fallen into our hands. The Paris cooks had their annual ball recently. The rule at their gatherings is that every cook contributes one dish ; all the masters of the art are represent. ed in their dishes. A handsome carriage, built for Jeff Davis in New Orleans, was left behind at Richmond in the haste of evacuation. The people of Pennsylvania, within the last seven weeks, have just added seven thousand volunteers to the Army of the Potomac, , It is estimated that in the new and in the old world there are 8258 Masonic lodges, with 500;000 active memblrs. The number of non-active and those who have withdrawn is nearly 3,000,000. Phineas T. Barnum, whom everybody knows, was recently elected a represen tative in the Connecticut Legislature from the town of Fairfield, by 187 ma jority. A writer in one of the agricultural papers says the stagnant, odorous water in cisterns, which sometimes becomes very annoying, may be remedied in a few hours by putting two pounds of cau stic soda in the water. The Regents of the , Smithsonian In stitution have decided to rebuild those portions of the building destroyed by fire, and to make them .fire-proof/ at; a cost of 8120,000, which will be paid , frem the surplus fund of the institution.- Biidget Mcßrennan, of Boston, at. temptdd to open a window the other day, when her )land slipped through a pane, an artery was severed 'l4 the broken glass, and she has since died from loss , of blood. Barnum hae offered . $l,OOO for the piilow of the.bed on which the Presi dent died. ' --. Buffalo to erect a'monument to Abraham, Lincoln in one of 'it& public squares.. It` is said that . Jeff. Davis. has ran: tiad'a"hOlisiin Porto ItiOo thiough an agent:id that, city, lir A poor woman, in New Haven, the wife of a Union soldier, placed mourning upon her house, when she re ceived the news of the assassination of our good President. The landlord, a most rabid Copperhead. and rebel sym pathizer, ordered her to take down "those rags," and vacate the premises, which she was compelled to do. Is there no law to reach this heartless scoundrel? Something ought to be done which would give such people cause to remember that though Presi dent Lincoln is dead the Government still lives. Gir President Johnson wisely deter mines to show the world that in spite of this fearful tragedy the prosecution of our Executive'is not, even now, to be in the bayonets of a guard, bat in the love and vigilande of the people. He expos. es himself in public places with the ut most indifference. A. gentleman, meet ing him on Wednesday, asked, "Mr. President, is it wise for you thus to jeop ard yourself ?" He replied, "Yes, I have already been shot at twice, you re member, without injury. Threatened men live long." gir The Nashville Daily Times, of the 22nd inst., has, a report to the effect that John Bell, formerly a United States Senator, and candidate for the Presiden cy in 1860, died, recently, in Alabama. We learn, from what seems reliable au thority. that Mr. Bell was seen last summer at Augusta, in Georgia, in the most extreme poverty. Queen Victoria is about conferr ing a baronetcy upon Mr. Benjamin Guinness, the brewer, who has comple ted St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, at his own expense—the amount being £150,000. Mr. Guinness is• a member of the Church of England, and not a Roman Catholic, as has been stated. Acting Assistant Surgeon Jobn A. Hall, of this Lincoln General Hospi tal, Washington, has been ejected from the hospital in disgrace. An intercep ted letter to a parson in Canada from him, referring in a scurrilous manner to the death of the late President, was the cause. A young man in Louisville, named Merwyn, has been arrested for writing an anonymous letter to General Palmer, several weeks ago, threatening to assas sinate him if he allowed Sue Mundy to be hung. It is estimated at the Treasury Department that the expenses of the Government have been reduced nearly one million dollars per day since the surrender of Lee's army. -- A fund is being raised in Chicago for the beneSt of George F. Robinson, the heroic soldier who risked his life and was desperately wounded in saving the life of Secretary Seward. Decors, a famous Winnebago chief, died recently at Lincoln, Wis., aged 133. UftalfifiePa RKE-• Colo ana Silber ii toles, &e. ON THE ONE DOLLAR PLAN. The entire stock of one Gold and Silver Watch Manufactory, Two Immense Jewelry Establishments, One Silver Plating Ware-house, One Gold Pen And Pencil Maker, TO BE DISPOSED OF WITH DISPATCH WITHOUT REGARD TO LOST! The Goods are of fashionable styles and most excellent workmanship, arid are sacrifi ced in this manner' to relieve the proprietors from embarrassment occasioned by a distract ing civil war. It should be prominently sta ted, also, that they are mostly of AMERICAN MANUFACTURE and therefore gi eatly superior to the goods imported from abroad and hawked about as the cheapest ever sold. The simple duty on imported goods and the hlgh, premium. on Gold (all foreign bills are payable in gold,) amount to more than the entire cost of many of the artieles offered by - us to the public. To facili tate the sale ONLY ONE DOLLAR will be charged for any article on our list, and this sum the purchaserneed not pay until he knows what he is to get! This . plan accords with the method- recently become so popular for disposing: of large stocks of Jewelry and , si•nilar productions. THE PLAN IS SIMPLE! The name of each article offered for sale , as "Gold Hunting Watch," "Gold Oval-Ban', Bracelet," "Pearl Breastpin and Ear-Drops„ • "Hold Er amelled Ring," "Silver Plated Cake - Basket," &e., is written on a card and en closed in a sealed envelope ; these envelopes are then placed in'a drawer and well mixed; then as an order is received, with twenty-five: cents for return postage and other charges, one of the cards -or 'Certificates -is taken at random and sent by first mail to the customer, who will see at once what he can get for One Dollar. II he is pleased with his fortune he can forward the money according to directions on the certificate and secure the prize. If the article awarded should be unsuited to the purchaser—as for example, a set of Pearl Ear Drops and Breastpin to a young man Who could' not wear them, and had no one to gime, them to—we will send any other article on the catalogue of equal price which. may be pre ferred. Or if, for any reason, you choose to venture no further, then you can let the mat ter drop where it is and spend no more. Ex arniFie carefully our Catalogue!.. `WATCH DEPARTMENT. 300 ' ' GentsPatcrit Lever G'old Hunting Case. $5O to $2OO 300 Gents' Detach 3 d Lever Gold Hunt- ing Case ' - 40 175 400 Gente.Sceiss Gold Hunting Case 30 100 200 Ladies' Gold and Enameled Hunt-' • ing •Case. ' 30 80 400 Gents' •Patent Lever Silver Hunting Case. 3O 90 400 Cents' Det. Lever Silver Hunting Case. ..•••• :25 , 85, 300 Gents' Detached LeverSilver-Open Face. . : , 20 50 300 Gents' Patent Lever Silvet Open 300 Gents' Swiss Silver: 90 Gents' `DEPARTMENT. 300'Die b ' n 4 Crititiga r iitO j to . 4 120' 300 Gents' Diamond Pins. 20 'lOO 5000 Gents' Gold and Enameled Fob Chains. 3000 Gents' Califotnia Diamond rns. 3 * 3000 Gen& California Diamond %lip, 4000 Gents' Gold Vest Chains. • , 4000 Pair Gents' Gold Sleeve Buttons 3 1 4000 Pair Gents , ' Gold & Erma:. Sleeve Buttons 3 i 6000 Sets Gents' Gold Studs. 8000 Gents' Stone Set and Signet Rinca 3 .: 8000 Gents' Stone Set and Signet Enam. I Rings. 4 6000 Ladies' Gold Neck Chains. 5 !' 4000 Gold Oval-Band Bracelets. 3 6000 Gold and Jet Bracelets. 5000 Gold and Enameled Bracelets. • z.„ • 3000 Gold Chatelain Chains. 8 1 5000 Pair Ladies' Gold Sleeve Buttons. 3 4000 Pair Ladies' Gold Ena-n. Sleeve Buttons. 4 SOOO Solitaire Gold Brooches. 3 p 6000 Coral, Opal and Emerald Brooches 3 5000 Gold Cameo and Pearl Ear-Drops 3 7000 Mosaic, Jet, /Ma & Florentine Ear Diops. 3 .5000'Gold Thimbles. 10000 Coral, Opal and Emerald Ear Drops. 3 1 , 10000 Miniature Lockets. 4 1,, 10000 Miniature Lockets—magic .springS 10000 Plain Gold Rings, 4 1 2 10000 Sets Ladies' Jewelry, Gold & Jet 5 2, 10000 Sets Ladies' Jewelry, Cameo, Pearl &c., 10000 Ladies' Gilt and Jet Bracelets. 4 10000 Ladies' Gilt & Jet Hat Suppor ters. SILVER PLATED WARE 2 . 10000 Cups, 8000 Goblets, 10000 Pair Napkin Rings, 2000 Card Baskets. 4 3000 Cake Baskets. .5 4000,Castor Frames—complete with bot tles. 5 ; 2000 Ice Pitchers. 10 6000 Pair Butter Knives. 3 s .5000 Soup, Oyster and Gravy Ladles. 2 1000 Engraved Pie Knives. 3 8000 Dozen Tea Spoons. per doz. 5 6000 Dozen Table Spoons. per doz. 5, ; 6000 Dozen Dessert Forks. per doz. 7 6000 Dozen Table Forks. per _doz. GOLD PENS AND PENCILS. 12000 Gold Pens, Silver Ex.ention Hol ders, $8 to SI. 12000 Gold Pens, Silver Mounted Hol ders. 8000 Gold Pens, Gold Mounted Hol ders. 3 6000 Gold Pens with Gold Extension Holders. 10 2" 6000 Gold Pens, Gold Holders and. Pen cils. 10 6000 Gold Pencils. 6 - REMEMBER THE PLAN! In all cases we charge foi forwarding ;he Certificate, postage, and doing the business, the sum of Twenty-five Cents, which must be enclosed in the order. Five Certificates will be sent for $1; eleven for $2; thirty for sixty-five for $10; one hundred for $l5. AGENTS ARE WANTED Throughout the Country to operate for no. A large conipensation will be paid. Sent tui terms, &c , enclosing stamp. NEWBORN S.: Co., 15 FuLTON STREF I. IS. V. 3m-ini liimourpeT)eqi. GREAT SALE OF Watches, Mains, Diamond Rings, ONE MILLION DOLLARS' WORM! TO BE DISPOSED OF nT ONE DOLLAR EACH! Without regard to Value ! Not to paid for until you know what you are receive ! ! ! Splendid List of Articles ! ! All t , ) sold for One Dollar Each ! ! ! 250 Gents' Gold hunting-case Watches I , * , to $l5O each. 250 Ladies'. Gold and Enamelled huntins . - Watches $35 to $7O en, 500 Gents' hunting case Silver Watches to $7O each. 200 Diamond Rings $5O to $lOO eac: 5000 Gold Vest and Neck Chains $4 to S' each 3000 Gold Oval Band Bracelets 4 to S each. 5000 Jet and Gold Bracelets 6 to 10 2000 Chatelaine Chains and Guard Chains 5 to 20 each 7000 Solitaire and Gold Erooches 4to TO eac't 5000 Coral, Opal, and Eme,ald Broochei 4 to S each 3000 Gold, Cameo, and Pearl Ear Drops 4 to 8 each :5000 Mosaic, Jet, Lava, & Fientitie Ear Dro;± 4 to.B each 7500 Coral, Opal, and Emerald Ear Drops 4 to 6 each 4000 California Diamond Breast-pins 2.51. to 10 each • 3000 Gold Fob and Vest Watch-keys 2.50 to 8 each 4000 Fob and Vest Ribbon-slides 3 to Id each 5000 sets Solitaire Sleeve-buttons, Studs, Sc 3 to 8 each 3000 Gold Thimbles, Pencils, &c. 4to 6 each 10000 Miniature Lockets 2.50 to 10 each 4000 Miniature Lockets, Magic Spring 10 20 each 3000 Gold Toothpicks, Crosses, &c. 4 :u each 5000 Plain Gold Rings 4 to 10 each 6000 Chased Gold Rings 4 to 11 eade 10000 Stone Set and Signet Rings 2.50 to tO each . 10000 California Diamond Rings 2to 10eae4 5100 sets Ladies' Jewelry— Jet and Gold I) tu 10 each 7000 sets Ladies' Jew alry—Cameo, Pearl, Opal, and other Stones 4 to 15 each 10000 Gold Pens, Silver extension Holders and Pencils 4 to 10 each 10000 Gold Pens and Gold mounted llobler3 6 to 10 each 5000 Gold Pens and Gold Extension Hold(' 15 to 25 each. 5000 Ladies' Gilt and Jet Buckles 5 to each 5000 Ladies' Gilt and Jet Hair Bare & 113111 5 to 10 each 5000 Silver Goblets and Drioliilig Cups . 5 to 50 dollars each 3000 Silver Castors 15 to 50 each 2000 Silver Fruit, Card, and Cake Baskets 2 0 to 50 each 5000 dozen Silver Tea Spoons 10 to 20 p.dol• 10000 dozen Silver Table Spoons and Forks 20 to 90 per doz. " ARRANDALE &CO, Manufacturers' Agenh• No. 167 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, Announce that all of the above list of good' will be sold for One Dollar each. In consequence of the great stagnation or trade in the manufacturing districts of EngWl through the war having cut off the supply 01 cotton, a large quantity of Valuaole Jewelry originally intended for the English market. has been sent off for sale in this country, Ave must be Sold, at any ,Sacrifice! Under thoe circumstances, AR RANDALE & CO., actin . : as Agents for the principal European man , : facturers, have resolved up - on a Great GO' Distribution, subject to the following regue tious Certificates of the various articles are 1z put into envelopes, staled up, and mixed ; so, when ordered, are taken out without repro to choice, and sent by mail, thus giving all B fair chance. On receipt of the certificate, P. 9 will see what you are to have, and then it ig at your option to send the dollar and take th e article; or, not. Purchasers may thus obtais o Gold Watch, Diamond Ring. or any set of Jewelry on our list for ONE. DOLLAR. SEND 25 CENTS FOR CERTTFICATE. In all transactions by mail, we shall charge for forwarding the Certificates, paying postage and doing the business, 25 cents each. wki ch must he enclosed when the Certificate is seat for. Five Certificates will be sent for $ l, eleven for $2, thirty for $5, sixty-five for SW , and a hundred for $l5, AGENTS.—We want agents in every tee ment, and in every town and county in t, be country, and thOse acting as 'such will be sr lowed 10 cents on every Certificate ordered it to them, provided their remittance amounts one dollar.: 2 Agents will collect 25 cents every Certificate, and. remit_ 10 cents to us, either in cash or postage stamps. .Addresa CO-, 36-13t.1 Broadway, N. II 92 to . 3 I. ,1