The 4,ttitriettiatt, 0.(41.4qv P. L. Daker, _Editor, MARIETTA, PA : Vattuida _Aatt RO, be." air The trial of the fiends engaged in the•assassination conspiracy, is progres sing at Washington, with open doors. Those upon their trial are directly impli cated in the murder of either the Presi dent or attempted murder of Secretary Seward. They are David C. Uarrold, Lewis Paine, Edward Spangler, Michael O'Laughlin, Atzerott, Dr. Mudd, Sam uel Arnold, and Mrs. Snrratt. Up to Saturday last the testimony was taken with closed doors, owing • to its impor. tent character, as well as the apprehen sion of the witnesses being foully dealt with hythe accomplices of the 'prisoners. The trial will doubtless consume a couple of weeks. Ur Miss Millie Francis; a dancer in the National Theatre, in Cincinnati, came to a sad•death 'a few weeks ago. She had been dancing and lo! passing from the greenroom to the stage, in -re- Pponse to a•second:eneore, drank a tum blerfal of ice ' , water, from the effects of which she dropped dead, in full view of the audience:.• • • Governor Curtin has. 'arranged / hat whenever a Pennsylvania soldier is killed or dips while inithe service, trans portation Glen be furnished for one per 7 son from hia home to the place where the remains' of the soldier may' be, and also for the free return of the remains and the person in charge. . Fes" It, will be.recollected that Hen: James Harlan, Senator from lowa, Ives, toward the close of the late session of Congress, nominated to and , confirmed by the Senate as Secretary of the Inte rior, in the place,of Judge Usher, resign ed. President . Johnson having reques ted him to retain the portfolio, and. on Wednesday,took possession of his post. of.ir Roger A. Pryor,in 1860, declared in a priblfg Speich that "the first antiL slavery' President who was electeci would be assassinated. and if there would be no othdr prsort to do the deed, he would be the Bretuslo plant the dagger in his breast. ar R. M. T. Hunter, the rebel brav ado, and ex-U. S.. Senator, has been ar rested by a squad of soldiers sent for 'that purpose. He Was found at his resL idence, near Richmond. He isliow con fined in a gunboat on the James River. r ISir Sines Secretary Seward's acci denti disabled him; Senator Sumner has been assisting in conducting the Depa'rf 7 went of St4e, and has prepared' mac of the important correspondence. Cr The notorious 'and •cruel Dick Turner has escaped from Libby Prison. Ould and Capt Hatch, the• rebel. eom missionets of exchange, now have quar ters in Castle Thunder. • Cr Major General Sigel having ten dered and received his resignation, is now chief editor of the Wecker, one'of the best Republican papers published in Baltimore .Md. itv All the private and officialpapers of Presideni*Lincoln bave been careftd ly collected, sealed up and forwarded to Judge Davis, of Bloomington, Illinois: isw Forney's Press says the impres sion in Washington is ;that Jeff. Davis will, be tried in that city, for high treas on, before the U. S. District Cont.r iwr Five Confederate deserters were lynched arid hung at 'lndianapolis on the 35th, for expressing pleasure at, the as eassination ,of, Mr. 7Lincoln. Gir The Emancipated 'negroes,' it is said, each take a horse or mule from their former masters and take them to Richmond and sell them. President ,Johnson will occupy the late residence of Gen.._Halleck, on Georgetown Eleights, during the sum mer months. ear A young man was soundly chas tised in Pittsburg, last'Week, for extotes: sing his gratifocation at the President's assassination. cgr There ie a Pennsylvania soldier who has lost' both arms, both legs and One eye, and tell . the story. Cr Mr. Hunter, Acting , Secretary of State, entered that •Department under Van.Buren, more, than thirty yeareago. r i gr Barnum has telegraphed to Sec retary Stanton offering $5OO for, Jeff. Davis' petticoat. tar Ex-Preeident Franklin Pieree will be married next:month to his'see= and wife ei The late'P'te ria anti'Afeell'ilierfob; it'd& at *D . 'WE t e vendue. • CAPTURE OF DAVIS :—Forney's Press, in speaking of the arrest of Jefferson Davis, says thus is the aristocrat the captive of the democrat—Andrew John son. There has been a wondrous Prov idence in the last scenes of this war, and the manner of the taking of Davis is as strange as any of the events that have followed so rapidly the fall of Richmond. Re fled from the stubborn rebel capital after he had ordered it to be given to the flames. Laden with spoils himself, he left a starving and plundered people to be clothed and fed by the conqueror. And even as he saw ruin before and around him, and flying to save his own life, he attempted to force his 'armies in to new conflicts, and to she ' d more blood in a lost and desperate causer Caught at last, in the midst of the victims of his ingratitude and tyranny, after a reward had been offered for his arrest as an ac complice in thei'great assassination, his fate is the beginning of the end of a life never stained with dishonor until 'he broke the oath he swore to defend his country.' Nor was the catastrophe want ing in the ludicrous. The proudest spirit of the South—the most sensitive of the slave aristocracy-'—whose pride it was to excel in every manly grace 'and every scholastic acquirement—assumed the garments of his wife to escape the search of the soldiers of the Union-. We have often heard that the madame of the rebel monarch' was the Catharine of theflourt ; but this is the first time that Davis has ever voluntarily assumed the petticoat. Oh, what a picture for the satirist 1 We will not anticipate his punishment. But if hisown cruelty to others is to be applied to himself, it will be one long and 'inconceivable torture. At any hour he could have saved thou sands from death, by an honorable sub mission ; but, in the face of defeat, he forced them to remain in the army,' and to refuse the terms of the Government of their fathers. It seems to have been ordained, hciwever, that he should only fall into the hands of justice after his ar mies bad' been crushed and 'his agents had implicated him in the blackest crime in human history. As the web of this vast conspiracy is being unravelled, and while a mourning world contem plates the murder of the mighty dead, JEFFERSON DAVIS iS On hit way to a Re tributiOn which should be as marked and memorable as his own offences have been numerous and appalling. 4 10 - • Mr. Charles Lanman writes, that while preparing his ‘.‘Dictionary of ,Con gress" for publication in 1858, he for warded to Mr. Lincoln the usual request for a sketch of his life, And received the following reply ; : Born February 12, 1809, in -Hardin county; Kentucky. Education defect ive.l Profession, a lawyer. Have been a captain of; volunteers: in the Black Hawk war.. Postmaster at a very small office. 'Four times a member of the Il linois Legislature, and was a member of the lower llousis of Congress. Yours, &c. A.,LincoLN eirMr. Lincoln's -,grandfather, also named ; Abraham, Lincoln, was murdered by an Indian. in 1774, while at work on 41.9. .farm, near, the Kentucky river. He had three soils, the eldest of whom, Thomas, wes the father ofthe \ President. Thomas married in 1806 Nancy Hank's, a native of Virginia, and, settled in Har den county, where the President was born. February 12, 1909. In 1816 the family xem.oved to Indiana. The great grandfat her of the President emigrated from Barks - county, Pennsylvania, to Rockingham county,: in the Shenandoah valley, Va., about 1.750. .0 far. 4iperican, Musical ,Instruments are Curling, golden.opinions abroad. A recent number of the Leipzig Signal°, the leading musical journal. of Europe mentiqns the superiority of the Mason & Hamlin i dabinet Organs, manufactur ed ,ip Boston, intimating that these manufacturers have discovered the se cret of avoiding the harsh, reedy tones of other instramants of, this class. • ar The lofty plateau of Arlington has been converted into a national cem etery for our brave soldiers and seamen who die in or near Washington. It was opened for interment My 1, 1864, and Within the. year 5000 haie been buried there. In a year or two more it will be the most populous city of the dead , on this side of the Atlantic. Cr Dr. W. P. Parr, recently a sur geon in charge of Camp Butler, Ohio, has six thousand acres of land in Tensas Parish, La., willed to him by Thomas J. Buck, a rebel prisoner of war, upon whom he attended for abouta year, and who died recently at Camp Miller. fir Near Pittsburg the other day, a man caught on a railroad bridge by an advancing• train, in his fright hung him self down between the•sleepers to avoid it, clasping both arms over the rail. The poor fellow dropped: armless into the water below. All the prominent citizens of pe tersbci rg, have ,taken the oath of allegiancq; an denim? themselves, much happier under the new arrangement than they have been any time , daring the past four. years. • " l iiir'leiTMori - Dpgrii - *ill'be 's7' AMC old on the 3d Of 'June iTte in a Nut—,F.,ocil A public meeting has been held in Carson City, Nevada, to raise a fund by one dollar subscriptions to be presented to Robinson, the brave man who saved the life of Secretary Seward, and the necessary committees were appointed to effect the object. Large subscriptions in New York and elsewhere are also being made. The Port Royal New South says at the Government sale of abandoned plantations on and near Cooper river, Col. Leabrook's plantation of 700 acres was bought by Simon Cameron, B. F. Wade and James N. Doolittle, for $2700. The United States became proprietor of several plantations. Mobile bay was cleared of obstructions by means of torpedoes and a galvanic battery. The torpedoes were let down amoug.the obstructions, and then explo ded by means .of "an electric wire. About .a mile ofsunkea;barges and boats filled, with stones and old iron, were blown up in this way.. A man named Delaney, who has been guilty - of defrauding the government in the enlistment of recruits, at Augusta, Me., has been tried by a military com mission, and sentenced'to ten year's im prisonment and ordered to pay a fine of 370,000 to the government. The Ibuu (Miss.,) Herald has pub lished a•record of the deaths at the pri son-pen at Andersonville, from March 1, 1864, to March 10, 1865. - The total number was nearly 13,000, more than 1000 a month. On the 23d of August, 127 died. One of the "beautiful young ladies" who composed the ballet, at the Pitts burg Varieties, turned out to be a young man. She dressed androomed with the other fair ones. The manager, very pro perly, turned the damsel out. Details ofeolored troops with intrench ing tools are employed in burying the Union dead who have lain exposed on the battle-fields around Richmond for a year past. Several hundred skeletons were interred near Cold harbor. The Indiana ;Pa.,) Messenger is just ly indignant at a . family in that borough for placing a photograph of the assassin Booth in a prominent place in their pho tographic. album. When the rebel guerilla Moseby heard of Booth's assassination of the Presi - dent, he is reported to have exclaimed : "Now, by----! I could take that man in my arms." Placing photographs of deceased in dividuals in their coffins is now a custom of the Continent of Europe. The like nessos are warranted to last for cent& EILEI A number of collieries have stopped work near Ashland, Schuylkill county, on account of the high rate , of labor and the decline in.coal. A farmer in Brattleborough, Vt., has • pples, sound and fresh, grown in 1563. iey were kept in a cellar, packed in walnut saw dust. ' A movement is on foot in Ilarrisburg to induce the storekeepers to close their places of business at 6 o'clock during the summer. The reward offered for the capt tire of Franz Muller, long variously claimed, lias been awarded to Matthews, the cab- man Free soup of excellent quality is daily salt out to the citizens of Richmond by the United States Christian Commis sion. General Lee, who remains very quiet in Richmond, is said•to be engaged in .writing up a history of his closing cam paigns. Elder Kimball, one of the leading Mormons, saints, it is said, recently had born to him, in one, night, no less than fourteen children. Edwin Booth, brother of the mueder er, in a private letter to a friend in Washington, announces his determine %ion to quit the stage forever. ' A juvenile glutton at Ashley Falls, Mas 9., recently sucked 39 eggs on a wa ger, and wanted to suck a dozen more fora dollar. • Owing to the high price of labor and stock., all the iron manufactories of Pitts burg have suspended. • Louis Napoleon, b . orn in St. Cloud, in April, 1808, has just completed his fifty seventh year. The cutlery, mantifactory of J. Moor house, in -Mansfield, Mass., was burned Mr. Linieln was the first of our Pres idents who died in his second Atha 'of office. The well known •elephant: HiLiknibal died at Cdntreville, Pa., on' Sunday, May 7th. The rebel General, Mansfield Lovell is a grand-nepiew "of Benedjet Arnold. Mrs. Lincoln left .V? ashh3gtop,oplast Wednesday for Chicago, hey new home. The Lebanon county jail' is at riregent without s single prisoner: 4. J A...negro. and., .awhite woman ,were 7 • • .7 • tk 4 4,*.g parried at Troy a few days since. I =MIMI JEFFERSON D.Avis.—J eff. Davis w a s born in Kentucky, June 3, 1808. Ile was the son of James Davis. a noted horse trader, of Ilopkinsville, Kentucky. The father fell under suspicion as a horse thief, and was forced to fly from Kentucky, and settled, when Jeff. was very young, near Vicksburg, Miss. Ile was able a few years after his removal to send his son Jeff. to Kentucky to complete his education at, the Transyl vania University, Lexington, and subse quently, through the influence of his money, secured for him an appointment to West Point, which young Jeff. enter ed at sixteen, forming part of the grad uating class of 1828. Be graduated near the foot of the class, and was cow missibned in the First Infantry as brev et second lieutenant, the lowest rank that could be given him. He was sent to Florida mid served very creditably with Zech. Taylor in the Black Hawk 'war, for which be got a commission as first lieutenant in the First Dragoons. In 1832 he offended pen. Taylor by run nipgaway with his daughter and marry ing her, and the old General never re cognized Davis until they happened to meet on the battle field of Buena Vista, Mexico. In 1835 Davis having resigned his commission," settled near Vicksburg, and entered upon the arena of politics, in which he was so far successful as to be elected to the lower house of Con gress. When the Mexican war broke out Da vis raised and commanded the First regi ment of Mississippi rifles. The only significant feature in his career was the fact that he declined a United States commission as brigadier general of vol unteers, on the ground tliat such an ap pointment by the federal Executive was a'violation of State rights. He re-entered political life in '47 hav ing been appointed by the Governor of Mississippi to fill the vacancy in the United States Senate caused by the death of Mr. Speight. At the ensuing election, in 1848, he was elected to fill the term expiring in 1851. On his re turn to Mississippi he became the State rights candidate for Governor, but was defeated by "Little Fidget" Foote, , his life-time enemy, who is now lying in Ludlow street jail in New York. In 1853 he was called by Pierce to a seat in his Cabinet, as Sec . retary of War. In . 1857 he was re-elected United States Senator from 'Mississippi, which he held until his resignation (January, 1861,) on the secession of his State. MRS. JEFFERSON Davis.—The present wife of the arch-traitor, Who 1 has been captured with him, is his second wife. the daughter of General Taylor having died many years since. Mrs. Davis' maiden name was Verina 'Towel!. She is said to be a grand-daughter of Genar at Howell, of New jersey. She is still a young woman, with a family, we be lieve, of four children. Eir A number of the leading citizens of New :1 7 ork, among whom are Moses Taylor, August Belmont, Thurlow Weed, Marshall 0. Roberts, and others, have made up the handsome purse of $l6OO for the brave soldier, Robinson, who, while acting as nurse, saved Secretary Seward's life. The money has been re ceived by Mr. Seward, and will be at once presented to Mr. Robinson, who is recovering from his injuries slowly. ar Secretary Seward is cow 64 years -of ag,e: He was chosen to the Senate of New York at the age of 29, Governor of that Slate when 37, and when 48 was elected U. S. Senator, which post he filled till he became Secretary of State in 1861. 65- Judge Davis, of the United States Supreme Court in Illinois, has been ap pointed administrator of the estate of the late Abraham Lincoln. Judge Da vis was an old personal friend of the de ceased. A citizen of Massachusetts has written to Washingten suggesting that the gallows on which - John Brown was hung should be secured and taken to Washington for future use. The mustering out of Pennsylva nia troops is to be changed from Camp Curtin, Harrisburg, to some point in Cumberland or York county. -- Mr. Arnold, M. 0., from Illinois, a long and strong personal friend of Pres ident Lincoln, is preparing a memoir of Lincoln's administration. • —lt is proposed that the authorities adopt the Confederate uniform as the garb to be worn by convicts in the dif ferent pebitentiaries. —Queen Victoria has written. a , pri vate letter, to . Mrs. Lincoln., expressing . her deepest sympathy for her irrepara— ble loss. , „ -- We hear that - Garibildi has recov ered from his wound, and 'walks freely, tliough still obliged to use a cane. The latest mechanical novelty abroad is the erection of 'a large steam engine for the manufacture of teeth. ' The rebel .General. Forrest, it is said, was killed by one of hisr. own offi cers, a few days since: -- Heenan, ,the , prizatfightnr,; vine; nti 1a $, ano_onata,)/eop!ng a2tayern in BEng,-, ; land. ME litomr.--The Secretary of War,tc ale glad to observe, is vacating the clerk ships in his office, and bestowing them on soldiers who have seen long terms of service ; who are disabled, and compe tent to fill . them. This is right. We hope that the same principle will 'be adopted in every other department of the Government. Recently a Mr. Pal mer—all honor to him—who held a po sition in the Custom li;nrse, Providence. R. 1., resigned his position in favor of a one-armed soldier. Let us make it a point to take care of our maimed crippled heroes. 'gar Miss Delia Webster, who was im prisoned in Kentucky twenty years ac on a chargeof harboring escaped slaves. and has since been the subject of repeal ed persecution from Kentucky judges, has offored to give one hundred acres of land, situated on the Ohio river, oppos ite Madisonville, Indiana, for the estab lishment of a "Lincoln College." Cir The Herald's Washington corres pondent says there are twenty-one, and Perhaps twenty-three persons concerned in the assassination, who will certainly suffer the death penalty. gar - The Emperor Maximilian has sent home orders to havehis chateau at Mi ramar ready by September ; but a Lon don paper states that Miramar will be let to the ex-King of Naples. I.ff• The rebel General J. E. B. Stuart is the same cavalry officer who had com mand of all the cavalry forces in Wash ington at the time of Mr. Lincoln's first inauguration. Fortune_ F IPLOYMENT FOR EVERYBODY Great Sale of Jewelry, Watches, Chains, Diamond Rings, Silver-Ware, German and French Fancy Goods, Ste., worth over 8800,000 all to be sold with out reserve. Everyone to have something valuable. LIST OF THE ARTICLES. Gents Cold Hunting Case Watches SSS to 150 Ladies Gold Enamht Case Watches 850 to 85 Gents Hunting Cast, Silvel Watches 35 to 70 Gents Gold Watches, double time 75 to 150 Gold-plated Watches in magic cases 35 to 50 Gold Plated Watches Enameled, for Ladies, S 5 to 50. Diamond Rings .50 to 100, Gold Vest and Neck Chains 10 to 30; Gold Oval Band Bracelets 4 to 8, Chased Gold Bracelets 5 to 10, Chatelaine Chains and Guard Chains sto 20, Solitaire and Gold Brooches 4to 0, Lava . and Florentine Brooches to 6. Coral, Opal, and Emerald Brooches to 8, Mosaic, Jet, lava and Flor., Ear Drops 4 t o 8, Coral, Opal, and Emeralc Ear Drops 4to 6, California Diamond Breastpins 2,50 to 10, Gold Fob and Vest Watch Keys 2,50 to 7, Fob and Vest Ribbon Slides 3, to 8, Solitare Sleeve Buttons. Stui's, etc., E 3 to 10, Gold Thimbles, Pencils, etc., 4 to 7, Miniature Lockets • 4 to 8, Miniature Lockets-Magic spring sto 10, Gold Tooth Picks, Crosses, etc., 3 to 10, Plain Gold Rings, Chased Gold Rings 4 to 11, Stone Set and Signet Rings 3 to 10, California Diamond Ring.; • 3to 10. Ladies' Jewelry in .Sets-Jet and Gold 8 to 15. Ladies' Jewelry it, sets, Cameo & Pearl, 4 to 12, Gold Pens, Silver Extension Holder & Pencil 4 to 10, Gold Pens and Cold Mounted Holders ri to 10, Gold Pens and Gold Extemion Holders 6 to 15, Silver Goblets and Drinking Cups 20 to 50, Silver Castors, Frdit and Cake Baskets 25 to 60, Silver Tea and Table Spoors and Forks, per dozen 20 to 90, Silver Plated Tea Pots and Coffee Urns 36 to 50 Silver Plated lee Pitchers & Molasses Cups 25 to GO See what the most popular and widely cir culated periodicals say of our Establishment From the "Dispatch" of Feb, uary 25, 1865. We take pleasure in calling the attention of our readers ID the announcement of Messrs. Devaugh & Co.'s Great Sale of Jewelry, Silver Ware, and Fancy Goods, in our advertising columns. We are personality acquainted with the members of this firm and know them to be gentlemen of stetting worth 'and Integrity. Their stock of goods, for variety and extent, we have scarcely seen paralleled. from the ".Mirror of Fashion," March 1, 1565 Messrs.' Devaugh & Co.'s Great Sale ofJew elry, etc., opened on Die 15th nit-, and we venture to sey that no finer display of goods was ever exhibited by any establishment in this city. The ladies thronged their bazaar almost to suffocation, although the streets were rendered nehrl) impassable by the melted sno v and slush. We prediCt for them a won derful success. From the "Ledger," February 28, 1865.. Our lady friends should visit the extensive establishment of Messrs: Devaugh & Co.'S No. 15, Maiden Lane. if they wish to indulga themseves with a sight which they will long • remember. Such a profusion of elegant Watches, Chains, Riggs, Earrings. and,, in short, of Jewelry of every name, kind and de scription, we never befora witnessed. Their silver and plated ware is superb and almost oasis into the shade the other splendid estab lishments which have long been the boast of ' our city. It is estimated that their stock is worth not less than one million of dollars. HOW YOU CAN GET A PRIZE. Send Twenty-Five Cents to us, and as soon . as we receive it we will mail you a -Certificate! showing what you are entitled to. If the ar i . Bele or articles please you, send back the Cer tificate'arird Orie• Dollar and we will foiwardl you the article, no matter how costly_ it. may, be. If the article is not what you wish,' state, when you send the Certificate and dollar, vhat , other article of the same value you prefer and we will send it. If you wish more thin one Certifieate send us $1 and we will Send five ; • for $2, eleven ; for $5, thirty ; for:s.lo, sixty;.. for $l5, one hundred.' Agents are wanted. in the AThsy and in' every place. .We have an immense. stock of.. goods to dispose of, and need a lirga number - of Agents. Our terms to:Agents are very' lib: eral and some even of .our Lady Agents are making,' from ss' to all day 4G'e ;give Agents 60 per cent. on, atl Certificates 'they sell lii&vided they'reinit tiot leSi than Ifor eight. r. . . 113 - Write your name and address distinct ly, and say only what is necessary. , O,IRARD -HEVAUCH Sz:CO:,I tb . Maiden Lane New York. LE ]L&RIETTA MARBLE YABD, , • . MICHAEL GABLE, AGT.; , MARBLE MASON AND STONE - CUTTER. Opposite the Town, Hall ffidrieita, .Pa, • HE Marble,. business in alLitEenranettes, will be continued at the old place, near the Town Holland opposite Funk's Oreiseys Tavern, where every description if . tiarNe work will,be kept on hand or Epode to order at short notice and at-irery - reasoning Priaei.' Marietta, June 29, 1861. • TT OWE Bz, STEVEN'S,. Celeprifeillempy IT Dye eolote, livistii•anted' to seqait, 13 t • . • TILE,GOL-D,BAY MORTAR. 'Nero TFop 'Ne•d-OrreetrislChaeses ..E÷rAkcbvelyibeii4XorKikkes...,.lust I:9cei7eit SPAVGLER DELVES' II , RELIABLE AMT 1 Obi ., Far 17e Growth, Beatzty and OF 711 E HAI ! [ESTABLISHED 1. , . 10.] Price 75 Cents Per Bottle. e c Ti. E fret A ml.rosia 73 mr,Lths. MRS. WALLACE E. MAXW H , r hair is four feet and ten inches in I[! —the result of using Reeves' Ambrosia two years. These photographs taken from life, bren awarded to extend the knowledge ~:• merits of this wonderful discovery. reds have seen these ladies and heard the:.: from their own lips. Mrs. Maxwell's Testimonial. New-York, December 23, i.-• 62. Knowing positively that Reeves' AJW+: produced a beautiful head of hair for :q7, Lime Shepherd, of Brooklyn, New-lark. was induced, thereby, to use it thoroughly. needed something for my hair, it brie' and thin ; had used one half-dozen when 1 could plainly notice an increase in length, strength and beauty. An experienc, of about two years has proved a romp:,. ! success. My bait is now, by weasurena.?;: four feet ten inches' in length, rraraiaL_ , near; to the floor. 1 have allowed my plimogra; , to proclaim the merits of BEEVES' A11E12051 . 4 'o the WORLD. Mrs. WALLACE E. illAxwri.r, All enterprising Druggists hare Photographs and keep for sMe REEVES' A MB'. 051.1 AT 7.5 CENTS PER BOTTLE. Principal Depot, li2 Fulton-st.. N. Y For sale in Marietta by DR. HINKLE WATCHES •H_ L_ c_l6 Coilier of North Queen-St., and Ce?,:r Square, Lancaster, P. American and Swiss Waldo IN GOLD AND SILVER CASE •0 - --• EIGHT DAY AND 30 Hoc:;. / IN GREAT VARIETY, AND rso:L run HEAT FACTORIES. SPECTACLES in every style of frame, and with glasses to suit any who need artificial aid. We have twe:. ty years experience in this business. SILYER-WARE. Spoons, Forks, Butter Knives, &c , starscr: with our name and warranted standard. PLATEDWAItE The best platedware in the United St:±%, We warrant our best Table ware—Soon:.:. Forks, &c., to wear ten years in daily use. JEW ELRY. ; Rings, Pins, Sleeve Buttons, Studs and a Va riety of every article in this HAIR 0 - 14:1WELII.Y. Hair Jewelry made to order. Two hundrei styles, or samples, constantly on hand. Repairing of Watches, Clocks, Specta cles, or Jewelry, done neatly and promptly. H. L. 8r E. J. Z.-111:11, Corner Korth Queen slreet and Centre Sven', • LAIVC4STER. FA. a JACOB LIBRARY, JUN., A CABINET MAKER A N. D 1.• T INDERt . A Ii E R, MARIETTA, pA. tak!WELDnost respectfully n6thodofir°r In, liecit tzens'of Marietta and the public In . general, that, having laid in a lot ' seasoned Lumber, is now prepared u ' manufacture all kinds of eABiNET FURNITURE, in every style and variety, at short notice. He has on hand a lot of Rurniture of his av: manufactu,e, which for fine finish and gee' workmanship, will rival any City make. Especial attention-paid to repairing. He is also , now prepared.to attend, in all iti branclies,.the UNDERTAKING business, be* ing supplied with an excellent Herse, larze and small 'Biers, Cooling Box, &e. fa'.COFEINS finished •in any_stylk—Plair' or costly. Ware Room• and ,Manufactory, near Mr. Duffy?smew ding,', near' the ‘" Upper-Sta tion," Marietta, [Oct. 211. First' National Bank of Marietta Ef:IS WANKING ASSOCIA TION THAVENG COMPLETED ITS OILGANIZATIOI i is now prepared, to transact all kinds of BANKING BUSINESS: :The Board'or Diiectors meet weekly, 00 Wednesday, for discount and 'other busiy , ra-Bank : Firom9 A.'bt to 3P. sr. JOHN HOLLINGER, PszsIDENT , AMOS J3O ERMAlV;.Cashier. I f you want a i Firat-rate Black'or Fancy. Silk A neat or gay. challie• or De Laine A superioa Black or fancy Woolen Do DO A fine braedium 'Black or Colored Alpse 3 A good , Lavellai De Beige or Poplin An Eircellent Chintz or good Calico A FrenCh„Etiglieh or Shambry Gingham. You will find it at SPANGLER. & RICH'S . tMistEss, pae - Fitias. and CATA treated with` the utmost success, by - 03 : B J. ISAACS, Oculist and. Aurist, (formerly 01 Leydon; Holland,) Nm 519 PINE street, ail adelphia. .Testimonials from, the most rells ble' sources in 'the City and Country co l ! seen at his office. The medical faculty Ere invited to accompany their patients, as he no .secrets in hie pra;ctice. ARTIFIC I -, EYES, inserted without run. No char? made fortexaminaliom: [ jam. 2S-11. ...,. . LOT A ',mtgs.. OF BITIF WINDOW .4 Sff:CDES 'it remarkably. low Price s f'to closeoat. JOHN SPANGLE R, .„ Market Street,Marie tae . . . 1 21 111 it :drnr,. MIME EE 11 ME ME =I ME Ph t)zr a till, ~~ ~„ ..