Zlte Matiettiau F. L. faker, Editor, MARIETTA, PA : Vattadatt, ~fans 5,18'4615. JEFF DAVIS MANACLED.-A gentleman who arrived at Raltinore on Thursday from Fortress Monroe, miya • that Jeff. Davie has manacles on both ankles, with a chain connecting about three feet long. lie stoutly resisted the process of man acling, and threatened vengeance on those who did it. Rather thin submit, he wanted the guards to shoot him. It became necessary to throw him on his back and hold him until the irons were clinched by a son of Vulcan. He exhi bited intense agitation and scorn, but finally caved in and wept. He indicated writhing misanthropy, and an inclination towards felo de se. No knives, no forks are allowed in bis cell ; nothing more destructive than a soup spoon. Two guards are in his casemates continually. The clanking chains gave him intense horror. The Grand Jury of the District Court found a bill of , indictment against Jeff. Davis and John :#ll Breckenridge for high treason. Davis , . and Beechen• ridge are indicted, separately. The overt act was the raid in, July last with in the District of Columbia and the jur isdiction of this Court, killing citizens and destroying property, Breckenridge being present personally and Davis On structively. District A ttorney. Coving ton announced the fact in Court, and asked for a bench warrant in the case of Breckenridge, who is still at large. He also asked that such steps be taken as will bring Davis before the Court for trial. tir Hon. 'Lafayette Foster, the pres ent acting Vice President, is a gentle man of ability and high character. He was born in Franklin, Conn., in 1806, and graduated in Brown University, in 1828. He was early distinguished at the bar of his native State, and was long a Speaker in the lower House of the Legislature. He took his seat for the first time. in the National Senate, March 9th', 1855, and entered upon his Second term in 1861. A few days since a returned Union soldier pnrchased a new pair of hoots at a store in Buffalo, and requested the privilege of leaving his old ones. He did so, but some time after returned and called for them. When they were, brought him, he ripped open the lining and took from beneath $1,550 in grreen backs, in denominations of $5O, op() and $l,OOO, which he had placed theie and forgotten. A valuable pair of boots that. gir The Fourth of July will be dele brated this year in Boston/ with great enthusiasm. There will be the usual morning concert on the common, regat ta, balloon ascensions, fire-works, and entertainments for the children. The military display, it is anticipated, will exceed any ever witnessed in. Boston on such occasions. The oration will be de. livered in the Music Hall by the : Ch ries Sumner. or The statement going the rounds of the press, that President .Lincoln COW somebody that he was ofJefiTifi - descebt., bas for its origin eimrity-this-r-Atr—Lin coin, talking with a Rabbi, jocularly re marked that her (Lincoln) was probably of Hebrew stock, ee hie father had three eons who were named Abrahamf Isaaci and Jacob. Fifty pears on a stenkeight inchee in length are exhibited at si fair in ,San Francisco. The papers there boast of two fruit crops in one year, an they say three crops are not uncommon in the interior. wile tree under `whibh •Grlent and Pemberton held the interview abich re sulted in the capitulation of VT4ebnrg has disappeared, ,rootibranch, trudikand ‘ all, carried off by sout , eniur huntere.l,, or Harvey Ford, do old man in fie ~ • Haven, was very muc l h affected by the news of President luincolee' decertol3, and after appearing much depressed all day, he dropped dead in the evenin:,l.i I A monninent to Past GrandffkM. ter Wildey, the founder of Fella ship in this country, isqo be CbminenEgd in Baltimore on Thursday nein; formal laying of the edition:stone. ttVi'' • fir The postmytter at Eittntsittgtl4l, Ind., was iatairiemoved. Cher . :Virs4 .12 been made against him that • ' : 4 . pa the mails and seduced his remet s! , tant. -' • ' trir [he Boston Herald stsitVP c A I lit, cloak Davis wore" whap pititti' 4 i was made in Boston. eir Dr. Verdi. Mr. Sewittid'a ,`•,* ' , E.a horacPopathigt. " JEWS PETTICOAT DIBGIIISE.—A corres pondent of the New York Herald, in giving the details of the capture of Jeff. Davis, says that when our troops came to the tent occupied by the ax-Presi dent, they were met by, Mrs. Davis, en dishabille, with "Please, gentlemen, don't disturb the privacy of ladies before they have time to dress 1" "All right, madame," said the corpor al, "we will wait till you have on your, duds." Presently there appeared at the tent door an ostensible old lady, with a buck et on her arm, escorted by Mrs. Davis and her abater "Please let my old mother go to the spring for some water to Wash in r said Mrs. Jeff. in a' Pleading tone. "It strikes me your mother wears very big boots," said the guard, as he hoist ed the old lady's dress with his sabre, and discovered a pair of number thirteen calfskins. • "And whiskers, too !' .said the ser geant, as he pulled the hood from her face, cind.lo 1 Jeff. Davis, in all his little ness, stood before them. A "Spencer" was immediately poin ted at- his ear, and he , was marched back to, the, tent and placed in durance vile. "How are the mighty fallen !" The great leader of the confederacy.try ing to escape the clutches ref justice in his wife's petticoats I BOOTH'S BODY AGAIN.--A correspon dent of the'New York News, who,. by way of illustration, spoke of the disfig urement of Booth's lifeless remains as rumor told the tale, now says : "For the honor of the country, I am glad to say, there is no truth in the shocking tale. Booth's body . was buried without disfig urement. It was buried in secret and in the night, and no stone marks, or ev er will mark the spot—but this was the choice of his family. The body , was given to them. They had it carried far away to the North--away beyond New York—and there interred, and there to remainuntil the last day, when the quick and the dead are to be judged. A MASCULINE Hou . snrArn.—A strange sort of person, named Sophia Gibliouse, died a few days ago at Cambridge, out in Guersey county, Ohio. It was always supposed that the person in question was a woman; and for twenty-five years the public remained in ignorance that the would-be woman was in reality a man. Not until'after death Wl:ts"the de ception discovered. Daring' all that time the man has dressed as a woman, associated with women, 'and had been employed as one in doing all sorts of rough house-work from place to place. ear A special Washington despatch to the Philadelphia Inquirer says: W. Stewart, of the Winter Garden Theatre, New York, is here to try and procure the-bodp_of Booth for his family. It is 'needless tO;,say that It will not be gran-, ted, as he islburied deep, and none can ever resurrect him or find his grEive. Notwithstanding the many lies afloat as, to the final diSposition of it ,there but two men who know, and neither has ever divulged a word as to the manner of burial,or place, nor was the body in anyway disfigured. „ or Monkei,vsare rising in the 7 world. A late letter l from / Paris informs/us the ) one of thetequipages at the last' March races attimcied universal attention from the fact ttit on the box next! to the ,-- - coachrnii,nisat an'onrang outang ressed in grow/i's livery, his top boos an. white leathers, irreproachable in art.Ltn. f i tting to perfection. Every time the t‘rriage stopped the onraug mitring jumped off the box and stood at the car ria a door. For a long time the Duke de 'only had'a monkey who attended a table with perfect decoruia and the r,nost imperturable gravity. ear The Bostonians are endeavoring or.raisera Lincoln fund—an amount with which they intend to present Mrs. Lin coln for her.future support. Mr. Lin coln's property will not exceed $25,000, and it is urged that, as by his election for four years more, he would have been entitled: to a gross salary of $lOO,OOO, they intend to raise that sum for the widow's benefit. of Mr. Gottschalk, the distinguished pianist, predicts that the Mason & Ham lin Cabinet Organs will become as fash ionable as the pianoforte has been, and will indeed be "sure to find its way into very household of taste and refinement Ichcan poesibly afford its moderate Efjtc3oiltl ht a Nut—Zbei Begging impostors, wearing soidiers' uniforms, but who never fought in the , war, are roaming about the State annoy ing the people. Dake Gwin will have a salary of $60,- 000 a year, provided the Sonora mines yield it. A member of the English parliament has to pay $50,000 for not keeping his promise to marry a young woman. . White coachmen in Richmond attract newspaper attention there as an inno vation. General::Lovell H. Roeseau is ;the Administration candidate for Congress , invtlie!•Louisville (Ky.i). .- The log 'cabin in whiCh 'Mr. Lincoln resided' when. he OM Tails and :learned to write and studied law is to be exhibi ted at the great fair in Chicago. A movement has commenced among the Irish-Americans of Chicago, to erect a handspme'monument over the remains of Colonel Mulligan. Initiatory steps have been taken to purchase an elegant mansion for Gen. Sherman in Cincinnati. The Jews am complaining On account of Presidentjohnsorr changing the date of the fast day, inasmuch as' the let Of June next happens to be the Jewish fes tival of Shervuous. An insane woman in Albany jumped from a third-story window, .and when picked up was found uninjured. She had recovered her reason. Other insane persons are recommended to try the same remedy. The borough of Altoona, which now has a population of five thousand, four years'ago consisted simply of a single log house. •EdWard Spangler, one of the accom plices orßooth in the assassination of President Lincoln, is originally from the borough of York. - - - --- - - On Thursday last, ihe assistant miller at a steam saw mill in Easton, was en gaged in tightening a screw near the saw, when his knee came in contact with it, and it severed the leg at the knee, sawing off one foot and one arm. A fire occurred about five miles west of Carlisle, by which seven children, the oldest fifteen years and the youngest six 'onths, were , burned to,death. .Mr. and Mrs. Mayberry, the parents, were also severely, burned. The fire was acciden, tal.. Major General Sedgwick'S' sword, worn by. M i ni on the day. of . his death, has been presented to the Connecticut Legislature. The remains of the dead 'soldiers kill ed in th'e vicinity of Richmond, Ye., are now•being removed, in.. ,. great numbers and,transporteTto their"former homes in'the north. The new paper in Chicago, 'of which Charles A. Dana is to be eciitoi, is to be called the Daily Republican,'add the first number will be issued on the 29,th. Mrs. Hannah Cooper, a blind old lady over 70, in Hamden, Conn., has knit-and , sent as gifts to the,soldie.rs, 88 pairs of stockings during the past three years. John T. Ford, proprietor of Ford's Theatre, was on Friday unconditionally released from the Old Capitol Prison, -where he had been conCined since his re tur,_n from Richmond, a few days after the a'ssassination of President Lincoln. Ex-Governor Letcher, who was cap tured, on Monday at Lexington, Va., ar rived in Washington on a special steam er, and has been committed to the Old Capitol prison. He was dressed in the garb of a farmer at the time of his cap ture. Some,bibulous chaps in Rutland, Vt., who stole, the other day, some ,"pretty good whisky" from a cask , that nobody seemed to own, found, to their infinite horror and disgust, not Ion; after, that the cask contained, besides the . whisky, the body of a negro preserved for dissec tion. In the case of . Blackburn, of yellow fever notoriety, the magistrate said, that owing to the uncertainty of the English law required in such cases of conspiracy, he should not resume the responsibility of deciding the case, but, would send the prisoner before the judges at pie next assizes. Bail was accepted_itithe mean time, to the amount of sB',-000. The DutchGap - Canal it seems has not been altogether a failure, for the _— _Aichm - ond Whig of Saturday says that General Mulford arrived there from Fortress Monroe, the previous day, hav ing passed through Butler's Dutch Gap Canal on the steamer Clyde. This is the first steamer that has passed through. President Johnson has respectfully 'declined the coach and span of horses tendered him by the merchants Of New York', for the reasons that he has ever hfiid file those occupying official posi tions should not receive such presents, He A*: ,. •wever, that he may, bp jiter miVielt paretMent convey in Abe l ehl t ispots of the donors, regard ing it, ctseilitVO4,las a mark of high re spect from-kit -friends and loyal citi, m ite , , Or Brooklyn, New York, has now more than 600 miles of streel.e. BOOTH'S FLIRTATIONS.--478 scanda lous story that Booth was engaged to sundry daughters and sisters of pi:omi- nest politicians, is not without some foundation. It is notorious that the la dies of social distinction placed them selves freely in his way, sought introduc tions to him, invited him to the parlors at the National and other hotels, and considered it quite the thing to indulge in a conversation, a flirtation or a dance with the handsome rake. Not innocent girls only, but married ladies also, are they whose names are now bandied about Washington in infamous connec tion with this vile assassin. He was a general beau, and ladies of wealth and station were fond of him. Why shall it not . , be tola of ? The rep- utation is the legitimate penalty of the association. It is a shanaeful fact that lewd fellows of every degree, bold, gar- I rulous Libertines , .who can dress well, and talk gossipy nonsense, and quote Shakespeare as Wilkes Booth did, have a welcome entrance into all the fashion,- able circles in this country. In Booth's case there was no excuse of ignorance. His disloyal principles .and his loose morals were alike notorious ; and those who, knowing this, courted his seduc- Jive society, are ,saffering the disgrace of, it, as they ought to. 'ow The rumors that the rebel ant , 4r ities had mined their Libby dungeon, and were determined to destroy all the Union soldiers whom they were starving, on the first indication of a successful rescue, were literally true. This is proved by the testimony of several reb el officers on the assassination trial, who were posted in and , about the prison. They saw everything—the 25 lb. kegs, the fuse wh ich was placed under a guard, Sic.—This mine was to have. been fired in case Kilpatrick's raiders succeeded in penetrating Richmond, who would have of coursereleasedthe Unio? pris oners, and thus blown them into eterni ty. The powder was afterwards secret ly removed at night. It seems that we have been warring with demons rather than with men, and that their cruelty and barbarity exceeds the limits of the human imagination. ti' A jeweller in Bridgeport, Con necticut, is manufacturing an opera glass, charm and monogram combined, to be presented to Mrs. Lincoln. It is to be richly. mounted with gold, pearls, and diamonds, Thirteen diamonds re presenting the thirteen original States, and thirty-six pearls to represent the preient number. Looking through the lens on one side is to be seen the pho tograph from life of President Lincoln. Oa the other side is seen, in the form of a shield, the letters A. L., over which is a single star. Beneath is an appropri ate motto. . • Cr A regular trade in gamblers' tools has sprung op in New York, and the following are now openly advertised by a card-dealing house : "Fifty-five kinds Of advantage or marked• back playing cards, per dozen, $l3 ; five new styles marked cards just out, $lB per dozen ; longs and shorts with which you cut higher or lower than any one else ; ad vantage dice, price $10; French card magnifier, showing you what your oppo nent has ih his hand, enabling you to win every time." Cr Considerable sensation has been occasioned in Fifth Avenue, New York, by the erection there of a handsome res idence which is to be occupied by the notoriouB abortionist, Madame Restell. The hous'e is an elegant one, costing $165,00.0, `but the aristocracy are not able as yet to reconcile themselves to the, proximity of so notorious a charac ter, even though matching the best of them in tqe . splendcir of externals. A simple mode of keeping butter in warm vireather where ice is not bandy. Invert a "common flower-pot over the butter, with some water in the dish in which the butter is laid. The orifice at the bottom may be corked or not. The plirousness of the earthenware will keep , the butter cool. gay Dr. Pretty, an English physician, claims to have found a very simple means Of arresting the hiccough. It is suffi cient to squeeze the wrist;preferably that of the right band, with a piece of string, or with the forefinger and . thumb of the other hand. A Clertnan butcher in Utica, sold lead-cheese made of decomposed moat last Saturday, and families who .bought it were poisoned thereby. Much suffer lug was caused,'but no deaths. 1L45 - A person named Clark, a deserter from the 3d New,Hampshire regiment, confessed that he enlisted five times in one, day in New York, and realized by these "jumps" about $llOO. ear The prospect of a union between the Presbyterians of the "Old School" and those orthe "New School" are.not so favorable as they were last year. eir The Minnesota people are clamor ous for the annihilation of, tho there. The Indian troubles are no soon er-over than they bresic out afresh,, Queen Vietolia was three times attached, the' persons who sought Wet tieing. named Oiford; Beau, and Ell A decision was rendered in the Supreme Court of this state in session at Harrisburg, on Wednesday last, the 24th instant, in the case of. Wm. Shal lenberger vs Mary W. Brinton, an ap peal from Nisi Prins, in Philadelphia. The case is important as involving the constitutionality of the United States legal-tender notes. Judges Strong, Reed, and Agnew gave opinions affirm ing their constitutionality, to which Judges Woodward and Thompson dis sented. Mrs. R. E. Lee, wife of the late General Lee, has written to the author. ities, claiming Arlington Heights as her property. She complains that the grounds have been. greatly abused by our Government, and states that ehe will visit Washington in a few days for the purpose of demanding this from Presi dent Johnson. This matchless and in comparable piece of.impudence will be treated by the authorities with contempt as it richly deserves. The Bank of - Pittsburg, the only State Bank in Pittsburg or vicinity, was organized in 1810; and has pissed through every financial crisis since with out suspending specie payment but on one occasion-11 1837—and then only fora short time, at the special request ofthe citizens: Throughout :the crisis of 1541, 1857, and during the present war, it has always redeemed its liabili tie& circulation, and deposits in specie whenever called upon. -- Washington city is filled with ru mors that terrible eVidence has been ob tained against Jefferson 'Davis and other noted rebels, connecting them in an un enviable manner with the assassins now on trial. Jeff: Davis and Clement Clay have been safely lodged in Fortress Monroe, guarded by twenty soldiers. Jefra haughty and dignified bearing has deserted him and he appears greatly chopfallen. The wealthy secessionists of Balti more, have banded together to raise funds for the support of Gen. Lee. For ty thousand dollars have already been subscribed, and they boast that it will be increased to a hundred thousand. Here's a chance for the secesh of Phil• adelphia and Pennsylvania to show their hands. --A man in Reading, phio, thought he heard somebody in his yard, got up and went out, and fired his pistol into the darkness to frighten away the thieves, if any there were. lie killed his wife, wbo had followed him out, The celebrated bloodhound "Hero," from Castle Thunder, Richmond, reach ed New• York, on Tuesday. He was kept to pursue Union soldiers endeavor ing to escape, weighs 180 pounds, and is altogether an "ugly customer." -- Dr. Blackburn, the yellow fever Man, through his . counsel, has admitted his guilt, but claimed that there is no authority to prosecute for conspiracy to murder in a foreign country. Lubec .was lately executed at Bou logne, France, before about twenty thou sand persons: Hiscrime was the drown ing of two little children of his wife by a former husband. Mrs. Warren Potter, of Greenfield, Mass., whose case has excited much at tention from her long sleep of eighteen weeks, is now recovering the use of her faculties. Simon Cameron, Benjamin Wade, and Senator Doolittle have been buying some farms near Charleston, which were abandoned by their owners, and sold by Government. George Peabody, the London banker, is about to return to his native country, to spend the evening of his days and eleep With bis`fathers. - —lt is stated that no pardons will be granted to Rebels unless they re nounce all right, title and interest in slave property forever. DIED On Thursday, tagatli nit., LANGDON W. PIFIELD, of this borough, ~.;in the 59th year of his age. S UMMER HATS! The undersigned have just received a beau tiful assortment Of all styles of SILK, CAPRERA, A . ' FELT AND Ntra,v ' cr Hato, Which we are prepared to sell at the MOST REASONABLE TERMS. , ICS Our friends in the County are invited to call and examine, our assortment. • SHULTZ. BROTHER,. • FASHIONABLE HATTERS, NO. 29, NORTH QUEEN STREET, LANCASTER, PA. Spring Shawls Balmorals Gloves,' Hosiery, Belts andßue'iles, Embroidered Handker chiefs and Collars, Mourning Coll'ara and Veils, Head Nets find Dress Trimmings. A full supply at SPANGLER & RICH'S. DR. Army . Lotion, an infalli, ble• remedy for Saddle Galls; - Open Soies and ‘diteasee of the skin, • •- • , • ~, AT THE GOLDEN MORTAR. ST. CROIX AN.p - NEW .nIVGLAND RUM for culinary; purposes, warranteitkenuine M. D. Benjamin. 713 winitivs long 'celebrated - GIN, jjq:, .ai!, - ) ~ i,: is :43 , ff:. Dir BENJA4OIN. illiteiffi f.ioDf I au-. 66b Aqa let ON THE ONE DOLLAR PLAN The entire stock of one Gold and Watch Ma n ufactory, Two booe,;, Jewelry Establishments, One ,a 1,,,; Plating Wore-house, One Gold p;,, And Pencil Maker, TO BE DISPOSED OP WITH DISPATCS IVITHOUT REGARD TO LOST! The Goods are of fashionable styles to, most excellent workmanship, and are sacni,. ced in this manner to relieve the proptielott from embarrassment occasioned by a distract. log civil war. It should i ke prominently . 1 , ted, also, that they are mostly. of AMERICAN MANUFACTURE and therefore gt eatly superior to the Reath imported from abroad and hawked about B i the cheapest ever sold. The simple duly o r , imported goods and the krgh premium on G o l d (all foreign bids are payable in gold,)/IMOUDI to more than the entire cost of many of th, articles offered by us to the public. To he'll. tate the sale ' ONLY ONE DOLLAR will be charged for any article on out list, av this sum the purchaser need not pay until knows what he is to get ! This plan sccor6 With the method recently become so popular for disposing of large stocks of Jewtlry and si - nilar productimis. - THE PLAN IS SIMPLE! The name of each article offered for sale as "Gold Hunting Watch," "Gold Ov a l-B ast Bracelet," "Pearl Breastpin and Ear-Drops "Hold Er smelled Ring," "Silver Plated Cake Basket," &c., 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-n ee cents for return postage and other charges, one of the cards or certificates is takes ea random and sent by first mail to the custonae l , who will see at once what he can get for One Dollar. It he is pleased with his fortune can forward the money according to dereetion s on the Certificate and secure the prize. If the article awarded .should be unsuited to the purchaser—as for example, a set of Pearl Ea: Drops and Breastpin to -a..-young man %she could not wear them, and had, no one to gai them to—we will send anyother article on the catalogue. of equal -price which may be pre. ferred• Orli', for any reason, you choose to venture no further, then you can let the inst. ter drop where it is and spezd no more. amine carefully our Catalogue ! WATCH DEPARTMENT. 300 Gents' Patcnt Lever Gold Hunting Case. $5O to $2OO 300 Gents' Detach'd Lever Gold Hunt ' • ing Case 40 175 400 Gents' Swiss Gold Hunting Case 30 Ipi 200 Ladies' Gold and Enameled Hunt lug Case. 30 400 Gents' Patent Lever Silver Hunting Case. 30 400 Gents' Det. Lever Silver Hunting Case. 30 Si 300 Gents' Detached Lever Silver Open • Face. 20 50 300 Gents' Patent Lever Silver Open Face. 25 300 Gents' Swiss Silver. 1S 49 JEWELRY DEPARTMENT. 300 Diamond Rings. $4O to IN 300 Gents' Diamond Pins. 20 100 5000 Gents' Gold and Enameled Fob Chains. 3 4Q 3000 Gents' California Diamond Pins. 3 15 3000 Gents' California Diamond Rings. S 12 9000 Gents' Gold Vest Chains. 5 4a 4000 Pair Gents' Gold Sleeve Buttons 3 l' , 4000 Pair Gents' Gold & Enam. Sleeve Buttons 3 ID 6000 Sets Gents' Gold Studs. 3 h 8000 Gents' Stone Set and Signet Rings 3 B 5000 Gents' Stone Set and Signet EASM. Rings. , _ 4 Ii 6000 Ladies' Gold Neck Chains. 5 sil 4000 Gold Oval-Baud Bracelets. ' 3 10 6000 Gold and Jet Bracelets. 8 It 5000 Gold and Enameled Bracelets. 8 It 3000 Gold Chatelain Chains. 8 30 . . . 5000 Pair Ladies' Gold Sleeve Buttons. 3 4000 Pair Ladies' Gold Ena Sleeve Buttons. 8000 Solitaire Gold Brooches 6000 Coral, Opal rind Empald Brooches 3 5000 Gold Cameo and Read Ear-Drops 3 'lOOO Mosaic, Jet, Lary& Florentine Ear Drops. 3 5000 Gold Thimbles: 10000 Coral, Opal god Emerald'Ear Drops. 10000 MiniatCre Lockets. • 10000 Miniature Lockets—magic spring S 10000 Plain Gold Rir4s. 4 1 . 2 10000 Seta Ladies' Jewelry, Gold & Jet 5 /11 10000 Sets Ladies' Jewelry, Cameo, Pearl &c., 5 20 10000 Ladies' Gilt arid Jet Bracelets. 4 1 10000 Ladies' Gilt &jet Flat Suppor ters. 2 I SILVER PLATED WARE. 10000 Cups. $2 to 21 8000 Goblets. 3 ) 2 10000 Pair Napkin Rings. ' ' 2 10 2000 Card Baskets: 4 16 3000 Cake Baskets. 5 20 4000 Castor Frames—complete with bot tles. 5 11 2000 Ice Pitchers. 6000 Pair Butter Knives. 5000 Soup, Oyster and Gravy Ladles. 2 6 1000 Engraved Pie Knives. 3 8000 Dozen Tea Spoons. per doz. 5 0 6000 Dozen Table Spoons. per doz. 8 24 6000 Dozen Dessert Forks. per doz. 7 : 15 6000 Dozen Table Forks. per doz. 8 GOLD PENS AND PENCILS. 12000 Grild Pepe, Silver Exierition 1101- . dere, $8 to $1 ]2OOO Gold Pens, Silver Mounted Hot- dere. 8000 Gold Pens, Gold Mounted [lOl - 3 I 6000 Gold Pens with Gold'Extbnidon Holders. 10 6000 Gold Pens, Gold Holders and Pen cils. ' ' 10 5° 6000 Gold Pencils. : 6 . 5 REMEMBER THE PLAN! In all cases we charge for forwarding tht Certificate, postage, and, doing the bonne , the sum of Twenty-five Cents, which must tK enclosed in the order. Five Certificates MI , be sent for $1; eleven for $2 ; thirty for 0: sixty-five for $10; One hundred for $l 5 . AGEItTS ARE WANTED , Throughout the Country' to operate for US. 3 large compensation will be paid. Send 1s terms, &c., enclosing stamp. NEWBORN & CO., 3m-iril 75 FULTON STREET. N. 1 .4 ETTERS REMAINING unclaimed in the Post Office at Marietta, Pa., TaussnAll urge I, Dili& • Armstrong. R. J. Jones, Mrs. pheby J. Billings, John • Kaylor, Adam 2 Brightbill, .Miss LizzielCuhnley, Christian Blanchard, Duddley .: liajler, Miss C. Dodd, CiPr• A. B. Knard, John Dyre, Maj. George Keller, .Casper Diffenderfer, WilliaM Leed, Peter 2 Ebersole:Benjamin ' . Martin, William Eisenberger, ElizabethiNFcCau, Mr. Geo. Painter, Edward . Rigler, Stephen Fishel, Mr. Chas. W. Smith, Alexander Gay, James'if. I - Schichentans, Cora Jones,Mrs. America Vanlunser, Geo. r:P.To pbtain any of these letters, the ap plicant must call for "advertised letters," gI the date of this list,.and pay one cent fern d' vertiSiPg. ABRAHAM C'ASSEL, P. 31' pHBLIC NOTICE. About sixty mewl 0 , 11 , i 'square logs lodged on the landed :MIL H. Schock, at, Schock's-; Mills, East Bongs, township, Lancaster County, during the W . high water, and a descriptive list of the Pr! vs to marks has been filed, in the office of OP M. Brown,Justice 'of the Peace, msytoo: which can be examined at any time. P! l . , ` b n i , l notice is hereby given'that they roust be I, ', tified, charges.paid and removed within 110 ; days or they be foileited according to,i' C. M. BROWN, Agt for hi SlA' c May 15, 1865. Q ÜBSCRIPTIONSzeoeived, for an the DI kJ 41 Periodicals of_ h o TdeRYGo/den =I