The Mariettian. (Marietta [Pa.]) 1861-18??, August 05, 1865, Image 2

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F. L. Baker, Editor.
MARIETTA. PA :
':gPatuidatt., fiugitst 1614.
sir A youth of sixteen, giving his
name as Raymond O'Neil, was, on
Thursday, arrested at the Brooklyn post
office, where he had called for letters in
answer ,to advertisements published in
the papers promising, for certain remit
tances of money, to send to young ladies
photographs of their future husbands,
and to others a recipe for making a pa
tent washing powder. By papers found
on the young man, it appeared that
these admertisemente had found plenty
of soft victims among both sexes. As
no one appeared to make a complaint
against O'Neil he was discharged.
The
_duty of placing the manacles
upon Mrs. gurratt, escorting her to the
gallows, and supporting her until the
trap fell, devolved upon Lt. Col. W. H.
H. McCall, (formerly of the sth Re-
serve) of Lewisburg, Pa. When plac
ing the irons upon her wrist, she told
him he was no gentleman or he would
not do so. Col. M'C. told her that it
was his unpleasant duty, in obedience
to orders, and not his choice. Her
parting salute to him was "You are a
scoundrel !"which were about the last
audible words she uttered.
sfar A group of ladies in the parlor of
a villa at Ravenwood, L. 1., (opposite
Blackwell's Island,) were astonished the
other evening by the apparition of a big
Irishman, stark naked, who rushed
through the window, exclaiming, "Give
me a suit of clothes." The most extra
ordinary consternation followed, but the
fellow stood his ground, and the •ladies
were obliged to give him a suit to get
rid of him. He then departed abruptly.
It turned out that he was a runaway
convict, and his audacious stratagem se
cured his escape.
or Billy Mulligan, the pestilent lit
tle gambler and ruffian, is dead. After
a long career of infamy in New York,
be ventured back to California, from
whence he had been driven by the cele
brated Vigilance Committee of 1856.
He has been there several months, de
fiantly daring any one to arrest him,
but rum has finished him. On the Bth
instant, in a fit of delirium tremens, he
shot and killed two men, and was aim
ing at another, when an officer put a
bullet through hie hetid.
Or The act of the 29th of April,lB64,
providing for the abatement of five per
cent. on the amount of State taxes paid
fifteen days prior to the first of Septem
ber has been repealed, and the Auditor .
General is now authorized to add five
per cent. penalty on each county on all
State taxes unpaid on the first of Au
gust, which shall be charged-in the du
plicate against each delinquent taxpayer
in arrears on and after said day.
A correspondent of one of the
New York dailies, writing from Fortress
Monroe, under date of the 17th says
that Jeff Davis is failing in health.
He says, "Health has left him, hope is
gone, that proud spirit is broken, and
the end is not far. lam writing no fan
cy sketch. I have been told to-day that
if he keeps up his present prison habits
and despondency, he will not live six
weeks longer."
Imo' General Scott says that people
think he is proud and pompous simply
because, he is tall and erect... To a re
cent caller, who expressed surprise at
his affability, he remarked, "Sir, it has
been the misfortune of my life to be six
feet four inches high, and to have a
straight spine.. Had I been round
shouldered, or had a hump on my back,
it would have relieved the odium in the
public eye."
eir In the Buffalo Police Court it
was held last week, that ladies are le
gally entitled to no more privileges in
public conveyances than gentlemen, and
that when the latter pay for seats they
have a perfect right to occupy them so
long as they conduct themselves in a
proper. manner. A conductor was ac•
cordingly fined $5OO for ejecting a man
fioui a car because ho refused to give
his seat to a Woman. •
ar The last of the 7-30 Loan was :die
posed of by Jay Cooke, on Wednesday,
though it can still be had in moderate
amounts of our bankers and brokers.
litany millions of dollars are still want
ing to pay off the soldiers and settle the
accounts of contractors, &c., but,no fur
ther loan can be placed in the market
until after tfie meeting of Congress.
d a- The late Arthur Tappan, when a
merchant in. New York, made it a rule
that none of his 'clerks should drink ar
dent spirits, stay out late nights, go to
a theatre, or have the acquaintance of
an actor ; and required all his employee
to attend church twice on tiondays, and
prayer meeting twice a week.
PUNISHED FOR DISLOYALTY.—James
Simons, seaman, was tried May 2d, 1865,
found guilty of using seditious language
and evincing disloyalty, in that he ex
pressed satisfaction, both in words and
conduct, when the assassination of Pres
ident Lincoln was announced in hie
hearing, and was sentenced to be im
prisoned for two years in such prison or
place of confinement as the Secretary of
the Navy may designate ; to forfeit all
pay now due or which may hereafter
become due him during his term of en
listment ; to be dishonorably discharged
from the Navy, and never again be en
listed or permitted to serve under the
Government of the United - States.
Sentence approved.
lir William Webster and his son Jo
seph, who reside, with their families, in
the same house, on Flint property, on
the turnpike, below Montgomery Square,
Montgomery county, last week had a
quarrel, which resulted in the death of
the father at the hands of the son. It
appears that the latter wished to take a
horse out of the stable for some purpose,
when the father interfered to prevent
him, and during the altercation struck
him. The son seized an axe, lying near
by, and inflicted on, the father a raqst
terrible wound, laying open the skull
with one blow. t.
or The Governor of Arkansas has
written to President Johnson, request
ing the revocation of a large number of
pardons granted. to wealthy rebels of
that State on his recommendation. The
Governor states that these persons man
ifested a penitent and loyal spirit until
they had received the Executive clemen
cy, since which they have shown as re
bellions a disposition as ever, and have
fostered disloyalty and embarrassed and
opposed measures of government by ev.
ery 'means in their power. •
Or The veritable war-horse- of the
rebel chief, Stonewall Jackson, may now
be seen in Newport. It is a noble ani
mal, and makes a fine appearance in the
streets, as it doubtless did when leading
to the charge against our loyal armies.
The steed is the property of George
Francis Train, who has a summer cot
tage on Kay street.
air Since the acquittal of ;Miss Har
ris, for the killing of Burroughs, at
Washington, a number of timorous treas
ury clerks, having the fear of the wonian
in black before their eyes, have instruc
ted the messengers in the department
to say "Not at home"_ to every suspi
cious female desiring an audience with
them,
ihr George P. Robinson, the soldier
who saved . Seiretary Seward's life, was
married on the 13th inst., at Springfield
Maine. He has also been presented
with a farm out West, and may now set
tle down and enjoy himself, with remi
niscences of his desperate encounter
with Payne to enliven his winter even
ings.
or A woman horse-whipped her hus
band in the streets of Warren, R. 1.,
last week, The man meekly submitted
to forty or fifty blows, but showed op
position when his son followed up the
mother by belathering his dad with an
umbrella. It is not stated what offence
the whipped man had committed.
ita" In consequence of the heat on the
4th of July, the saloon railroad eat in
which Queen Victoria rode from Wind.
sor to London, to visit the Queen of the
isletherlands, had to be cooled with ice,
which was strewn over the roof of the
carriage previous to Her Majestrs' re
turn to Windsor.
GO - The issue of five cent fractional
currency has been stopped by order..of
Secretary McCullough, and it is epect
ed that the Treasure and Sub-Treasure
will be supplied with two or three cent
coin to meet the wants of the communi ;
ty in , lieu of the paper issue withdrawn.
Sr Rev. Henry Johnson, residing in
Chesterfield county, near Richmond,
Va., who shot and killed a soldier who
was robbing his garden some nights ago,
has been tried by military tribunal, and
sentenced to five years' confinement iii
the penitentiary.
ekr A. party of thirteen ladies and
gentlemen frOm Norwhich, are encamp
ed out at Saybrook, near the mouth of
the Connecticut. river. They occuppy
a large tent, do their own cooking, and
enjoy all the luxuries of a seaside hotel
with but small expense.
Brattleborough, Vermont, is .be
coming a fashionable resort. James
Parton and his wife (Fanny Fern) and
Major Charles G. Halpin°, (Miles
O'Reilly) are among
_the guests there
this summer.
gar There now remains only one pris
oner of War, Capt. Henry Wers, con
fined in the Old Capitol awaiting his
trial, which will not take place for two
weeks, upon charges of cruelty to our
prisoners at Andersonville.
ar °h ang and Eng, the Siamese
Twins, who have been engaged in farm
ing operations for/some years in North
Carolina,.are soon again to appear on
exhibition in the Northern cities.
The time for quitting work in - the
departments at Washington, is to be
ehangod from four to three.
att Min in a Nut—Zigll
Long Branch is described as very gay
this semen.
The Newburyport Herald advocates
female suffrage.
Boston Corbett, who shot Booth, is
sick in an hospital in Washington.
Prentice is wealthy as well as witty.
He reports $10,165 as his income this
year.
A man dropped dead just as he got
into an omnibus, in New York, last
week.
A woman in Detroit was cowhided in
the streets 'for walking with another
woman's husband.
Rebels, subsequently enlisted in the
Union service, do not gain a, right to
pension
Ind St. Louis female as well as male
convicts are put at work breaking stones
for the road.
Lewis Cass, who has hid the reputa
tion of being worth several millions, re
ported for 1864 an income of $20,147.
Soda fountains have been introduced
on the trains of the Little Mama Rail.
road.
The Bev. Fitch W. Taylor, the oldest
chaplain in our Navy, and a schoolmate
of William Wirt, died in Brooklyn on
Monday.
Applications for pensions are on• the
increase. It is said that thirteen mil
lions will be required to pay pensions
this year.
The notorious Billy, Mulligan was
shot dead in San Francisco by a police
man, after he had killed two men in a
fit of delirium tremens.
Mrs. Ellen Wright, of Pittsburg, the
wife of a respectable man, and mother
.of several children, died recently while
in a state of beastly intoxication.
The emigration to this country from
Sweden, especially the middle and
northern districts of the country, is this
year unusually great.
The building on the Fifth Avenue,
New York, which is being constructed
for the residence of A. T. Stewart, is of
white marble, and will cost $1.200.000
when completed.
Mrs. Surratt's friends, if they succeed
in obtaining her remains, will plane over
them a monument, inscribed with her
last words : "I'm innocent ; but God's
will he done."
The St. Louis Republican says that
Major McCom:1011;a sprightly young of
ficer, who at one time officiated as pro
vost marshal in that city, has eloped
with and married a daughter of Govern
or Curtin of Pennsylvania.
The Queen of the Sandwich Islands
and suite have just reached London. It
is understood that she will become the
guest of Lady Franklin. She is accom
panied by several of her high officers,
two of whom, Messrs. Harris and Allen,
are Americans.
A young woman lately left her 'hus
band of sixty in Michigan, took ssoo' of
his money, went to Syracuse, and pick
ed .up with a lover, bought him a new
suit of clothes, and pretty soon took the
clothes and left him. At last accounts
the two men were in company, looking
after the woman.
Professor Mahan, of the Corps of in
struction at the United . States Military
Academy, West Point, has arrived in
Richmond, and is a guest of itfajor-den
eral A. H. Terry, at the Jeff. Davis
mansion. Prof. Mahan is under orders
from the War Department to inspect
the fortifications around Richmond.
The census , takers have found living
in the west part of the village of Platte
burg a French Canadian, who is in the
one hundred and sixth year of his age,
and his wife is ninety-five years old.
They are both of them in the enjoyment
of quite good health ; have lived togeth
er seventy-eight years, and hat! fourteen
children.
A Russian journal, relates that the
wife of a peasant in the government of
Koursk, recently gave birth to a son, on
the following day to a son and a daugh
ter, and three days after to another
daughter. The second boy died, and
the mother also at the last accouche
meat ; the three other children are still
living.
An exchange has a graphic descrip
tion of a recent tornado, which blew
eight oxen over a river 800 yards wide,
carried off several dwellitig houses, one
sub-cellar, and two wells, and performed
several other freaks .of strength. One
old lady went .up like a balloon, and was
soon after discovered hanging on a tel
egraph wire two, miles and a half off.
Front this unpleasant predicament she
was rescued by her grandson.
The New York Observer, in an able
article on church 'music, by its senior
editor, thus speaks of the Mason &Ham
lin Cabinet Organ; "Here we have an
organ, sweet, solemn, sonorous and
grand ; with your eyes shut you cannot
distinguish its sound from that of the
pipe organ itself. It . is so effective and
beautiful as to meet the desires of the
most refined and fastidious, and •is all
that is needed in, any church of ordinary
size."
The Chattanooga Gazette says the
"poor old man," John Bell, has passed
through that place en-route for Nash
ville.—The Louisville Journal says :
We suppose that Mr. Bell will return
to Nashville, for he can probably live
in less discomfort there than elsewhere.
Of course the authorities will not think
of molesting him, He will not be sent
to any prison, but the whole world will
seem to him one vast Fort Warren or
Fort Lafayette, from which there can
be no escape except through tho gate of
death.
William Fon Rodd, Esq., of Butzto wn,
Pa., eighty-nine,years of age, bas lost
nine sons during the war. Eight were
killed in battle, and one died a Prisoner
at Salisbury, N. I C., eating hie own
right hand before dying, so great was
his hunger. The tenth son is a member
of Co. A.., 13th Pennsylvania cavalry,
and bears the scars of eight wounds re
ceived in battle.
Robert E. Lee, late Major-Gen, in
the rebel army, is sojourning at the
Clifton House, Niagara Falls. It is
said that C. L. Vallandigham, has also
gone to the sari& place, probably to
have a conferencWwith the noted chief
tain.
The largest income return in Pitts
burg is that of Joseph Walton, $232,-
553. Thomas Fawcett's income is $210,-
000, and that of Wm. H. Brown, $104,•
520. There are three or four others
who have incomes cbove $lOO,OOO, and
about a dozen who return over $50,000.
A woman in New London, Conn., on
Saturday 'attempted to empty a tub she
had been using, out of a third-story win
dow, but slipped and fell to the ground,
a distance of forty feet. Althonh she
was somewhat injured, no bones were
broken.
President Johnson has , accepted a
marble bust ofJohn Bright, our English
friend, as a present to the American
nation. The acceptance is conveyed in
the most cordial and graceful language.
The bust will be placed in the White
House at Washington, a very high com
pliment to one of the best of men.
It is said that eighty plantations in
Louisiana have recently been confisca
ted. These embrace many of the finest
sugar estates of , the Southern country.
Mr. Conway, the government agent, is
making arrangements to divide up these
estates into forty-acre lots for freedmen
and poor whites.
At Bullville, N. Y., last week, as Mr
James C. Cowdy was running a mowing
machine, he failed to see his daughter,
five years of age, who was picking ber
ries just ahead of him, and the machine
cut off both her feet a short distance
above the ankle.
President Johnson whom the rebel.
sympathizing Northern journals began
to praise in the hope of turning him
against his country, as in the case of
Pierce, Fillmore and Buchanan—has
knocked fits out of them by his bold and
eminently just Jacksonian conduct.
•
Fifty dollars were offered by a relic
hunter for less than an inch of the rope
by which Mrs. Surratt was hung. The
offer was refused. Guess a hundred was
demanded. Jeff Davis' rope will sell at
a still higher figure.
The bust of Ex• President Tyler, the
Richmond Whig announces, has been
removed from the recess of the Virginia
State Library. But the "bust" of the
confederacy will never be removed from
the minds of the people or the pages of
history.
A frightful instance of cannibalism is
reported in the case of the New Zealan
ders, who seized the Rev. Mr. Volkner,
an,Episcopal Missionary, hung him, de
capitated him. and subsequently ato
portions of the body—men, women and
children uniting in the dreadful orgies.
Within a stone's throw of Stewart's
new marble house, on Fifth avenue, is a
dwelling really believed to be. haunted.
It is an imposing and elegant building.
It has been occupied and abandoned by
three families within a few months. It
is now in the market.
The young man who received the
first prize for commencement-day ora
tary at Rochester University was nine
years ago a canal-driver, parentless, un
able to read, ignorant even of the time
of his birth.
Lewis Estell, a resident of Camden,
New Jersey, aged sixty-five ' years, has
been arrested on a charge of bigamy.
It is alleged that he has no less than five
wives living in Camden, Burlington, and
Cumberland counties. .
During a tempest at Hartford, Conn.,
on Wednesday last, the lightning split
the yokes off the necks of a pair of oxen
without injuring either of the cattle. A
man standing near by was knocked
down by the shock.
Ten skeletons have been unearthed at
Quebec; the oldest inhabitant remem
bers that one Dr. Alarenill, hanged for
murder 40 years ago, confessed to hav
ing killed ten other persons, and that
this doctor lived on the.spot where .the
bones were exhumed.
Col. Win. B. Thomas, Collector . of
the Port at Philadelphia, Edward Wal
lace, Naval Officer, and E. Reed Myer,
Surveyor; have been reappointed.
WOMEN AM) MEN.—Very intelligent
women, we Sod by observation, are sel
dom beautiful. The formation of their
features, and particularly their forehead,
is more or less masculine. Miss Lauder
was rather pretty and feminine in the
face ; but Miss Sedgwick, Miss Pardue,
Miss Leslie, and the late Ann Maria
and Jane Porter, the contrary. One of
the Misses Porter had a forehead as
high as that of an intellectual man.
We never knew of any very talented
man who was admired for his personal
beauty. Pope was awful ugly ; Dr.
Johnson was no better; Mirabean was
the ugliest man in France, and yet he
was the greatest favorite with the ladies.
Women more frequently prize men for
their sterling qualities olthe mind, than
men do women. Dr. Johnion chose a
woman who had scarcely an idea above
.an oyster. Be thought her the loveliest
creature in existence, if we may judge
by the inscription he left on her tomb.
fir The Washington correspondent of
the New York Post, in a telegram to
that journal, dated Saturday, says:
"There is reason to believe that the
Government will in a short time, make
known its policy in regard to the Mon
roe doctrine and the French occupation
of Mexico. Heavy reinforcements of
troops, to the number of twenty-tive
thousand are said to have been put on
the road to Sheridan wtbin the past
few days. General Grant is reported
to have said, in a conversation with the
Mexican Minister, a few days ago, 'the
French will have to leave Mexico.'"
eir A townsman of Gale, the rebel
who offered a million dollars reward for
the murder of President Lincoln, says,
that he is a lawyer of some ability, a
violent 'secessionist, a great lover of
whisky, who fully lived up to his income,
and never possessed more than ten
thousand dollars. The advertisement
offering the reward is said to have been
the ebullition of a drunken frolic, and
was considered merely as a silly joke in
that vicinity.
Cr Hon. Asa Packer, of Mauch
Chunk has set apart the sum of five hun
dred thousand dollars, to establish and
endow a college near Bethlehem, in this
State. Ile has given also fifty-seven
acres of land, on which the college build
ings will be erected. Judge Packer is
now in Europe, bat previous to his de
parture be communicated to Bishop
Stevens his intention and will superin
tend its organization. himself.
ar They have on exhibition in New
York "a splendid horse which had the
honor of bearing the person of Lieuten
ant-General Grant at the grand reviews
in Washington." Those who were in
front of the President's pavillion will
testify that if General Grant sat on any
horse in those days it must have beau a
saw-horse, as certainly no animal was
visible.
The Boston Transcript says :
The estate of the late President, we
are authorized and , requested to say, will,
with the addition of the contributions
made in Massachusetts, Rhode Island,
and New York, amount to one hundred
thousand dollars, and that the active la
bors of those obtaining subscriptions to
the Lincoln Fund have now ceased. .
sur At Randolph, 'Wis., on Monday,
Farmer Windsor took a young girl with
him to a circus. Straightway his wife
bought some arsenic. This she insert
ed into a pie, of which her husband was
fond. He ate it next day at dinner
and that night was past the region of
flirtation.
liar Returns of the elections in Vir
ginia represent that in other portions
of the State as well as Richitiond tha
regular secession candidates have been
generally successful. Encouraged by
these results, it is' said that the guerilla
chief Mosby designs being a candidate
for Congress.
There is a family in Detroit of
quite unusual composition. The father
and mother have each been married
three times, and have had children by
each marriage, and all are now living
happily together under one
_roof—six
sets of children.
sge- The town of Gosport, New Hamp.
shire, has neither oxen, horse, nor
plough within its borders, nor minister,
doctor or lawyer. It ,supports two ho
tels, which are well , patronized. It was
one of the earliest settled towns in- the
State.
or Eighteen persons have died of in
juries caused by the tornado at Viroqua-
Wis., June 28, and many others are still
suffering. Fifty houses were destroyed.
The loss of property was about $300,000.
air A Yankee in Kansas sells liquor
in a gun barrel instead of a glass, to
evade the law and make it appear be
yond dispute that he is selling by the
barrel.
ar Col. P. C. Ellmaker, of Phila.,
hair been appointed by the President
United States Marshal for the Eastern
District of Pennsylvania, in place of
Marshal Milward. . •
Iwr Mr. Peabody, the American Lon 7
don banker, has witnessed the erection
and ocenpution of the first of his houses
for the London poor.
• Fol. Rog heiention of tfrine,
INCONTINENCE of tallNt .
lnflamation or Ulceration of the Bladder ,:
Kidneys, Diseases of the Prostrate Gi, 4 .
Gravel, Brickdust deposits, Dropsical s ivq :
ings, Organic Weakness, Debility, p ens , 4
Complaints, &c.
.B . ELYBOKifS
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seding those unpleasant and dangerous reu sed „,
Copabia and Mercury, in curing these disease'
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Those suffering from broken down or
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The Render must be aware that howertl
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la — These extracts have been admitted 10
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SOLD BY ILL DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE.
BMWs of Counterfeits!
C OLGATE'S TOILET SOAPS.
Honey, Clycerine, Palm Almond, Bath II 6J
Shaving SOAPS, .Equal t o any imported."
Juet received and for sale, a ery cheap at „
TFIE GOLDEN MORT tr.