4ttariettian. F. L. .sa,lcer, Editor, MARIETTA, PA : Valcu , dag., 0 deicer- 1, Icf bJ tar The papers are circulating a pro posed amendment to the Constitution, which contemplates the constant suc cession of the Vice President to the Presidency. A President and Vice President are elected. At the end of the four years' the fortner retiree and the latter takes hie Place. Of course at each subsequent election only a Vice President is chosen. In this way the one term rule is adopted : the Vice President ie selected with special refer ence to his fitness for the first position ; and for four years he is being educated for the vast responsibilities he is to as sume. Montgomery Blair spoke at the Democratic meeting at New York, a few evenings since, in favor of the can didates of a party that has steadily and cruelly slandered . Abraham Lincoln, who made him Postmaster General, and An drew Johnson, whose confidence he pro fesses to enjoy. A surer promise of a Union victory in the Empire State, on the Bth of November, could not be'de sired. Gir The Pennsylvania Railroad . Co mpany have under ,consideration the pro ject of building a large and spacious depot at Harrisburg. J. Edgar Thotn• son, Esq., spent several days in Harris burg recently, and it is undOrstood that his visit had reference to the matter. eir Col. W. W. H. Davis, the Demo cratic candidate for Auditor General, so badly defeated by General flartrarift, on the 10th instant, announces is his last paper, the Doylestown Democrat, that he is about to take an October trip to the solacing waters of Salt River. The Fenians are creating a stir in Canada Agents of the organization have recently visited both Quebec and Otta wa, with the view of establishing lodges and it is reported that a number of the brotherhood have lately left Toronto on a special mission to Ireland. or Hon. Asa Packer, who donated half a million of dollars and a fine body of land to establish a great Episcopal college in the eastern part of the State, has just returned from his foreign tour, and is now at his home in Mauch Olink. sir The English money nabobs who were published as having been bondhol ders in the Confederate loans are in a great way ; several : have come out in the Lyndon Vines denying that they ever invested in any of the rebel loans. gar Arrangements are now in progress on the part of a number of ladies and gentlemen of Baltimore for the pui * pose of erecting over the grave of Edgar A. Poe, the gifted poet, a marble monument in testimony of hie poetical talents. The Fireman's Parade_ of Phila delphia, on Monday, was one of the grandest pageants of the kind that ever took place in the United Slates. The procession was seven and a half miles in length, ar A large procession of colored Odd Fellows took. place in Baltimore on the sth inst. Speeches were ered. and everything passed off in a highly creditable manner. ear Some of the planters near Mont gomery, Ala., put into their contracts with the negroes an agreement to be whipped when they need it, to which the negroes agree. The recently published views of Henry Ward Beecher on future punish ment, in which there is a leaning to Universalism, is causing much discu: sion. ear Gen. Banks in a speech at ranee, Mass., on the 2d. said that P 7 dent Johnson's policy was too lord. and would be disastrous to the count or Every county, save one, in Con necticut, voted against the Negro Suff rage Amendment, The total majority against it is about-6,000. Or A young lady at Niagara was heard to .exclaim : "What an elegant trimming that rainbow would make for a white lace dress !" gar Four hundred German and Polish emigrants left Havre, Fiance; lately for Virginia, where large tracts of land have been granted them. or In Ohio, Gen. Oox, the Republi can candidate for Governor has 28,287 majority. The Legislature stands 95 Union to. Pemocrats. lir An agent in Texas has purchased 30,000 acres of land in that State, for the establishmi3nt of a colony ef Poles. The proposed monument to Ste. phen A. Douglas w4jAhalitlierlAPleze4 for lack of funds, has been commenced. air Ruth Play was hung at Ports mouth, N. 11., ninety-seven years ago, fur child murder, and it is a singular fact that the person who caused her ex- ecution is still alive. She was a school- teacher, and Mrs. Betsy Eastman, of Salisbury, N. H., now 103 ye' rs old, was one of her scholars, and still remembers and relates the circtioastance. The teacher was absent one day, and Mrs. E., then a girl or six years, while at play in the school house, saw a loose board in the floor, which she raised from motives of curiosity, and there dis covered the remains of a dead infant. She t 0.1.4 what she had seen, and an in vestigation showed it to bo the child of the teacher, Rho murdered it to conceal its birth. She was tried, convicted and hung. eir The Scottish 'Farmer says that soap suds, although generally deemed only fit for being run off in the easiest and most expeditions -manner possible, are highly beneficial vegetable feeders, as well as useful insect preventives. Hence they should never be wasted by parties having gardens, as their applica tion to the ground, whether in winter or summer, will shdw beneficially, not only on ordinary vegetable crops, but also on berry bushes, shrubs, etc., while, if pour ed or syringed over roses, cabbages, etc. they will mitigate the mischievous doings of the green fly and catapillars. Cr Among the present " lionesses" at Paris is Lady Victoria Fitz William, a fascinating Esquimaux of Grinnell Bay, whose tender care of Lord Frederick Fitz Williams, some three years ago, when he was taken ill on board the En glish man-of-war "George Henry," de tained in a bay, by stress of weather, on the Esquimaux coast, induced him to offer her his hand. Her maiden name was Tookolito, and the report of her ro. Mantic devotion to the English officer, if true, affords another proof that truth is stranger than the most startling fic tion. gar A geldiugnamed "Dexter" made the fastest time on record, at the Fash ion Race-Course, Long Island, on Wed nesday of last week. The - match was $5,000 against $l,OOO that, no horse. gel ding or mare, could, in three trials, un der the saddle, make better time than a mile in 2;19. " Dexter " did beat that time trotting the mile in two minutes, eighteen and one fifth seconds. This is the best " time " on record. ~Twenty. five thofisand dollars has been offered for "Dexter." tfir At last the cho - era, advancing fromthe dimmest recesses of Asia, has reached -the borders of the Atlantic: and, tired of ravaging Europe, threatens America. The last foreign steamer' an nounces it at Southampton, one of the most prominent English sea-coast towns, whence scores of vessels daily sail for our shores. Philadelphia and New York would be the first points visited, for to them almost all of the Southamp ton vessels come.N An altercation occurred between two discharged soldiers at Lawrence. burg, Indiana, on Monday. One of the men assaulted the other with brass knocks and beat him so that he died in a few minutes. The murdered man Was quierand inoffensive, not having given the least provocation for the deadly as sault.• The murderer was committed- to prison. r ew Rev. Jeremiah Day, ex-President of Yale College, is the oldest Klan in New Haven. He is in his 93d year, and visited Hartford the other day, where he astonished the young men by _walk ing all about the city and up Asylum Hill, where younger men prefer to take the horse cars. It is said that during the visit o English capitalists Sir Morton Peto i3X pressed groat astonishment —and disap pointruent.at the appearance of Wash ington. They expected to see a hand some city, alive with business and en terprise, after the manner of European In. 40 - President Johnson has ordered the military authorities of Alabama to transfer to the civil courts Geo. W. Gayle, the man who offered the $1,000,- 000 reward for the assassination of Pres ident,Lincoln. e:z The - Virginia Congressional can didates are declining by the wholesale, being unable to take the test oath. • Silks and laces 'to the amount of $lO,OOO were found secreted in a vault in a cemetery in Philadelphia. eir In Springfield, 111., a barber was ately fined $5O for shaving a gentleman n his private room on Sunday. gar Judah P. Benjamin, Rebel Sacra ary of State, is about to betatzehimself o the English bar. oar The railroads kill at the rate of about 7000 people a year, and maim three or four thousitud. ear Potatoes are.veryylenty in.4owa, and sell for 20 . cents a bashol,at Daven- Col. Edward A. Irvin has been , - appointed associate judge 'of Clearfield county. c• - -TH - E TL,bc Morlb in a Nut—Slitll Florina Budworth, a female Philadel phia soldier, whose sex was not discov ered until shortly before her death, was among the victims of rebel cruelty in the prison at Florence, S. C. There are fewer marriages by one-third in New York than there were twenty five years ago. Women must be con tent to live so that men can nfford to marry. Over eight thousand steam engines are employed in boring for and pumping oil in the State of Pennsylvania. A colored-corporal was hung at Camp liamilton, near Fortress Monroe, on Thursday, for rape c )(omitted last April. The President has ordered the confis cated Dangerfield property in Alexan dria, val9ed at $50,000, to be restored to Mrs. Dangerfield. A new hotel is to be built in New York, which will cost, with the ground, about two million dollars. It is to be located near the Central Park. The twenty-third Army Corps, com posed entirely of colored troops, and now on the Rio Grande, is to be muster ed out. The railroad between Washington and New Orleans is complete ; and the first through passengers from New Or leans arrived in Washington last Wed nesday. Gen. James P. Brown, A:diutant Gen eral of Tennessee, lately married Miss Belle Cliff, Gov. Brownlow acting in the capacity of parson and perfor - ming the ceremony. Fenians, who profess to speak by the card, Bay that startling news from Ire land may•soifn be expected. It is pri vately stated that fifteen gunboats have been purchased by the organization. The will of the late Isaad B. Parker, of Burlington, N. J., .has lately been proved. His estate is worth about three million of dollars. The larger part is left to his scn, John Brown Parker, Esq., of Carlisle, Peon. Mary Gilmore, daughter of the sheriff at Parairie du Chien, Wis., on Friday night, taking advantage of the tempo rary absence of her parents, released two men named 6utherland, who had been three weeks confined in the j oil, on a charge of stealing oxen, and eloped with them. The Richmond Times says the Swed ish emigration.experiment has worked to the satisfaction of all parties, The farmers are much pleased with the Swedes, whom they find to be industri ous, efficient, honest and orderly. They do double the work of the late slaves, and, require no looking after. Champ Ferguson, the notorious guer rilla, has been sentenced to death, and was executed on the 20th inst. He re ceived the announcement very calmly, dqubtless because he knew the enormity of his crimes and the abundance of proof brought out on the trial. He is a • de mon second or.ly to Winder, the arch fiend. . An agonizing story is told, of a vain New York young lady, who, dissatisfied with her good, but irregular teeth, had fifteen of them pulled out to make room for a-new and false set. In vain .the dentist wished to spare her eye • teeth. She would have them out. Nervous prostration followed the operation, and she died -a victim to her pride, and leav ing the set of false teeth she had order ed uncalled for. • Colonel William Polk, a nephnw of the late ex-President - Polk is, appointed Special Agent of the United States Treasury Department, for TexaS, to re cover Governmeneeotton and wool, and has entered upon his duties. An oldgentleman remarked the other day that in 1776 we went, to war on ac count of the Stamp Act, and got the nigger, while in 1861 we went to war about the nigger and ,got the Stamp Act. A New Yorker living in Nineteenth ' , area, discovered the other day that he his4l lived for two years on the same block with his brother whom he had not seen for twelve years. /It is said that John C. Breckenridge, rebel ex-Secretary of War_ and ex-gen eral, proposes to become a British sub ject, and enter into the pork business in some Canadian town. New Orleans papers announce that the Hon. Pierre Soule is soon expected to arrive in that city and mahn it Ids permanent home. The property of Joseph F. Davis, bro ther of Jeff. Davis, and Gen. Wm. T. Martin, both late of the rebel army, has been restored to them. The Mobile Tribune reports that a newspaper to be edited by colored men, in the interests of the colcired people,is to be set up in that city. John Minor Botts, has bean nominat- ed for Gongressin.the Lynchburg, (Va.) district, in place of an ineligible candi date. Over 25;000 tinahela of oysteraare an . nanny planted in , the•llhemee riverwith-- in the town' ot.Notwieb,,Ownee. tient. SAFETY OF RAILROAD TRAVEL :—Not- withstanding all that is said about "rail- road murders," it can be demonstrated that railroad travelling is safer for the community than any other method of public conveyance. In the city of Lon don alone nearly five times as many per so are killed and wounded by carts, cabs, and omnibuses as are killed or in jured by all the railways of England, Scotland and Ireland taken together. The railway accidents for the last year over all the lines of the United King- ' dom together were 114 killed and 1611 wounded. During the first eight months of the present year there were compu ted to have i been in the United States 128 railroad accidents, with 266 persons killed and 1109 injured. There are a greater number of miles of railroad in operation in the United States than in Great Britain, and probably a much lar ger travel, but still the disproportion of accidents on the railroads of the two countries would imply ours to be -most unsafe. This ought not to be, and pro bably when there is capital enough in our railroads to keep them all in proper order, will not be. THE CnoLERA.--There is a strong pro. bability that this terrible epidemic will rage in Southern Europe during the winter ; and cold weather will not save either England or America from it, if the people of these countries are not as careful about their diet in December as they were in July. The disease has reached Southern France, and we shall probably learn by next steamer that it has appeared in Paris, The people of the Atlantic States cannot be too care ful of their habits for months to come. Cr Joseph Redman, a colored man, supposed to be dead, rose in his coffin, at St. Louis, the ether day, and began chattering unintelligibly, terribly fright ening his wife and other mourners who were sitting in the room, some of the women fainting and the men rushing out pell-mell, panic-stricken by the sight and incoherent talk of the late deceased. Cr The library of Peter Force, of Washington, comprising fifty thousand volumes, has been sold to the New York Historical Society. Among its curiosi ties of literature is said to be the only copy of a printed newspaper containing an account of the discovery of America by Columbus, which was published but -a few months after that event. • Cr The election in this Stale, on the 10th inst., has resulted in the general success of the Union party. The ma jority for Gen. Hartranft over. Col. Da vis, for Auditor General, and of Camp. bell ever Linton for Surveyor General, will not be less than 21,000, judging from the official and unofficial returns which have been received. 0' The grand parade of the Philadel phia Fire Department on Monday last was one of the most imposing and splen did pageants ever presented in this country. The procession was composed of twenty-two divisions, each numbering from four to six companies, making in all ovtir one hundred and fourteen, in cluding over thirty visiting companies.' ar"Three ladies of Sumter, S. C., were called to account by the Provost Marshal recently for wearing Confeder ate flags at a party. They , were sharply rebuked, and settled the matter by a written apology, in which they disavow ed all intention of insulting the United States or expressing disloyalty. 011endorf, the grammer writer, who died recently, is said to have lived shabbily on the fourth or fifth story of a great chocolate factory in the Rue Rich elieu at Paris. He bought none but second-hand newspapers, that is, papers a day old, and which had gone through many hands. He died wealthy. eir The statement relative to the muster-out of the Veteran Reserve Uprps is premature. The War Depart= meat looks upon the corps as a necessi ty for the present, and it will, not be dis banded, it is understood, until the regi ments of the regular army are snific!ent ly recruited to take its place. A.New Bedford lady who was in Boston bn Saturday week, astounded a female pickpocket, who in a crowd bad thrnst beriiand into the lady's pocket by turning and coolly inquiring, " Why do you put your hand into my pocket, when I have my purse here in my hand ?" An insane man in Tarrytown, N; Y., was about to shoot his housekeeper, when she calmly said r Mr. Lidenber ger, you are too good a man to kill me." when he turned the muzzle of the pistol to his own head, and blew out his shat tered brains. 4pir Mr. Motley, our Minister at Vi enna, is very popular in high Austrian society. He, as well as his daughter, is an excellent German scholar, and the ladies of Vienna aristocracy condescend to give Mr. Motley credit for being geisireich ( mind-rich). Cr The majority for Gov. Stone, who boldly' advocated negro suffrage, is about 15,000. The rest of the Union State ticket will probably.reach -20,000. The Legislature is largely Union. - Larl Schurz is , about to start an English radical paper in Saint Louie: s 7 ;pwal Notict.s HOSTETTER'S CELEBRATED STOMACH BITTERS Read E. D. E. N. .sauthworth's Letter. Prospect College, Georgetown, D. C. April 2, 1863. Messrs. Hostetter 4- Smith Gentlemen—lt gives me pleasure to add my testimonial to those of others in favor of your excellent preparation.—Several years of resi dence on the banks of a Southern river, and of close application to literacy work, had so thoroughly exhausted my nervous system and undermined my health, that I had become a martyr to dyspepsia and nervous headache, recurring at short intervals, and defying all known remedies in the Materia Medics.. I had come to the conclusion that nothiirg but a total change of residence and pursuits , would restore my health, when a friend recommend en Hostetter's Bitters. I procured a bottle as an experiment; it required but one bottle to convince me that I had found at last the right" combination of remedies, The relief it affor ded me has been complete It is now some years since I first tried Hostetter's Bitters, arid it is but just to say that I have found the preparation all that it claims to be. It is a Standard Fam.ly Cordial with us, and evan as a stimulant we like it better than anything else; but we use it in all nervous, bilious and dyspeptic cases, from fever down to toothache, If what I have now said will lead any dyspep tic or nervous invalid to a sure remedy, I shall have done some good. I remain, gentlemen, respectfUlly yours, E. D. E. N. SOUTH WORTH. 0, To CONSIIMPTIVES.—The undersigned hav ing been restored to health in a few weeks by a very simple remedy, after having suffered several yeisrs, with a severe lung affection, and that dread disease, Consumption, is an xious to make known to his fellow-sufferers the means of cure. To all who desire it, he will send a copy of the prescription, flee of charge, with the directions for preparing and useing the same, which they Frill find a sure cure for Consumption,Astma,Bronchitis,Colds, Coughs, etc. The only object of the adverti ser in sending the prest.ription is to benefit the afflicted and spraid information which lie conceives to be invaluable, and he hopes every sufferer, will try his reined 44, as it will . cost themonothing, and may prove a blessing. Parties wishing the prescription, will please address Rev. EDWARD A. WILSON, William sburg, Rings County, New-York. rsep3o3m TERRIBLE LISCLOSURES—SECRL e TS FORTH E MILLION ! A most valuable and wonderful publication. A work of 400 pages, and 30 colored Engravings. Dr. Hunter's Vade Me cum, an original and popular treatise on Man and Woman their Physiology, FunctioLs, and Sexual disorders of every kind, with Nev er-failing Remedies for their speedy cure. The practice of Dr. Hunter has long been, and still is, unbounded, but at the earnest so licitation of numerous persons, he has been induced to extend his medical usefulness through the medium of his "VADE MECUM." It is a volume that should be in the hands of every family in the land, as a preventive of secret vices, or as a guide for the alleviation of one of the most awful and destructive scourges ever visited mankind. One copy, securely enveloped, will be forwarded free of postage to any part of the United States for 50 cents in P.-0. stamps. Address, post paid, Dr. Hunter, No. 3 Division street, New York. To THE EDITOR OF THE MARIETTIAN.— Dear Sir :—With your permission I wish to say to the readers of your paper that I will send, by return. mail, to all who wish it, (free) a recipe, with full directions for making and using a simple Vegetable Balm that will effec tually remove, in ten ?flys, Pimples, Blotches, Tan, Freckles, and all impurities of the skin, leaving the same soft, clear, smooth and beau tiful. I will also mail free to those having Bald Heads, or Bare Faces, simple directions and information that will enable them to start a full growth of luxuriant Hair; Whiskers or a Moustache, in less than 30 days. All applications answered by return mail without charge. Respectfully yours, THOS.*. CHAPMAN, Chemist 4- Perfumer, 831 Broadway, N. Y. Dep. 30-3 m A&C One Hundred Dollars Reward will be paid by Messrs. C. G. CLARK & CO., for a medicine that will cure coughs, colds, croup, whooping cough, or relieve consumptive cough, as quick as " Coe's Cough Balsam." Let all our•readers bear in mind that COE'S Dyspepsia Cure will certainly cure the worst cases of Dyspepsia in existence ; will stop pain after eating as soon as you take it, and is a most excellect article for all diseases of the stomach and bowels. BLINDNESS, DEAFNESS and Catairh, trea ted with the utmost success, by Dr. J. isaAcs, Oculist and Aurist, (formerly of Ley - don, lot land,) N 0.519 PINE street, Philadelphia. Tea timonials from the most reliable sources in the City and Country can be seen at his office. The medical faculty are invited to accoffip , :ny their patients, as he has no secrets in his prac tice. ARTIFICIAL EYES inserted without pqin. No charge made for examination. L26-Iy. ITCH ! ITCH 1 . ! ITCH ! ! Scratch! Scratch!! Scratch !! ! "Wheaton's Ointment" will cure the Itch in 48 hours. Also cures Salt Rheum, Ulcers,Chilblains, and all eruptions of the skin. Price 50 cents. ,For sale by all druggists. By sending 60 cents to WEEES 65 POTTER, Sole Agents, _l7O Washington street, Boston, Mais.; it will be forwarded by mail, free of postage, to any part of the U. States [6m "ELECTION.—;An election for officers of the I Lancaster and Marietta Turnpike Road Company to serve the ensuing year, will take place at. the public house of John Kendig, on Monday the 6th day of November, 1865, at 9 &cloak in the forenoon. A. N. CASSEL, Sec'y. Oct. 14-4t.] 11'.Lancaster Examiner copy. LOST' on MISLAID :—A promissory note for sso' made payable to Mrs. Dias Bones teel bearing date June 23d, 1661, has •been lost or mislaid. Public notice is hereby given that payment will be refused to any per Son except to Mrs. Bonesteel in person. A. SUMMY. Marietta, Oct. 14, 1865,-3t• 1 ciLIAMPAGNE and other Table Wines guarrantepd to be pure, and sold as low es can be bought in Philadelphia or New-York. 4. D. BENJAMIN Picot Building, ACHOICE Lot of Books for children called indistructable Pleasure Books ; School and Paper Books, Stationary, Pens, Pen holders Bzc , at LANDIS & TROUT. CIIOIOE,HAVANA SEGARS, and th beet Chewing and Smoking Tobacco at WOLFE'S. URE ODD LIVER OIL JELLY,Ior sale P at, DR. HIPELE , S. . I YON'S, Peliodjeal Props, anok-Clark's 1 . 4 male -.1"1110, 'The Golden Illeortar, L'Ul'flii~. The Drug Store oppo s it e I POST OFFICE. Where Gold, Silrer an,l ARE TREES IS F.Y:CiIAN F (1 Drugs, Oledicines, &C., &C., &c., OF EVERY DESCRiiT:6I —ALSO— TOILET ARTICLES, 'Such as Perfumed Soaps, Hair Uilt, p Dyes, Pomades, Tooth Soaps, Washes, Hair, Nail, Clothe Tooth Brushes, of ail chsciip [ions. Extracts for the ' Handkerchief, Colo gnes, Ambrosia for the llair, and many other articles too tcal..l- t Ladies and Gents Port it, of every description. —A L S 0— All the-most popular Patent )leiliriiks NOW IN USE, Suen Ayer's Sarsaparilla, Jayne's Alterst.l, pectorant, and Vermifuge, ,Ta )ne , , Carminitive Balsam, &c., Hoflland's German Bitters, Sl% Worm Confeciions, Mrs. Will,lJ A • Syrup, and in fact all the most !tma'.:c medicines now in use. Fresh Coal Oil constantly on Laud. assortment of Coal Oil Lamps, ima:-..(• nays, &c. Also, articles of noz.N , • the sick, such as Corn Starch, - Root, Tapioca, &c. Spices of all kinds, Cloven, , spice, Mace, Black Pepper, Pepper, French Mustaid, &c. Chemi ca l Food, Citrate of ing Cups for the Sick, Breast • Shields, Nursing Bottles, ringes, Flavoring Extracts !or Golden Carp, or Gold Fish w.!., I .-. Aquariums. Arrmigenients hare a:. made with one of the be,t A - State,to furnish Canary and A lot of Family Dye eolith, Fresh and reliable Garden A large assortment of 1; 0 ,7„, Stationary, Everything in the Stationary .v Pens, Inks, Note, Tismie, Bi,,ttJl kinds of Paper, Envelopes, Quills, scented Gloves for the wzu . :: jen endless variety of fancy ant usually found at such esta!,lishne.::.. article not on hand will be o:,:;, A new kind of playing cards, • Cards," having Stars, Flags and CHs.i, of Clus, Diamonds, hearts, cards arc Goddesses, Colonels, Queens, Kings and Jacks. 'Elia ful and patriotic substitute for the blems and should be universally pren:: School Books, Copy Books, Slates School Stationary generally, and lidd always on hand Subscriptions for all the lustrated and Mammoth Weokla, Sheet Nlusic of all kinds will Lc with promptness atm dispatch. Having secured the services of [ H. BRITTON, an, experienced mei e : Pharmaceutist who will at:end t,, [ . compounding with accuracy a:, all hours. The Doctor himself can !l• ted at the store, unless elsewhere prof: 3, engaged. Being very thankful to the 101 l past patronage bestowed upon hi:a. and endeavor to please all who may a call. F. 111 N, LE, J! Marietta, February 4, Ibtin-tf VENV HOOP SKIRT 1:0111- - IN LINO lobefilioß of 1-i OOP SKIRTS. J. W. BRADLEY'S New Patent Duplex. Elliptic (or do . THIS Invention consists of Duplex Elliptic pure refined steel springs, braided tightly and firmly tog. c , er, L edge, making the toughest, must dexil Is. tic and durable spring ever used. dom bend or break, like the i•iaJle and consequently preserve beautiful shape more than tw as ; any single spring skirt that ever ha made. The wonderful flexibility and ;rent and pleasure to any lady wrdring the Elliptic skirt will be experienced par: in all crowded Assemblies, Operas, ci railroad cars, church pews, arm dr: .1 • promenade and house dress, hs the be folded when in use to or cups as easily and conveniently as a silk of dress. . A lady having enjoyed the pleas:Jr , . fort and great convenience of weuriv.:;:.: plex elliptic steel spring skirt for a t ar.... , will never afterwards willingly their use. For children, Misses, aul ladies they ar superier to all others. The hoops are covered with ;2 ply twisted thread and will wear twice a,: the single yarn covering which is USe Single steel hoop skirts. The three rods on every skirt are also double twice or double covered to prevent 111 , ing from wearing off the rods when ,]:. down stairs, stone steps, Ste., &c., are constantly subject to when in use All are made of the new and elegan:c tapes, and are the best quality in eve: , giving to the wearer the most par.!. perfect shape possible, and are uryuc the lightest, most desirable, comturt:2 economical Skirt ever made. \VESTS' BRADLEY '& CARY, PrOP , the invention, and Sole Manui 2actuic Chambers, and 79 & 81 Reade ,tr York. For sale in all first-class stores ill th '•• and throughout the United States, aLi • Havana de Cuba, Mexico, South and the West Indies. 11:3 Inquire for the Duplex Eli': double) Spring Skirt. First National Bank of 21p.ri THIS BANKING ASSOCIATION HAVING COMPLETED ITS OILGANIZ is nnw prepared to transact all kicc- BANKING BIJSINES. The Board of Directors meet weti;]y. Wednesday, for discount and other be=: 3.Bank Hours : From 9A.Mto 3 v. • JOHN HOLLINGER, PRES/LE , AMOS BOWMAN, Cashier. SPEAR'S FRUIT PRESERVIN O LUTION. This solution is warr , :: rightly applied, to prevent the decors',u of any kind of fruit, and preserve it in fectly fresh and wholesome condil. years. It contains nothing which is to health, or objectionable in articles el The fruit retains its firmness and is c any sealed. It is a liquid; each bottle tains sixteen ounces and will preset" , hundred and fifty pounds of fruit and at $1 per bottle. For sale at Dr. E LECTION.—An election for officer_ Marietta and Mountie) . Turripihi . Company, to serve the ensuing year, held at the public huuse of Jacob Fuld:: borough of Marietta, .on Monday the tI • of November 1865, between the Iloilo 4 o'clock in the afternoon. S.P. STEEEET, Ser's' Oct. 14, 1865-It.l - r,ILECTION. — An election for oilicor, the Marietta and Maytown Road Company to serve the ensuing . Yesr , , v ` take place at the Toll House, on the r 0 5,, ,, Monday the 6th day of November , tween the hours of 10 and 12 o'clock , A . . C. C. ParßOSl 3 3 S '' ' ' October 14,1865 49