The Mariettian. (Marietta [Pa.]) 1861-18??, December 30, 1865, Image 3

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    0 7,1 Dial J nittlian.
01111111 DAY, DECEMBER 30, 1865.
t kr Blank Notices to quit ; those
ugs lly given to tenants on the first day
easnuary. Also, carefully gotten-up
Blank Leases, for sale at this office.
orpur Carrier Boy desires ns to
lay that he will make his politest " bow
to our town subscribers on Monday—.
N e u Year's—immediately after dinner.
He lopes to find all "at home" with a
little postal currency on haud.j
l ir pr. Fleury Landis has purclased
the handsome three-storied residence
and d r ug ctore building, belonging to
Dr. a ru m for $6OOO, and is permanent.
ly located at the "Golden Mortar." Dr.
Grove, we understand, ie about to locate
is Philadelphia. Mr. Theodore Thomp
son hue purchased, at private sate, from
idr, Patterson, the A no Boggs residence
is Market square, for $2,700. Mr.
Ilirana D. Benjamin has purchased from
t h e greedy estate for $l5OO, the corner
property fronting on Front street and
Elbow Lane, and designs putting three
or four stores on it. This property has
log needed an enterprising owner.
IF ir Headley's History of the Rebel
lion will be issued in March next. This
unqnestionably, be one of the most
readable and reliable histories of the
',hellion. llr. Ucedloy's reputation as
military writer has long since been es
tablohed—his "Napoleon and his Mar
shal," or "Washington and his Gener
al," either would have established it.
The book will be gotten-up in fine style
sad sold by subscription only, but sub
seriber3 will not be obliged to take it
olden it corresponds with the descrip
tion in every particular. The engrav
nip will be of the finest order and ea
graced expressly for the work. There
will also be a German edition. The
cast of the book will be $5. Seo adver
tiament in another column.
a The twentieth anniversary of
lb:iege' Lodge, I. 0. of 0. F., was cel
ebrated in their ball, in this borough,
on Saturday evening last. We under
stand there was quite a respnctable turn
tut, consisting of ladieß, members and
citizens. An address was delivered by
P. G. Is, O. nexus, and a letter from
P, G. A. B. GROSII read. The address
and letter came too late for this week's
lA', will appear in our next.
Capt. Cyrus 8. Haldeman, Assis-
Lot Adjutant General, has been appoin.
ttd ir, by brevet, for meritorious
7Ervie2s during the war, to date from
lint. Major Haldeman has been
=tatioi ad at Philadelphia post since the
Eumuter rf 1862. The Major formerly
wa: a res:dont of Bainbridge, a few miles
West of this borough.
61 Christmas, in our place, was kept
in a kind of devil-me•care order ; more
broken noses, street lights and drunks
said to hare been exhibited than upon
any formor prise Ktickle day within the
recollection of that superannuated gen
tleman, known as this "oldest inhirtai
tau',"
tre Oil Thursday last the ice very
Tilsity left the Susquehanna, which put
Neat °lour ieegatherers in quite a quan
dary—whether to fill with the Lank ice
or wait for another "crop,"—some filled
tillikt others determined to
_bide their
time and "run the chances" of a better
Ca Samuel riuusiers, jr , while skating
apo the canal no last Saturday after.
won, came in contact with a rope
stretched from a boat to the birm bank,
ad the force of the collision threw him
upon the ice, hurting him severely about
the face and shoulders.
It Stephen Miller, son of Samuel G.
Miller, of this borough, was rou over by
e horse sad carriage on last Saturday
in Market street. The car,
riage paz3ed over hie body but did not
severely injure him.
R' John Spangler and Patterson &
es • , baea jost received a fine assortment
(If 'limes—for ladies, boys, and boys of a
iar Or growth. Cau't we, too, have a
86 . 1 ing park ? Who answers yes ?
•%.,.• • ~ tor,*
gir A vary pleasant "sociable" took
Nate at Llouseal's on Thursday evening
Lst. The young 'uns enjoyed them
selves use are told, until a late hoar on
Friday mum.
1664 ' ll - r •c'neStoga Slackwater Navi
gallon whioli taus from Graefre Landing
to Safe ['arbor, is to be sold by the
Sherif of this County on the 13th day of
January next.
lir 1116 I•cieotitic American, the old
est an d hee periodical of ite kind is
4 "ut to Hater a new volume. See card
in another
......
,„ 14r. BlackAell & Co., 171 . Broadway,
York offer inducements to lovers
of literAtare. Soo their card in another
coluroo.
••••, ......
...........
knit 1 4 An election for directors of the
R ational Bank of Marietta will
ar :4l9 Place on rneeday 9th day of jauu
y.
Ihr r. Henry U.
"6 eting a akm,il4,----
co works je
39 6 \
(15016. J. IC. MFFEA.BACIT
" I •
rX.‘ 9 Mfg about to retire from the memmettle bu
k -
ar °Pon' &Ires fis4lvill sell kb cock! stock, whole Or
M0R7':421. 2
Tee. cesx,_ without regard to•eoet.,
LANCASTER, DECEMBER 26TR, 1865
COL. F. L. BASER,
I have Just received the sad intelli
gence of the death of my brother Jacob.
As he was born in Marietta, and lived
there for a number of years, this notice
of his death may be of some interest to
his relatives and friends who still reside
there. He left Marietta in the autumn
of 1841, and, with the exception of about
six months, has been a resident of the
States of Kentucky and Missouri, from
that time until the present.
He married Miss Ellen Carson, of
Lexington, Kentucky, in the autumn of
1847, and removed to Lexington, Mis
souri, in the spring of 1848, where he
has ever since resided, and where be
died on the 16th of the present month
at " twenty minutes past eleven o'clock
A. M., in the forty-fourth year of his
age.
With the exception of about one year,
during the darkest period of the late re
bellion, and when postal communication
with that peculiarly afflicted portion of
the country bad been entirely suspended,
we kept up a constant correspondence ;
and therefore I was regularly advised of
the experiences and sufferings, of various
kinds, which he had undergone, during
the last five or six years of his life. He
died of eonsnmption, that fell disease,
which has proved so fatal to those mem
bers of our family who have inherited
the constitutional tendencies of my moth
er. But before his own death he saw
his children and his wife, one after anoth
er, all sink prematurely into their graves,
by modifications of the same disease,
and, add to this, the apparent destruc
tion of his pecuniary prospects upon this
earth, by the desolations of war—leaving
him alone like a blighted tree at a peri
od when be should have been in the
prime of life, but instead thereof, en
feebled by physical disease and mental
depression. His former partner in busi
ness, writes me briefly, but promises de
tails in a future communication. " Be
fore he died he was entirely sensible—
told his friends he suffered from a pain
in his right lung, but did not speak of
dying. He appeared like one sleeping,
and died without a struggle. Many of
his friends attended his funeral, and he
was buried in " hlacpbala Cemetery"
by the side of his wife and children."
In matters of religions profession he
made no pretensions whatever, brit those
who seemed to know him best, consider
ed him honest and conscientious to a
fault ; for upon these grounds he was
constantly standing in the light of his
own pecuniary interests. If be was
"rich toward God," the mere sacrifice
of worldly wealth will be no hinderance
to his progress in the eternal world ; and
there, in the keeping of Him who causeth
his sun to shine, and his rains to descend
upon the evil and the good, we mortals
must leave him.
Death is always a serious and a sad
event, although it is not necessarily a
terrible one. There are no terms con
nected with it, except those which we
ourselves have written upon the various
pages of our " Book of life ;" that Book
out of which all men will respectively
be judged. The great question is, do
we Mink of, and live this truth sufficient:
I) ? Do we remember that we are al
ways writing something upon its pages
—either good or bad ? It is in _vain
that we pretend the leaves are all blank,
if no good is written thereon. Eternal
activity is the immutable law of a
healthy mind, and if its activities are
not progressive, then they are retro
gressive, for there as no neutral ground
upon the moral plane. But there is a
use in death, independent of its means
as a transit of a "weary heavy; laden
soul" to the realms ofrest. It is anoth
er milestone in the moral and spiritual
way of the living, warning them that
they themselves are one more step near
er to the grave. S. S. R.
Only two survivors, of all those who
participated in the war of the Revolu
tion, so far as known by the Commis
sioner of Pensions, remain alive, name
ly Win. hatchings, of Penobscot,
Hancock county, Maine, aged 101 years,
and Lemuel Cook, of Clarendon, Orleans
county, New York, aged 99 years. On
ly five widows of revolutionary soldiers
draw pensions from the Government, at
a yearly amount of $293.
M, Lindback, the Swedish clergyman
who was accused of poisoning by whole
sale while administering the commudion,
has committed suicide by banging him
self in prison.
Wood for
5n OR 60 CORDS OAK WOOD, for sale.
Price, Five and Six Dollars a cord.
Apply to GEO. W. STAHL.
Marictta, December 30, 1865.
Estate of Jno. M.:Adams, late of the
Borough of Marietta, deceased.
Letters of administration on said estate bar
ing been granted to the undersigned, all per
sons indebted thereto are requested to make
immediate settlement, and those baying claims
or demands against the same will present them
without delay for settlement to the undersign
ed, residing in the Borough of Marietta.
JOHN A EMER,
Administrator. -
Marietta, December 30, 1865. 21-6 t
ARGAINS ! BARGAINS! !
- ' BARGAINS!!!
c- , s - WTHE
HEAD
HISTORY OF THE
GREAT REBELLION !
Dear Sir.—
THE late rebellion stands out peculiar and
extraordinary in human events; and the
magnificent scale upon which the war has
been conducted, constitute it one of the grand
est and most brilliant chapters of the world's
history.
Mr. Headley, of all writers, is perhaps beet
qualified to portray the the stupendous feat
ures of the mighty contest. His previous
works on less momentous themes have placed
him in the first position, as a graphic and pow
erful de/eniator of war scenes and characters,
and the magnitude and grandeur of the pres
ent subject, impart to his pen the fire and vi
gor of a yet more exacted inspiration, and fur
nish ample scope for the highest exhibition of
his peculiar genius for military description.
Under his powerful pen the stirring scenes Of
the War pass in review with the vividness and
distinctness of a present and living reality ;
while his great talent for condensation ena
bles him to embody everything of importance
in a compass just Suited to the public Want.
From no other source can so clear and com
prehensive an impression of the grand march
of events be obtained, so easily and agreeably
as from Mr. Headley's work.
Other histories have been issued before
Grant's Report and other official documents
were submitted to the government, and there
fore unreliabie. s:r. Headley has delayed the
completion of this till those documents ao es
sential to authenticity and correctness could
be obtained.
The second volume, completing this work,
will be issued it March, 1566. Agents wan
ted to engage in its sale in every town and
county in the United States. Liberal induce
ments offered. For particulars apply to or ad
dress AMERICAN PUBLISHING CO.,
No. 148 Asy:um-st., Hartford, Conn.
Scranton 45. Barr, Agents.
ADJOURNED COURTS
FOR 1866.
It is ordered by the Court of Lancaster Co.,
that Adjourned Courts for 1866 for the trial
and decision of cases in the Common Pleas,
Orphans' Court, and Quarter Sessions, are to
be held as follows:
FOR ARGUMENTS.
One week, commencing Monday, March 19th
Et Et EE " June ISth.
1TM133
Si IC " 16 Decem. 17.
To continue one week from the said days re
spectively, ana as much longer as the business
may require. All the cases on the list for
argument in the Orphans' Court shall be taken
up on the first days of said terms, and be pro
ceded with until disposed of, unless continued
by consent or cause shown.
The cases on the argument list in the Quar
ter Sessions shall be taken up on Wednesday
of said term if not prevented by the Orphans
Court and if so, the cases in the Quarter See
sionsrwill be commenced on the termination
of the Orphans' Court business.
The argument of the cases of the Common
Pleas to be commel,ced on Thursday of the
week, if not prevented by the Orphans' Court
or Quarter Sessions cases, in that case, the ar
gument list of said court is to be taken up at
the termination of the cases in the other courts,
and proceeded in until disposed of, unless con
tinued by consent or cause shown.
It is further ordered that the absence of
counsel at the time appointed for hearing the
cases mentioned in the proceeding orders shall
be no cause for suspending proceedings there
in, unless by consent, or legal ground for a
continuance be shown.
It is ordered by the Court that adjourned
courts for Jury trials in the Common Pleas,
will be held as follows :
One week, commencing on the sth of Mon
day in January, 29th.
One week, commencing on the 3d Monday
in February, 19th,
One week, commencing on the 4th Monday
in February, 26th,
One week, commencing on the 4th Monday
in May, 28th.
One week, commencing on the Ist Monday
in June, 4th.
One week, commencing on the Ist Monday
in September, 3d.
One week, commencing on the 3d Monday
in October ; 15th.
One week, ommencing on the 4th Monday
in October, 22d.
One week, commencing on tha Ist Monday
in December, 3d.
And such other periods as may be appoint
ed at the aforesaid courts, or at rcgular terms.
The foregoing to - be published in all the
newspapers in the city and county of Lancas
ter, by one insertion in each, at the expense
of the county. Bill to be presented at the
Commissioners' Office.
NEW GOODS AT
• J. IL. DIFFENBACH'S.
-----
Third Arrival of Fall and "Wintor Goods.
Such as Fancy and Plain Colored Alpaccas;
French Merinoes ; Coburgs; Plain and
Figured all wool DeLaines ; all colors
Sacking Flannels; Ladies Cloaking
and Water-Proof Cloths. Good
assortment bleached and un
bleached Muslins • Checks;
Ginghains ; Ticking and
Canton Flannels; Crash,
&c.. &c., &c., &c.
GENTS DEPARTMENT.
Clothe and Cassimers, all grades, both Foreign
and Domestic; superior Esquimaux Bea
ver, for Oyer-Coating; Neck-Ties;
Collars; Suspenders ; Gloves ;
Hosiery, &c., &c.
GROCERIES OF ALL KINDS,
Molasses. Sugars, Rio and Java Coffee, Spiess,
Mackerel, Buckets, Brooms, Table and
Floor Oil Cloths, Window Blinds,
Glut. and Qucensware, &c.
Having purchased exclusively FOR CASH
will enable him to sell as cheap t s the cheapest.
iC'Country Produce taken in exchange for
goods. [Oct.-21, 18h&.
LETTERS RfaIAINING unclaimed in the
Post Office at Marietta, Pa., Txx &spa Y,
DECEMBER 2.5, 1865.
Powers,Jacob Stroke William
Baldwin, Mr. R. M. Smith, James
Clayknobb, Henry Snyder, Mrs. Barbara
Jones, Mr. F. F. Tshudy, Miss Sarah
Kohln, Adam Theisinger, William
Leech, Jacob y eager, Alber,
Meckley. Mrs. Mary Zink, Barney
Popp, William
To obtain any of these letters, the ape
plicant must call for "advertised letters," giv
the date of this list, and pay one cent for ad
verde:Mg. ABRAHAM CASSEL, P. M.
An election for nine directors to serve the
ensuing year, will he held at the Banking
House, in the Borough of Marietta, on Tues
day, January 9th, 1866, between the hours of
1 and 3oc lock, p. ■n. AMOS BOWMAN,
Cashier.
OLGATVS TOILET SOAPS.
only, Clycerine, Palm,Almond, Bathand
Shaving SOAPS. Equa to any imported.—
Juit received and for eale, very cheap at
THE GOLDEN MORTAR.
CHOICE HAVANA SEGARS, and the
bed Chewing and Smoking
WOLFETobacco
S. at
'
SUBSCRIPTION S received for all the late
Periodicals of the day
At The Golden Mortar.
ROGER'S Celeorated Pearl Cement and
Oil Paste Blacking at
" THE GOLDEN MORTAR.
T. CROIX izip" NEW ENGLAND
0 for culinary purposea, warranted gen dine
11: D. Bi , aninli • -•-
, .
" Sept. 17th
ADJOURNED JURY TRIALS
LADIES DIIES,N GOODS,
BANK NOTICE.
First National Bank of Marietta,
December 6, 1865.
WATCHES
cfc ,T_
Corner of North Queen-St., and Centre
Square, Lancaster, Pa.
American and Swiss 'Watches
IN GOLD AND SILVER CASES
cic)oiT_s,
edr EIGHT DAY AND 30 HOUR,
IN G//EAT VARIETY, AND FROM
THE BEST FACTORIES.
SPECTACLES in every style of
frame, and with glasses to suit
any who need artificial aid. We have twen
ty years experience in this business.
SILVER-WARE.
Spoons, Forks, Butter Knives, Sic stamped
with our name and warranted standard.
PLATEDW ARE
The beat platedware in the United States.
We warrant our best Table ware—Spoons,
Forks, &0.,—t0 wear ten years in daily use.
JEWELRY.
•
Rings, Pins, Sleeve Buttons, Studs and a va
riety of every article in this line.
HAIR JEWELRY.
Hair Jewelry made to order. Two hundred
styles, or samples, constantly on hand.
D:i 2 ltepairing of Watches, Clocks, Specta
cles or Jewelry, done neatly and promptly.
H. L. k E. J. ZAH.III,
Corner North Queen Street and Centre Square,
LANCASTER, PA.
SUPPLEE & BRO.,
IRON AND BRASS
FOUNDERS
and General Machinists, Second stree
Below Union, Columbia, Pa.
They are prepared to make all kinds of Son
Castings for Rolling Mills and Blast Furnaces,
Pipes, for Steam, Water and Gas; Columns,
Fronts, Cellar Doois, Weights, &C., for Buil
dings, and castings of every description ;
. STEAM ENGINES, AND BOILERS,
IN THE MOST MODERN AND IMPROVED
Manner; Pumps, Brick Presses, Shafting and
Pulleys, Mill Gearing, Taps, Dies, Machinery
for Mining and Tanning ; Brass Bearings,
Steam & Blast Gauges, Lubricators, Oil Cocks,
Valves for Steam; Gas, and Water; Brass Fit
tings in all their variety; Boilers, Tanks, Flues,
Heaters, Stacks, Bolts, Nuts, Vault Doors,
Washers, &c.
BLACKSMITHING in GENERAL.
From long experience in building machinery w
flatter ourselves that we can give general satis
faction to those who may favor us with thei
orders. I Repairing promptly attended to.
Orders by mail addressed as above, will meet
with prompt attention. Prices to suitthe times.
Z. SUPPLEE,
T. R. SUPPLEE..
Columbia, October 20, 1860. 14 tf
L ADIES TAKE PARTICULAR
NOTICE
De, ilea 4
[ WARItA NTED FRENCH. ]
These Pills, so celebrated many years ago
in Paris, for the relief of female irregularities,
and afterwards so notorious for their criminal
employment in the practice of abortion, are
now offered for sale for the first time in Amer
ica. They have been kept in comparative ob
scurity from the fact that the originator, Dr.
V ALPAU, is a Physician in Paris : of great
wealth and strict conscientious principles, and
has withheld them from general use, lest they
should be employed for unlawful purposes.
In overcoming female obstructions they seem
to be truly omnipitent, bursting open the flood
gates from whatever cause may have stopped
them ; but they are offered to the public only
for legitimate uses, and all agents are forbid
den to sell them when it is understood that
the object is unlawful.
For sale by Dr. P. Hinkle, Marietta ; P. A.
Pyle, Mountjoy ; H. D. Parry and R. Wil
liams, Columbia, and druggists generally.
Ladies can procure a box, sealed from the
eyes of the curious, by enclosing $1 and six
postage stamps to D. G. STAPLES, General
Agent for us, Watertown, New-York, or to
any of the above agents. [n0.25-ly
NEW TRIMMING & VARIETY
STO RE,
Opposite ,Diffenbachts and two doors
West of the Golden Mortar
Drug Store, Market-sl.,
Marietta.
MR& IviARGARET ROTH
Begs leave to aunounce to the Ladies of the
Borough of Marietta and vicinity, that she
has just opened an entire new stock of
TRIMMINGS AND VA-RIETIES,
embiacing all the Novelties of the Season,
among which will be found
Plain and Fancy Mantua and Velvet
J.ibbons, Gimps, Cords and flassels,
and Buttons in endless variety,
Hosiery and Gloves, Linen & Emb'd Collars,
Zephyr Shawls, Plain & Emb'd IPdkfs,
Opera Caps, Silk & Zephyr Scarfs,
Suspenders, Cermantow a Wool,
Twilights, Breakfast Coseys,
Braids and Shetland Wobl,
Bindings, Zephyr Yarn,
Laces, Neck-Ties,
BALMORiLS, SKELETON SKIRTS,
Corsets, Belting, Edging, Rufllingi
Embroidery, Fancy Soaps, &c.
Particular attention has been paid to the se
lecting of small wares, such as Sewing Silk,
cotton and Linen Thread, Whalebone, Hooks
Cad Eyes, Needles, Pins. &c.
IC?* The public are particularly requested to
Call and examine for themselves.
Mrs. It. is agent for the sale of the cel
ebrated Singer "A" Family Sewing Machines
which took the first premium at the late New
York - State Fair. She will also instruct per
sons purchasing from her, how to work the
machine. (9-tf
THE LADY'S FRIEND—
The Best of.the Monthlies—devoted to
Fashion and Pure Literature. $2.150 a dear;
Two copies $4.00 ; Eight (and one gratis)
$l6. WHEELER & WILSON'S SEWING
MACHINES given as premiums. Send 15
cents for a sample cnpy to DEACON & PE
TERSON, 319 Walnut st.,
Single numbers for sale by all the News
dealers.
L l ME ! LIME! !
- 0
Fresh Lime for Whitewashing and Building,
For sale it HENRY WOLFE'S,
opposite the Post Office, in large or small lots.
This Lime is much better than that which ls
brought from a distance. It is carefully se
lected. lam now selling the best lump at
35 cents per bushel ; 10 cents per peck ;
Five cents per half-peck.
HENRY WOLFE, Market-st., opposite the
Post Office, Marietta. [6m*
AN IMPROVED LANTERN
lIIS is the most desirable Lantern in the
j_ market. It burns "Coil' Oil witlibut a
Chimney. emitting neither smoke nor smell.,
It gives a pure white light.
It stands quick motions in any direction.
The flame is regulated from the outside.
It is neat and compact in form and size.
It is free from solder in the upper parts, and
is otherwise very substantial in its structure.
PRICE, ONE DOLLAR
For sale at JOHN SPANGLER'S
' Hardivare Store, on Market street.
PPLE S 1 SOO Barrels New-York and
Michigan Winter Apples, •
wit renewal aiiiillitsttiteja - .. , ,
SPAI47OLEII "R/CH.
• " \ "0,
. ~ C`=
•~.::~
INVENTORS, MECHANICS, MAN
UFACTURERS,
The best paper in the United States for Ma
chanies, Inventors, and Manufacturers, is
the Scientific American. It is the largest in
size, and has by far the widest circulation of
any other paper of its class in this country.—
It is published weekly. Each number contains
sixteen pages, with numerous illustrations.—
The numbers for a year makes two volumes
of 416 pages each.. It also contains a full ac
count of all the principal inventions and dis
coveries of the day. Also, valuable illustra
ted articles upon tools and Machinery used in
workshops, Manufactories, Steam ana Me
chanical Engineering, A oolen, Cotton, Chem
ical, Petroleum, and all other manufacturing
and producing interests. Also, Fire Aims,
War implements, Ordnance, War vessels,
Railway machinery, Electric, Chemical, and
Mathematical spparatus, wood and lumber
Machinery, Hydraulics, Oil and water pumps,
water- wheels, etc.; Household, Horticultural
and Farm implements—this latter department
being very full and of great value to Farmer
and Gardeners.—Articles embracing every de
partment of popular Science, which everybody
can understand and which everybody likes to
read.
Also, report of Scientific Societies, at home
and abroad ; Patent-law Decisions and discus
sion, practical recipes, etc. It also contains
ffi
an Official List of all the Patent Claims, a
special feature of great value to inventors and
owners of patents.
The Publishers also act as agents forprocu
ring Patents for new Inventions.
A new volume of the Scientific American
commences January 1.
TERMS: $3 per year; $1:50 for six months.
Ten copies for one year, $25, Canada Sub
scriptions. 25 . cents extra. Specimen• copies
sent free. Address,
MU.NN & CO.,
No. 37 Park Row, New York City
PATTERSON & CO.,
NO. 66 MARKET STREET,
MARIETTA, PA.
D EALERS IN
FOREIGN & DOMESTIC
HARDWARE..,
Keep constantly on hand a full stock of Buil
ding Material, Nails,
LOCKS, HINGES, 45
GLASS, PAINTS, CILS, WHITE LEAD, A
SUPERIOR ARTICLE OF CEMENT, &C.,
111 0N: Rolled and Hammered
Iron, Steel, Horse-Shoes Bar,
Norway Nail Rods, Hoop and Band Irtrt,
Horse-Shoe Nails, Bolts, Files, Rasps, etc.
ROUSE-KEEPING GOODS.
FIRST-CLASS COOKING
AND PARLOR STOVES, RANGES,
. Tubs, Churns, Cedar Stands,
Wash Boards, Buckets,
Knives and Forks,
Plated and illetalie Spoons,
Sad Irons, Kraut Cutters, Waiters, Brass and
Copper Kettles Clothes Wringera,' Pans,
Iron Ladles, Meat Stands, Coal Oil
Lamps, Shades and Lanterns, Tea
Scales, Coffee Mills, Painted
Chamber Setts, &c., &c.
Forks, Shovels, Hoes, Spades, Horse Brushes,
Wheel Grease, Fish, Sperm and Lubric Oils,
Cistern Pumps, Long and Short Traces,
Breast Chains, &c., &c.
TOOLS: Hand and Wood Saws, Hatchets,
Chopping and Hand Axes, Planes, Chisbels,
Augers and Auger Bits, Braces, Prunning
Hooks and Sheets, &c., &c.
Thankful for past patronage, we hope to merit
and receive a continuance of the same.
PATTERSON 4r CC.
Marietta, August 1, 1865.
STOV ES !
STOVES! STOVES!! STOVES!!!
COOK STOVES,
COOK STOVES,
STOVES, 0,
AT JOHN SPANGLER'S.
PARLOR STOVES, PARLOR STOVES,
PARLOR STOVES,
GAS-BURNING STOVES AT
STOVES, STOVES,—VULCAN STOVES,
FOR HEATLAG
TWO OR FOUR
ROOMS _WITH
ONE FIRE—FOURTH
SUPPLY N 0 W READY—CALL AND
SEE THEM AT
J. Spangler's Hardware and Stove Store
Market Street, Marietta, Pa.
WINES & LIQUORS.
D. BENJAMIN,
DEAL ER IN
WINES &
- Picot Building, Xarietta, Pa.
BEGS leave to inform the public that he
will continue the WINE & LIQUOR busi
ness, in all its branches. He will constantly
keep on hand all kinds of
Brandies, Wines, Gins, Irish and Scotch
Whiskey, Cordials, Bitters, &c.,
BENJAMIN'S
Justly Celebrated Rose TVhisky,
ALWAYS ON HAND.
A very superior OLD RYE WHISKEY
ust received, which is warranted pure.
n'• All H. D. B. now asks'of the public
is a careful examination of his stock and pri
ces, which will, he is confident, result in lie
el keepers and others finding it to their ad
antage to make their purchases from I im
A LEXANDER LYNDSAY,
ug irig
Fashionable
Soot and Shoe Manufacturer,
MARKET STREET, MARIETTA, PENN
Would most respecttully inform the citizens
of this Borough and neighborhood that he has
the largest assortment of City made work in
his line of business in this Borough, and be
ing a practical BOOT AND SHOE MAKER
himself,is enabled to select with more judgment
than those who are not. Be continues to man
ufacture in the very best manner everything
in the BOOT AND SHOE LINE, which he
will warrant for neatness and good fit
gall and examine his stack before pur
chasing elsewhere.
SKATES! SKATES!! SKATESi ! !
Has just opened for the inspection of the lov
ed of skating, the largest, best and most va
ried assortment of Skates ever before offered
to the public.
Ladies, Gents, Misses, sad Youths can be
supplied with any quality and style desired,
at the lowest prices,
Also, Table and Pocket Cutlery, fine Ivory
handled goods, Pocket Books, Cigar-cases,
Gentlemen's Companions, Ladies Companions
Pocket Skate-Gimblets, Nut Crackers, (new)
Pocket Match safes, Ladies Work Boxes, and
a variety of other fancy articles suitable for
Presents; an early cal/ is solicited.
Sprin g
Shawls Bellmorels Gloves, Hosiery,
Belts and Bue'lles, Embroidered'Handker
chiefs and Collars, Mourning Collars and
Veils, Head Nets and Dress Tnnunings.
A. full supply at
SPANGLER & RICH'S.
110kIVER'S Ilag: co it :a
GET TIIE BEST!
1866 I 1866 !
1866
I=
JOHN SpANGLERS
Holiday Presents !
JOHN SPANGLER
SCHENCK'S MANDRAKE PILLS,
FOR LIVER COMPLAINT.
A SUBSTITUTE POE CALOMEL
If your bowels are costive,
TRY THEM.
If you have worms,
If your breath is bad;
If you feel drowsy,.
TRY THEM
If you are law spirited,
TRY THEM
If you have a sick headache,
TRY THEM.
If you have taken a drop to much,
TAKE A FULL DOSE.
They only cost 25 cents a box,
TRY THEM.
Blue 14Iass, and other preparations of Mer
cury, actually proacce more suffenng and
death than the diseases which they profess to
cure. And yet this corrosive mineral so de
nounced by the allopathic doctors, is prescri
bed by them almost universally in Liver Com
plaint, Consumption of Lungs, &c.
THE MANDRAKE PILLS
arc composed entirely of roots and herbs ob
tained from the great storehouse of Nature,
and their salutary effects will appear as soon
as the medicine is brought to the test of a fair
experiment. SCHENCK'S MANDRAKE
PILLS do not produce at y nausea or sickuesti
of the stomach ; but when given for Dyspep
sia, it may be proper to use them in connec
tion with SCHENCK'S SEAWEED TONIC.
By this judicious treatment the digestive fac
ulties are speedi:y restored to their full vigor,
and the worst cases of indigestion may be
cured.
When we reflect that the liver is the largest
internal organ of the body, that to it is assign
ed the important duty of filtering the bluod
and preparing the bile, that it is subject to
many disorders, and that when it is diseased
or inactive the whole body suffers sympathet.
ically, it is not surprising that a medicine
which can restore the healthy operations of
the Liver should produce wonderful changes
in the general health, an I effect cures which
may appear to be almost miraculous. Head
ache of long continuance, severe pains in tile
side, breast and shoulders, aching of the limbs,
a feeling of general weakness and wietched
ness, and other alarming and distressing symp
toms, indicative of imperfect or disordered ac
tion 01 the liver, are speedily removed by the
use of SCHENCK'S MANDRAKE PILLS.
Costiveness, piles, bitter or sour eructations,
and that indescribable feeling of oppression'
mental anxiety, languor, lethargy. and do
prossion of spirits, which unfit a man for the
management of business and the enjoyment of
life, are all relieved by the use of SCH ENC K'B
MANDRAKE PILLS.
Di,. SCIIENCK.—Dear it : . I take pleasure
in sending you a certificate in addition to
many you have already received from suffer
ing humanity. I can scarcely find language
sufficiently strong to express my heartfelt
gratification of the wonderful cures your
MANDRAKE PILLS and SEAWEED TON
IC have effected in the entire cure of one of
the most stubborn cases of the affection of the
liver. For three years I suffered beyond de
scription ; all my friends, as well as myself,
came to the conclusion that my time in this
life was short. Such was the terrible condi
tion to which I was seduced that life to me
had bee...ane a burthen ; my whole system was
in a state of inflammation; I could not eat, I
could not sleep; my whole body was filled
with pain ; swelling would arise io ray wrists
and ankles, rendering them totally useless.
On several occasions I was attacked with a
rush of blood to the head, "which would fell
me to the ground, and I would be carried
away for dead. I applied to several eminent
physicians of our city, who administered all
the medicines that they thought would reach
lily case, but of no avail.
One of them said he could do no more for
me, and advised me, as a last resort, to drink
cod liver oil. Not relishing the horrid trash I
declined to take it. Accident put your adver
tisement iu my hands. I called on you ; you
examined me and told me the nature of my
disease. You then ordered me ..he Pills and
Tonic with an observance of diet, pledging
your word that in one week I would find my
self another 'man. I followed your advice,
and, as you predicted, an astonishing cure was
effected. I continued your Pills and Tonic
for some time, and now thank God for his
goodness, and your invaluable medicine, I
am once mole restored to perfect health. I
most earnestly reccommend those who are
suffering from affection of the liver to give
your Pills and Tonic a fair trial, and a cure
will be effected. I have sent many persons
to you, and they have all been cured. Any
information my fellow-citizens may require
will be freely given by the subscriber, at his
residence, No. 812 Federal street, between 8 n
street and Passyunk road.
CHARLES JOHNSON, Sit,
Formerly Printers' Ink Manufacturer.
DR. SCHENCK will be professionally at h . 2
principal office, No. 15 North Sixth street, co r•
ner of Commerce, Philadelphia, every Satur
day, from 9 a. in., until 4 p. m. ; No. 32 Bond
street, New York, every Tuesday, from 7 to
3 ; No. 38 Sumner street, Boston, Mass.,
every Wednesday, from 9 to 3 ; and every
other Friday at 108 Baltimore street, Balti
more, Md. All advices free, but for a thor
ough examination of the lungs with his R es
pirometer the charge is three dollars.
Price of the Pulmonic Syru) and Seaweed
Tonic, each $1.50 per bottle, or $7.50 per half
dozen. Mandrake Pills, 25 cents per box.
For sale by all Druggists & Dealers. [2l
ritin.g
AND PAPER-HANGING.
Mhe undersigned would respectfully an
nounce to his old friends and the public
generally, that he continues the above business
in all its various branches
Especial attention paid to plain aad fancy
paperhanging, China glossing, Frosting and
Enamelling Glass, Graining of all kinds, Bz. - u.
Thankful for past favors, would ask a con
tinuance of the same. Residence a few doors
west of the Town Hall, on Walnut street.
DAVID H. MELLINGER.
Marietta, Nov. 25„ 1865.—1 Y.
CHARLES WILLIAMS,
[FORMERLY or LANCASTER, PA. ~
Successor to John Walker,
Fashionable Barber & Hair Dresser,
NEAR FRONT STREET,
Between the White Swan and Eagle Hotels,
MARIETTA, PA.
HAVING purchased the good will and fix
tures of J. Walker's establishment,would
respectfully ask a trial of the customers of the
shop and the public generally, having had a
number of years experience in the Barbering
business feels confident of being able to give
entire satisfaction.
irt you want a
First-rate Black or Fancy Silk
A neat or gay c b allie or De Laine
A superior Black or fancy Woolen De Laine
A fine or medium Black or Colored Alpaca
A good Lavella, De Baige or Poplin
An Excellent Chintz or good Calico
A French, Eri,glish or Shambry Gingham
You will find it at •
SPANGLER & RICH'S
iteOß PRINTING of every' description ex
utedNith: neistruiwaSid kispatch it the
,ce erns 4.*:iitittfisn.
,'.
=
TRY THEM
TRY THEM