The Mariettian. (Marietta [Pa.]) 1861-18??, February 03, 1866, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    he Natieftiatt.
- •
"4-0, ,":`,gt";'-
4 6•• ' - '
' I Ail, z,;
F L jjaker, Editor.
MARIETTA. PA :
s4ll.o4llYoroing, febNatT 8, iB6B.
or A London letter says_ that Queen
Victoria is:f.v.richer- than was Leo4old,
or than is probably 'any sovereign in
Europe. She receives large snm,
spends little, gives lees, has all her ex
penses paid, and her property is accumu
lating to an enormous amount. All her
children are provided foi by the State,
and if she lives forty years longer, as
she well may, coming of a long-lived
family, she will die worth more millions
than any one but a Rothschild could re
alize. The same letter says that when
Mies Burdett Coutts became the heiress
of Mrs. Coutte, whO bad been - Miss Mel
lon, the actress, herlortine was compu
ted at thirteen tons of gold.
eir The bill 'ratifying ttie Constitution
al Amendment received Governor
,
Ward's signature by the 'Legislature of
New Jersey, on the 28d inst. The Gov
ernor employed, in writing his name, an
eagle's-quill pen, trimmed with red,
white and blue ribbons. His signature,
is made in a bold, open hand, indicating
the cheerfulness with which he perform
ed this duty, in view of the important
fact that New Jersey was no , longer a,
slave State, but has assumed her posi
tion as one of the emancipated common
wealths of the reconstructed nation. .
2' A Fortress Monroe correspondent
of the Boston Traveller writes that large
quantities of the bedding of the Hamp
ton General Hospital has been bought
tolurnish hotels in Baltimore, Washing
ton and Philadelphia. Fifty cords of
iron bedsteads, 4000 mattresses, 10,000
blankets and 6000 sheets, almost,
as good as new, a few . still stained by
the blood of wounded northern soldiers,
thousands of whom, both white and col
ored, died upon
_them.; go north to fur
nish a house of summer resort.
Kentucky continues her disloyal
antics.--Bere is the last batch 1. The
Legislature passed a bill incorporating
a bank for c'olbred people, providing
that no inhabitant of " Boston, Mass."
should ever haie anything' to do with it.
2. be house has passed a resolution,
for the'second time, rejecting the Con
stitutional Amendment abolishing slave
ry, adding that this, must be considered
to ho foal in the matter I—Poor 'Ken•
Rocky I how bait thou fallen
Cr Norristown is to have a skating
park and Harrisburg a public bathing
place. The former is to be started by
a company of well horn citizens of .
Norristown, with a capital of ten thous.
and dollars, and the latter by a company
which is to have the right to buy or
lease sufficient Around on one of the
islands opposite that city to enable
them to erect the necessary, buildings,
for bathing purposes.
fier At a recent Edit oriel Convention,
held at Erie, Pa., op the 17th ultin3o,
amongst other resolutions adopted was
one recommending tbe Advertising firm
of Pettengill & Co., 37 Park Row, New
York, for its integrity and financial abil
ity. This we do most cordially endorse.
fir Mrs. Patterson, daughter of Pres
ident Johnson, is reported to have said
to a very prominent and fashionable
woman "We are plain people from the
mountains of Tennestiee, and we shall
not put on airs because wo chance to
occupy this. place fora short, time."
Or A new counterfeit on the twenty.
five cent fractional currency is in circu
lation. In this counterfeit Mr. Fessen.
den is adornedwith a breastpin, which
does not appear in the genuine. The
engraving of the vignette is very imper
fect.
INT Mrs J. B. Nelson, wife of a vary
respectable citizen of Rockford, lowa,
recently poisoned her little child and
eloped with 3 ona J. E. Welch, her former
schoolmaster.
tar At a late convention of negroes
at Augusta, Georgia, resolutions were
jsdopted opposing.universal suffrage, lattt
favoring suffrage for such-blacks as can
read and writs:
I James Peyton, of Fredericksburg
Va , once worth over having
lost all his property.`, hr the war, and
being too old and'feeble to labor, has
been sent to the Washingt6i/almishouse.
gar It has been decided bi the conr
of Queen'ssitench,-in Dublin, that a cler
gy man of thethareh-of England can le
gaily marry bittelf.
sir A. rowysof„wanden .buildings in
Dunkift, New York,was burned on the
23d. Four persons perlsbefl In the
flames.
or Rev. D. McCauley, of Colombia
will preach in the M. E. oburoh, todwor ,
TSB BOMB Wurtmr.—The Philadel
phia Home Weekly is the title of a first
class illustrated weekly newspaper pub
lished in Philadelphia by Geo. W. Childs
the publisher of the world famed Ledger.
The Home Weekly has on its list of
contributors fifty of the best writers now
before the public. With this splendid
array of talent it will no doubt soon be
the leading literary paper of America.
Terms :—52.00 a year, or two copies for
$3.00; eight copies for $lO.OO ; or six
teen copies for $2O, and one to the get
ter-up of the club. All communications
must be addressed to Geo. W. Childs,
Publisher, S. W. Corner Third and
Chestnut Sts., Philadelphia.
fir As the impression prevails to
some extent that nearly or quite all the
distinguished personages who were ac
tive rebels have been pardoned, it is sta.
ted by the Washington Republican that
nearly 1200 applications are now on the
President's table, most of which have
beenthere for several months. Seven
buodred f or them fall under the $20,000
clause. The remahader are . classified as
follows : Members of the rebel Congress,
86 ; ex-United States army officers,.l32 ;
rebel generals, 137 ; prominent rebel
civil officers, 32; ex-officers of the Uni
ted. States navy, 116.
Tho Mormons are becoming daily
more defiant in a disregard of their obli
gations to the Federal Government. It
is quite likely that a power unseen is
tempting these wretches to , a deserved
doom, and that at the proper time the
Government will lay its hdavy hand on
polygamy, Brigham Young and his pros
titutes.
gar A new hotel has recently been
opened in New Orleans, which' boasts
that it neither seeks nor, desires the pa
tronage of northern gentlemen. An ar
my officer who found that he could not
secure the attendance of waiters com
plained at the office, and was told that
the servants had orders not to wait on
snob as he.
fir A negro actress is about to appear
in tragedy at the loading theatre -in
Paris,, and it is said that Aldrige, the
mulatto actor, who has wet with such
success in London, is now in negotiation
with an American -- manager to play in
New York, Philadelphia and Boston.
ar A Connecticut farmer has a drove
of 4,000 geese, which•require, as rations,
10 bushel of corn daily. He bought
them in Canada at such prices thiit, af
ter paying 20 - cents a piece for their
transportation, they cost him ab ut $1
each.
ar The New York Tribunp has or
dered printing paper from Belgium,
where it can be purchased for seven
cents per pound in gold.. It can be laid
down in New -York for less than fifteen
cents, while , the present price there is
twenty cents,
Ifir A young widow who had married
an old man was forever speaking of "my
first husband." The second husband, at
last, gently remonstrated. " I guess,'
said the young wife, pouting, "you'll
want me to remember you when you are
dead and gone !"
There is said to be a genius in
Minnesota who can put on a pair of
skates, and rite a feur months' note on
the ice of eke Minnetonka with such
perfection that the sun is certain to li
quidate it on or before the day it, falls
due.
lir The PennsyhMnia Railroad Com.
filmy is replacing its wooden bridges
with iron structures, along the entire
line. In a short time there will not be
a wooden bridge on the road.
lar The Freedmen's Bureau has re
'ceived an application for one hundred
colored laborers to work on a railroad
in. Maryland. The requisition will be
promptly filled.
Gir Benjamin Phinney, a wealthy far,
mer at Rockport, 111., was recently pois . 7
oned to death with strychnine by his
'fifth wife, a pretty girl, whom he married
six weeks ago. -
fir President Johnson's message was
translated into' German and published
in the. New Frankfort Zeitung,:the •first
message slier published there in, full.
WAt Dumfries, recently, a woman
gave birth to a child with three tongues.
The child enjoys good health, and other
wise is perfect in form.
iv' '° What are you doing?" said a
father to his son, who was tinkering 'an
old watch. "Improving my time," was
the rejoinder,
Many persons write articles and
send them to an editor to be corrected
-as if an editor's office were
,a house of
correction.,
sr Generally, as soon -as a man is
supposed to have a little money, hts wife
gets too lame to walk, and must- have a
carriage.
Gr Ambassadors from Morocco have ,
arrived in .Par.is. They bring- as pres
ants to the Emperor . magnificent
horses And A tiger, a rare beauty. ,
gr A wird Sin'Fratioisco lately`put
in a petition for a givorce in court on
the ground*tliattinusband war "con
founded fool."
c—*6 — (&rl 3 llE M- -
... it • ihh is
Ste "'inn In a Nut-SSUIT.
Boys are sent to jail in Hartford, Ct.,
for snowballing in the streets.
Three thousand brevet - commissioos
have been conferred upon our officers
A profile of the President, in silver,
has been made for distribution among
the several Indian tribes.
It is reported that one of the Indian
Chiefs now in Washington has been
married eighty-five times.
Congress has granted the franking
privilege to the widow of President Lin-
coln for life.
Alexander H. Stephens says that the
condition and persecution of the Union
men in Georgia are worse now than du
ring the rebellion.
It is understood that General Butler's
reply to General Grant is nearly finish
ed, and will soon appear with the im
print of a New York puplishing house.
It is said to contain some sharp hints.
A. monument to the memory of the
late Henry Wiuter Davie is to be erec
ted in Baltimore. About $3OOO have
already been subscribed for the purpose.
It is said that General Gideon J. Pil
low is building a large schoolhouse and
previcling teachers for his former"slaves.
He owned some two or three hundred.
The Phoenix Iron Company are mak
ing preparations for the cholera. They
have issued notices to their tenants that
from and after April Ist, no cows, goats
or swine shalt be kept on their premises,
and rigid cleanliness must be practised
in and around their dwellings.
A colony is being organi4ed at Co
lumbus, Ga., to go to Mexico. Judge
Swan, lately of Tennesse, and ex mem
ber of the confederate Congress is at.the
head of it.
An engraving of. Carpenter's picture
of President Lincoln reading the eman
cipation proclamation to the Cabinet
will form the back decoration of the new
three dollar national bank notes.
Peter Nassau, a colored pauper of
the town of Pomfret, is the oldest man
in Vermont, being reported at over 130
years. Peter claims to have been ,a
body servant of Gen. Washington.
In the capitol at Walhington there
are ten and a half acres of halls, galler
ies, rotundas, libraries, ante-rooms and
corridors ! The, man who walks through
each one from end to end, will have
traveled some
"Old age is coming upon me rapidly,"
as the urchin said when he was• stealing
apples from an old man's garden, •and
saw the owner coming, cowhide in band.
There are one hundred and forty-eight
miles of city •passers 4er railroad tracks
in Philadelphiu, operated by nineteen
companies
Mrs. Martha. Grinder was hung at
Pittsburg on the 19th inst. _She eon
fussed to having poisoned two of her vic
tims, before she went to the scaffold.
Some industrious rat gnawed some
packages of matches in the.store of A
J. Avery, at Mulltown, Fayette county,
Indiana. The matches ignited, espied
ing a keg of powder, which . blew Out
both enda of the store, and slightly'dam
aged the goods on the shelves. -
'Jacob Stickney, of Newburyport
Mass., died on the 20th, 92 years - Old:
Lie had been efected or appointed to
some office in Newburyport for sixty
seven'successive years, ever since .1799;
and be had always accepted and taken
the oath of office until this year, when
he was to feeble to attend to it.
A bill has been offered in the House
at Harrisburg } for the prevention of
clandestine marriages. It makes any
Judge, Mayor, A lderman, Justice of the
Peace, Clergyman, Notary Public, or
other person who wilfully
_performs the
marriage ceremony between any persons
under t!venty.one'years of age, .liable to
a penalty of one libndred dollars.
Judge K. was .descanting in the -pres
ence of President Johnson, upon the
repulsive appearance of the oyster., •"It
iso t handsome, Judge, said the Presi
dedt. " bat it has ,the advantage of you
in one thing. " What is that goer
ied K. who is an-inexhaustible talker,
"It knows When to shut its mouth, re
plied Mr:Johnson.
,
Mr. Ashley introduced air amendment
to the Constitution of tbe United States
providing that in the . event or disability
of both the President and Vice Presi
dent of the United States, the Chief
Justice and the oldest Associate Justice
shall act as President until there shall
be a new election. And also/that when
there shall be no election by the people
the choice shall be made in Congress by
the Senators and Representatives.
A Moorehead City, N. 0, correspon
dent of the Norfolk, Va., Post, writes
that he recently had a conversation with.
Wilkes Booth, who is alive and well,
Tbe man shot in the barn- was not him.
The writer saysthat Booth neither ad-.
mitted nor denied killing . the President;
bnt,said he had of course remained con-,
coaled after public (opinion bad fixed
upon
him as the assassin. We give the
points in ,Stte eto as related in the
Post, and hardly nee ‘ d that it is 'too
td
absurd for belief.
FEAR DT DISEASE.—An experiment
tried by an eminent physician of St.
Petersburg, during the prevalence of
cholera there several years ago, serves
to illustrate the infiluence of the mind
upon the body. He obtained of the au
thorities two criminals who had been
condemned to death, to do with them as
he saw fit. One of these convicts was
made to sleep on a bod in which, as he
was told, a man died with the cholera
but the night before--although such was
not the fact. After a restless night, the
criminal was taken with all the symp
toms of cholera, and died of that disease
declaring that he had caught it from
that bed—a victim to his own fears.
The other was made to sleep on a bed,
wherein a man had died, a few hours
previously, of the fatal disease. This
fact, however, was unknown to the oc
cupant Hof the bed, ,who arose in the
morning refreshed 6y his Sleep, remain
ing in perfect health.
Tue REGULA a A RMY.—Th* Secretary
of War reports that there are as yet in
the volunteer service 47 Major Geneials
and 151. Brigadier Generals. Of the
latter 102 are to be muttered out. The
highest in rank in the regular army are
as follows : Lieutenant General Grant.
Major Generals 11 alleck, Sherman,
Meade, Sheridan and Thomas. The
Brigadier Generals are Irvin McDowell,
Wm. S. Rosecrans, Philip St George
Cooke, John Pope, Joseph Hooker, W.
S. Hancock, John M. Schofield, 0. 0.
Howard, A. H.Terry and J. A. Rawlins.
Cr The people will have their own
way, and indeed we do not wonder that
every one is bound to use Coe's Cough
Balsam, and nothing else, for it is cer
tainly the best thing in the world for
Coughs, Colds, Croup, and Influenza.
It is right, that all should use it: Coe's
Dyspepsia Cure, an article prepared by
the Same paities, is equally good for
Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Constipa
tion, sick headache, sour stomach, rising
of food, cramps, pains, and in fac-t any
disorders of the stomach and bowels. -
Cr It is currently stated among mili
tary men high in rank, says the Nation
al Intelligencer, that Lieut. General
Grant will visit Europe during the pres
ent season, and will remain there sever
al months. The incessant toil, anxiety
and responsibility that have rested upon
this distingiished soldier for the past
five years certainly entitle him to a pro
tracted leave of absence for purpose of
recreation and renovation amid .new
scenery under European skies.
cir The almanac for 1866, shows
some peculiar items of interest, viz :
Ash-Wednesday will be St. Valentine's
day, and Easter Sunday will occur on
All Fool's day, or first of April. In the
Christian calendar, the day appointed
for prayer for colleges and the institu
-tions of learning in the country, falls
upon Washington's birthday, the 22d.
ear Quite a novel scene was witness
ed in the Tremont lionse, Boston,
bil
liard room, a few days'since. Four corn.
missioned officers engaged in the late
war, all bereft of their right arms, were
enjoying themselves in playing a game
of billiards. Though compelled to ply
the mace with their left hands only, yet
their performance well demonstrated
their skill.
car General Joe Johnston employs
abo'ut five hundred of his late confeder
ate soldiers-in the repair of the Orange
& Alexandria railroad. As they became
familiar with the piCk and spade in the
rebel, entrenchments, they work with
tknowledge and are glad to obtain a liv
ing in thiS way. Some of them former : .
ly belonged to the first families in
.Vir
ginia. .
•
tir The marriage of Mrs. Douglas to
Major Robert Williams, has been an
nounced.. Mrs. Douglas 'is not more
signally one of the handsomest and most
brilliant women in America than Major
Williams is one of the finest looking and
most fascinating 'Men in the country ; so
the matcli is on all sides looked upon as
singularly felicitous-and fit to be made.
The recent report of the. Police
Commissioners of Now York, states that
the number of establishments in that
city, classed milder the head of " Pretty
Wale': Girl Saloons, is 223, while the
number_ .of "young and pretty lewd fe
males who - attend to them is 1,101.
The report calls them "nearly 1,200
daughters of perdition."
fir McCormick, inventor of the reap
ing machine that bears his name, hae
given $lO,OOO for the establishment of a
professorship-of-practical mechanics in
Washington College, presided over by
Robert E. Lee:
_McCormick is a native
of Virginia.
air In Russia a coffin fair is held every
year'and every Peasant whose aged par
ents have attained a certain age, is ex
pected to providently purchase a coffin.
We don't believe many old people at
tend that fair.
Gir John Seaver, of Portsmouth, N.
H., has accomplished the feat of walking
one hundred miles in one hunAred hours.
This is said to be the first time this feat
was ever successfully undertaken,
Aniong foreign godefri are the
statements; that Charles Dickens walks
twelie Wiles a day for exercise, and that
Wilkie Collins is a great opium eater,
ICotittg
WELL TO-DAY, SICK TO-MORROW.—Such i 3
the experience of thousands. Few enjoy con
tinuous health. To what does the occasional
invalid attribute his uncertain condition ?
Not to himself, of course. He lays the blame
on the climate, perhaps. It is too hot, or too
cold, or too damp, or too dry, or too variable.
But does he take the proper course to fortify
his consthution and bodily orgars against the
extremes ace changes of which he complains?
No. lie says, perhaps, that only an iron mats
could bear such great heat, or such violent
cold, or such sudden vicissitudes. Why then
does he not resort to the peat. Tonic and Pee
ventive, which, if it will not make him an
iron man, will at least quadruple the capacity
of his system to repel all external agencies
that tend to produce disease? Hostetter's
Celebrated Stomach Bitters, taken faithfully
'according to the directions, will so strengthen
the storsach,brace the nerves, tone the liver,
and regulate and invigorate the whole animal
machinery, that the system, instead of being
at the mercy of the weather, and liable to be
prostrated by every. change of temperature,
will become ease : hardened,
_as it were, and
almost impervious to climatic influences. It
is to this preventive principle that Hostetter's
Bitters owe theirgreat popularity in the West•
Indies, British America and Australia. F.
LYO:S's Pa RiuDlcA I. DROPS. The great fe
'male Remedy for Irreguleritiel—These Drops
are a scientifically compounded fluid prepara
tion; and better than any Pills, Powders -or
Nostrums. tieing liquid,their action is direct
add positive, rendering them a reliable, spee
dy and certain, specific fox the cure of all ob.-
structions and, suppressions of nature. Their
popularity - is indicated by the fact that over
100,000 bottles are annually.sold and consum
ed by the ladies..of the United States, every
one of whom speak in the strongest terms of
praise of their good merits. They are rapidly
taking the place of every other Female Rem
edy, and are considered by all who know
aught of them, as the surest, safest and most
infallible preparation in the world, for the
cure of all female complaints, the removal of
all obstructions of nature, and the promotion
of health, regularity and strength. Explicit
directions stating when they may be used, and
explaining when they sliould not, nor could
not be used without producing effects contra
ry to nature's chosen laws, will be found care
fully folded around each bottle, with the writ
ten signature of Jon L. Lyurq, without
which none are genuine.
Prepared by Dr. JOHN L. Lvos, 193 Chapel
street, New-haven, Conn., who can be- con
sulted either personally or by mail, (enclosing
stamp) couctrning all private diseases and fe
male weaknesses. Sold by Druggists every
where. C. G. CLARK. Agts for
U. S. and Canada& fly
To COUSUAIPTIVE§.—The advertiser hav
ing been.restored to health in a few weeks by
a very simple remedy, after having suffered
several years, 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 tire directions for preparing'and
useing the same, which they will find a sure
cure fOr Consumption, Asthma, Coughs, Bron
chitis, Colds and all throat and lung affections.
The only object of the advertiser in sending
the prescription is to benefit the afflicted and
spuad information which he conceives to be
invaluable, and he hopes every sufferer will
try his remedy, as it will cost them nothing,
and may prove a blessing.
Parties wishing the prescription, FREE, b:
return mail, will please address
Rev. EDWARD A. WiLsori, Williamsburg,
Rings County, New-York.'
AGEPITS WANTED !—To sell prize Certifi
cates for GOLD Mid SILVER Watches, Ladies
Jewelry, Diamond Rings, Pins, &c., ONLY
$5 EACH, for ANY article DRAWN. Retail
price from $lO to $250; all goods warranted
genuine. Price of Certificates 25 cents each.
Liberal premiums and Commission allowed to
Agents. sample Certificates sent free. For
circulars and terms address HAY W.A RD &
No. 229 Broadway, N. Y. (3m•
BLINDNESS; DEA FNESS and Catarrh,-trea
ted with the utmost success, by Dr. J. ISAAC.%
Oculist and Auriat, (formerly of Leydon . ,.Hol
and.) No. 519 PINE street, Philadelphia. TPs
.
timonials from the-most reliable sources in the
City and Country tan" be seen at his office.
The Medical- faculty are invited to accompany
their patients, as he has no secrets in his prac
tice.. AETAICIAL EYES inserted without pain
NO charge made for examination: L:16-Iy.
ERRORS or Yourx.--:A. gentlitman who kni
fe red for years'from Nervous Debility, Pre
mature Decay, and all the effects of youthful
indiscretion, will, for the sate of suffering
humanity, send free to all who need it, the
recipe and directions for making the simple
remedy by which he was cured. Sufferers
wishing to profit by the advertiser's experi
ence, can do so by addressing Jonx Oc-
DEN, No. 13 Cham_her St., New-York.
ITCH ! ITCH I.! Prca J ! ! Scratch! Scratch!!
Scratch !! ! " Wheaton's Ointment , ' will cure'
the Itch in 48 hours. Also cures Salt Rheum,
Uleers,Chilblains, and all eruptions of the skin.
Price 50 cents. For sale by all druggists,
By sending 60 cents to WEEKS & POTTER,
Sole Agents,' 170 Washington street, Bosten,
Mass., it will be forwarded - by mail; free of
postage, to any part of the U. States E6m
STRARGE, EDT TIITE.—EVery young. 1443%
and gentleman in the United States can hetir,
something very. much to their advantage by
return mail (free of charge,) by addressing
the undersigned. Thole having fears of being
humbugged will oblige 'by not noticing this'
card. All others will please address their
obedient servant, Taos. F. CHAPMA , N, 831
Broadway, N. Y.
I.lt is said of the ladies of France;- flat;
as a class, they are the handsomest in the
world. With their rosy cheeks and black'hi 4 l4:'
who 'can help but think so. Dr. Velptiu's',
Pills.never fail to make the complexion of a
healthy and rosy hue. Ladies trytheni 7
Sold by all Druggists,
I NTEREST ON DEPOSITS.
The First National Bank of Afarletta,
'January 10, 1866, , 'l4l
CA PI TAL, - _ S/PQA%
SURPLUS EUND, $22,228;70'
This-Bank Avill pay 5i per e.ntum interest'
for deposits made for,one year. . ANDS. IRO IirMAN, Cm/liar.
- DRY . GOODS "BOXES.—Latie and
'Madam size, for sale cheap at
D/FFENSACH'S, j
A NOTEIER GREAT CURE.
IN THE CITY OF NEW YOkk.
Of a highly respectable citizen, well I n
on
to the Mercantile community, by
DR. J. H. SCHEN C fi
THE GREAT LUNG DOCTOR Op pa il..
ADELPIIIA.
OFFICE N. Y. AND GALENA LEA,I,CO
No. 28 Nassau St., New York., June], ur.'
Da. J. H. ScuEricx--Dear
•
fifteen'years 1 have been troubled with'
were cough, and usually two or three tiraN-.
year with more or less hemorrhage, wbx."tiin'4
gether, for the last few years, has kt, t•
thin in flesh and too weak to du business Of
kind without suffering. In August :ast I
nd
a very severe hemorrhage, and, acrerdin
the judgement of a good New Yolk phy,i c e l '
I was classed as beyond the reach eln.cul . i t „'
and was advised to be prepared, solar
perty matters were concerned, to less, it
short notice. The 'physician (and ray gays
friends) said that the first cold I took
tistt
prove fatal. Early in January I took t t ,
were cold, and fortunately was occupy:,
rooms at No. 32 BOND STREET, ,11;„.t't?",
over your office. I think about the Itl;,
January 1 pfocured a Vottle of your Pulz,ja..
is Syrup and commenced taking it I+4 .
My feet and limbs were very niueli
and all the symptoms ofa speady rears
ml to accompany my cold. I sent
former physician, and stated to bin 1: 1; 1
was taking your medicine, and anti.
them to him, and having taste° of tc. ,
he replied: ...You can take them if
they will do you no harm." lie sa'a :
know what I told you bait summer, an ,
the same now, if you have any tuau.N
close up, no not put it off." lie said LQ
friends that he "codld ace no hol , e
and my friends and relations sonde..,
time had come. At this tia:e I was
freely of your medicine, but bad [l , 4,e:a .1 ; ,
The doctor called a few times, and
(much to his surprise, he sai I.) jilt
and he could nut uuder,tand wt.y. My Pih
was increasing in your medicines, and I h,! ;
wish to haveyou examine my caae, a%,":
what you had to say. When you tint cane
to my room and made the eXwilinatio4,
gave the but little encouragement, bat
contrary, expressed sad dounts et mi e t:
t,eing hclped out of my thlo seeming a L._
ties. Toe second time that you can,,,„
ing me still gaining, you gave me
moot, saying, " my symptoms v6ele
ing; the Puhnonie Syrup, Sea-wet?
and Mandrake Pills had acted Like
My circulation, my cough, my hilp,l.:e,
began to improve, an I es.u.d Witi:s
room a little. You visited Ice near:)
Tuesday, and found me improving, ;.:,u
me not to go. out of my wool ucut t!.e
day of May. I tool no cold wiiiie WILT
treatment, my appetite become
you told me to eat everything 1 1 , 69:;.,1 of
nutritious nature, and to exercise sbc ,
room as much as possible. I y
advice, and to the surprise of my old
and friends, I seem much batter than I
been for several years, and breathe betters c
I ever expected a person could with etc
the left being completely dried up. I hi
vary grateful to you, and conziler yOUF
and medicines invaluable.
Yours, [July,
Dn.-SCHENCK 6 - Dear Sir : d bout two eau
ago 1 was taken with a very trcubleAoi
cough and - a Odin in my breast SeVva
eight mouths passed away without Inv dom.;
anything for myself. 'then I applied :0 0
physician, who auendcd me for aUu.rt duet
months without rendering me any service, l
also obtained the advice and treatment Olt.
physician in one of our hospitals, and al,O,
had the adirice and treatment of twu °thin plu
sicians, but all to no purpnae. During to
long apace of time 1 was nearly dead ; rarer•
al times my friends came to see me and sit
ness my exit in to the spirit-world, I .vas CU.
tined tO my bed two months at °denude, My
breathing was exceedingly short. 1 gale tp
several' tunes all hope of getting better; and
as regarded getting well, that was entirely cu:
of the.qheation. And to think this day lin
well and lietifty ! I was ailiised by suns ui
my friends to try Da. Son Erica's Medlemei.
1 accordingly bought bottle after bottle twul
I reached the ninth ; then I found a d ecided
change in my conga for the better. I &and
severely from palpitation of the heart, sod ore
weeks after t co in mencqd taking your mehrite
this difficulty ceased.
When 1 hist went to Dr. Schenck's °Mee it
was with difficnity that I could get up into hit
receptiMa.romn, ',was so weak and so swelled;
my skin was assallow as though I had thrjaine
dice;
. 111. felt, dull, heavy, and sleepless. lb.
Schenck, after examiuing me, said both my
lungs were affected, and gave me but fan;
hope; but his medicines, in about two weetii
took right hold of me ; it seemed to go riga
through my whiale sy.iiieno. The Pulmdat
Syrup, Seaweed Tonic Mandrake lids,
all took right hold in the r gilt Lilacei The
Pills brought away great quantities of bile all
slime ; the Syrup loosened the mutter iu may
lungs, which came off veiylree;
Tonic gave me an appetite, and elerYtiliq
seemed to taste good.. toe SesiVed
To show what great power the medicines
have in.purifying my system, and to sticw
how badi.l was diseased, beside all the bile
lndtlitaPelil my bowels, and the great gailit
tiei:oAlilegin and matter I expectormedi. i ,
broke Mit e all over in large boils, Mar wV
continue to gather and run fur about
, ,
weeks.- and - I nad at one time ovei twentyithe
boils. I have nothing of the kind 110 W, all
feel. like :another ,person altogether. co
safely say that 1` have not enjoyed such heaiM
for five years as - 1 do-now, and umlaut pry l{
you and your medicines enough. MA Y / ( Al
abundantly Mess and preserve you! is t h e FM.
.core desire of one who has been so woilerrat
, ly relieved through your agency; and it eV
one desires to know with regart to to'd
fulness of this report, if they will call updnmll
of my friends, or upon me, N 0.4 Dryden Flare,
near Thompson Street, below Cadianduler?
Philadelphia,- they' will be perfectly' saneued
with the validity of the case. Yours, 'Nita
much respect, MARY
The above case, as described, is
correct. I know it to be true. 1 mica,
T. B.
Pastor, of Hancock M. E. Chundt:
DR. SCHENCK. will be professionally at Os
principal office, Nci. 15 Non.tx Smut STMST•
corner of Cornwell.% PHILADELPHIA; eel'
Saturday, from 9A. M. until 4P. ;
Bond street, New York, every Tuesday, from
9 to 3 ; N 0.33 Summer street, Boston, MON
every Wednesday, from 9to 3, and every otter
Friday at Baltimore street, Baltimore, Md.
All advice free, but for a thorough examination
of the_lniaga with his Respirometer, the 0 1 0
is three dollars.
Price of the Pulmonic Syrup and Sea -wee . d
1
Tonic, each .1.50 per bottle, or $7. 50 p er 11...
dozen Mandrake Pills, 25 cents per 1 : 105 '
FOR SALE' BY -AIL' RRUGGIST S
DEALERS. P}
AB66THELADY'S FRIEN V
The - best of the Monthlies —do'
ted to LITERATURE and FASHION. s2'..
50 a year. We give WHEELER & WU'
S;iN , S Celebrated $55 Sewing Machines co
;the , following terms: 71
'Twenty . copies and the Sewing Machine) S n ,
Thirty.eoptes and the Sewing Machine,
Forty copies and the Sewing Machine, slo°'
Send 15 cents for a sample copy to o°.
CON
Philadelphia.
8r: PETERSON, 319 Walnut street)
Estate of Elizabeth - Weis late of t he
Borough of Marietta deceased .
Letters of administration, with the `R id
annexed, on said estate having beeil r inte d
•to the undersigned, all persons inilebte
thereto. are requested to make inonedil
.settlement, did thoes hiring claims or, a ,
liaands eg.e nstAhe same, will present We':
lawithwildelai tor 'ept.tiotoont t o the e ederidg e
ed, residing in" ,said` Si:trough of Ivinnetts.
• * E. D. ROAra;
Adminotrat or •
Marietta, Februasy 3,
~1
T. S. SIFELpt