The Maricttiatt. F L faker, Editor. ~,,,,,, 54fok Vol Ting, "..Eebtliqqj tO, 186 a. or A letter from Chicago says: -Mrs. Page, a widowed daughter of Major General B. M. Prentiss, of Quincy, 111., committed suicide on the 12th, while at the house of her father. On the morn ing of that day, she appeared unusually downcast and sad, and finally she told some of the family that she was going into the back yard, and that they need not look for her return for some time. Before going• . ont of the door she took the precaution to draw the curtain, of tho window which looked into the yard. As she passed a colored woman in the yard, sho told . her that she was going to make way with herself, and left direc tions for her burial. The woman_ sup posedplip• vas joking and took no notice of it. The lady not returning for som.s time, swab was instituted, and her life leas body Was found in a cistern near the stable. We have no farther particulars. It will be recollected that some time since General Prentiss and his son were fined five dollars each for horsewhipping a young man who was paying attention to this daughter. Whether this fact has any conne . otion with the suicide re mains to be developed. e f r The law passed by the Louisiana Legislature for the government of the freedmen reduces them almost to estate of slavery again. To talk of 'freedom" with such a law on the statue book is only a mockery, There is no liberty to make contracts for six months, or for three, or to make none, but the laborer is bound by law to make •a contract of some sort during the first ton days of January for the whole .year. 'He may not be offered a dollar a month for his labor—he is boned by the law to take the best he can get during those ten days. The planters may make what agreement they may choose as to price they have only to hold out ten days and the laborer must either assent to their terms or take the consequences of vio lating the law. The freedmen must hire by families when they exist, and the contract withotbe head of the family is binding on = all the members. 4 ' Only one half of the wages is to be paid as fast as earned, and if the laborer leaves before his contract expires he forfeits all that is due him. ter A lady in Union county, Ky., a short time since, sold her land and re ceived some eight hundred or a thousand dollars in cash. A night or two after a stranger called at her house and demand ed lodging for •the night. After some hesitation he was admitted. Later in the night he was aroused by the lady, Wile told him 'that three or four men were trying to break into the house. The stranger. arose, seized his pistol, told her to go down stairs and get be hind the door and' open it when he directed her. Placing <himself in posi tion, be gave the word, she opened the door, rnd in rushed a map, who had no sooner placed his foot on the door-sill than be fell dead by a bullet .from the stranger's pistol. A second man met the same fate. A third vas wounded and ran away. The dead men were re cognized as the lady's son-in law and a near neighbor, The third, was her son. fit' The police force of - Galveston is' composed of twelve men only. The na tural consequendn is that the town is. overrun with thieves, gamblers, garrot ers and vagrants. Murders are commit_ ted at all hours of the day and night, with almost,perfect impunity. Cr The Internal Revenue Commiss ioner directs that all stamps must be cancelled by placing the initials of the person executing the. Instrument, to gether with the date. It is not enough so muke a arose or any other mark to deface them. 60 - The Fenian ezciternebt'still con tinues. There is s rumor that the inter firence of Secretary; Seward is to be asked in behalf of Irish-American citi zens who - have been - convicted in Ireland of being Fenians here. '(}en. Ho ward is delivering lectUres in New England, on the neednien's bu reau, receiving4loo each, which . he do natet4oWards building a , Trinitarian chttrOli, .Washington City. eir The new five-cent postal currency has been Kinted. instead of the vig nette o f Washingtomit bears that of S. M. Clark,. chief of the Printing Bureau. Aliir It is reported that President Johilson intends to supersede the pres ent tate govenithent of... Virginia by a• provisional one ifili• The Comptroller of the Pnireney intends establishing bureau for the re demtiott Of umtilated national orirrepcy. DEATH OF FREDERIECA BRESIEF..—The last European steamer brings news of the death of Fraderika Bremer, the Swe dish authoress, well known • and highly esteemed in . .this country for,varions ex cellent finalities, and standing by the side of some of the most popular female writers in every part of Europe. Miss Bremer was born near Abo, in Finland, in 1802. Her fathers family moved` in her childhood to Scania or Skane, an old province of Sweden. The girl then lived with Countess Sonnerbjoim, and taught at Stockholm in a female seminary. She traveled in this country in 1850 51, and also in Germany, England and else where. her collected works comprise some ,twenty volumes. Her " Homes of the New World, written subsequent to her return from America, was a glow ing record of all excellencies, and, doubt • less, did its share towards inducing lar ger emigration from Scandinavia to the United States. Miss Bremer was not a profound nor a philosophical writer, and did not assume to be such. She was true womanly in all her instincts, with a ready appreciation of all which is good and noble, and bore the many honors heaped upon her without being spoiled. .SINGULAR CASE.— One of our exchang es says there is a youngman in a town in Vermont who cannot speak to his father. Previous to bis birth some dif ferences arose between his mother and r husband, and for a considerable time she refused to speak to him. This diffi culty was subsequently healed. The child was born, and in due time began to talk, but when sitting with his father was invariably silent. It continued so until it was five years old, when the father, after having exhausted his pow ers of persuasion, threatened it with punishment for its stubbornness. When the punishment was being inflicted it elicited nothing but sighs and grimins , which told that the little sufferer wa s vainly endeayoring to speak. All who were present united in this opinion, that it was impossible for the child to speak to his father, and time proved their opinion to, be correct. At a mature age its efforts to converse with its parent Could only produce the most bitter sighs and groans. eir The American Statesmen offers - a Prize of one of Wheeler and Wilson's bat, $55.00 Sewing Machines for every Club of Forty Subscribers, or will allow on the price of the Machine, one dollar for every subscriber obtained. This pre sents a splendid opportunity to obtain one of these valuable machines without other cost than a. little effort. The Statesman is fast becoming one of the most widely known and valuable papers published ; having already reac.hed a circulation of over 50,000 copies weekly, it is an invaluable sheet to the. advertis ing community as well as its readers. lts publishers possess a spirit' of enter prise that allow none to excel them. Published weekly at 81.50 per year, at 67 Nassau street, New Yolk. lir Thomas Quinn, the messenger of the Greenwich Savings Bank, New York while returning from the Greenwich Bank with a tin box containing $3,000 in small bills, was arrested by 'a man dressed in police uniform, and an officer of the Twenty-eighth precinct, on a charge of being a counterfeiter. The box was taken.by the stranger, who told the officer to take his prisoner to the station house. •• Oa arriving there the officer found that he had aided in the perpetration of a most ingenious rob bery. ,ge Soldiers who have served in the armies of the Union, children, mothers, everybody that has got a bad cold, croup, Whooping cough, or is troubled with any lung or throat complaints, we advise you to use Coe's Cough ,Balsam, the cheapest and best cough preparation'in the world. And when you have the Dyspepsia, or are troubled with' Consti pation—the great cause of ill health—or any trouble of the stomach or bowels, use Coe's Dyspepsia pure immediately. le i r The Stanton Virginian , says :-- We are informed that the .Hop. Simon Oameron, ex-Secretary of War of the, United States, took several miles of the Manassas Gap railroad, and had it trans ported and laid down at government ex pense, on a • private railroad of his in Pennsylvania. The company made ap plication forthe return of the iron ; it was approved by the Quartermaster General, but,Secrettiry Stanton dismiss ed the claim by disapproyal. . The surviving, traitors of the Lee family will never again possess Arling ton Heights, As, the estate is. about being permanently devoted by Congress a home for disabled soldiers. There are now hundreds of soldiers buried. there. eir The Health °Meer of Brooklyn, New York, has secured the voluntary services of forty eminent physicians, who will inspect every house, street and al ley in the city, in order to a thorough cleansing against the cholera. ' Cr Fred puoglass, William Whipper and a delegation of colored men wafted on the President, a few Clays since, with regard to pegre suffrage. Douglass de liyered .quilaa neat speech to which the President- yery .conrteously replied. c-sr'&T.EIFI MARI FiITTIAN.@,-e---) Qt . be Morn( in a Nut—.%btli The Pennsylvania Railroad Company have declared a semi-annual dividend o f five per cent., clear of all taxes. It is understood that after. .declaring this di vidend the company have left in the treasury a reserved fond of three millions of dollars. One hundred citizans of Springfield, 111., have formed a Vigilance Commit tee, for the purpose of ridding the city of the gamblers, thieves, and murderers that infest it. It is estimated that a million of dol. lags have been wagered on•the fate of Jeff. Davis, some betting that he will be hung, others that he will never be con victed. The citizens of Chambershurg, Pa., have petitioned tht; State Legislature for aid in re-building the houses destroy. ed at the time:of the rebel invasion. Petitions are being. numerously sign ed in the South, praying for the banish ment of Jeff. Davis. A correspondent ofthe Miner's Jour nal'states that within the last three years over one hundred murders have been committed in Schuylkill county. Montgomery Blair presided at a Con vention of ex-rebels and secessionists recently held in Maryland, the object of which was to procure the repeal of the law of that State which disfranchises rebels:" That is where Blair is now— with the disloyal and against the loyal men of his State. The bodies of Union soldiers who fell at Falls Church in the first year of the war are being•taken rip and brought to Arlington for burial. This extensive cemetery, upon Gen; Lee's former place is being rapidly filled by the bodies of the. Union dead. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company have built a neat and sub - stantial iron bridge over the Juniata River, near Granville run, Juniata . county. It is over .500 feet in length, and is a model of neatness and strength. The Nashville and Chattanooga Rail road has begun a suit against its late President for $1,000;000 damages, in permitting the confederate government to'use the road and its machinery dur ing the war. A Hartford gentleman who was lunch ing with some friends on bologna sans age and ale the other day, found the end of a man's finger in his sausage. "!Jetty," a colored• woman, and a relic of Penursylvania slavery, died on the 15th inst. at Abbottstown, Adams county. She was upwards of 83 years old. Burton N. Harrison, late private sec retary of Jefferson Davis, who has for some time past, been confined in Fort Delaware, has been released by the President. The Bleecker Street and Fulton Fer ry Company's railroad stables, New York, were burned on the night of the 3d. Lose $40,000- Seventy horses were burned. The Georgia Senate proposes to elect United States Senators on the 15th of February. Fort Laramie dates to the 22d say that the Sioux Indians having beeo 'fro. zen out, have made a treaty to keep the peace, and not steal mules and stock, Nearly all the three-cent currency has been redeemed, and no more of it will be issued. It is reported that General Forrest, under the guise of retiring from busi ness in Memphis to, his plantation, has gone to Mexico, in consequence of hav ing been notified to appear before a military commission in Washington. The secretary of War has received from friends in England, principally in Birmingham, 85,000 for the benefit ,of destitute freedmen. It has been turned over to Gen. Howard's Bureau. A boy four years old, at Princeton, 111., who had been permitted to play with an old _pistol, on the. upposition that it was . not loaded, snapped it at his sister, twenty-one years old, and kill ed her instantly. The frequent finding of human limbs in the streets and alleys of Chicago is exciting considerable sensation. Last week the limbs pf a female, which had been severed above the knee, were pick ed up on Wabash avenue. The students connected with the medical colleges are the authors of these Outrages. - A man claiming to be descended from a whitefather and a mOther as mixed blood, offered his vote in New , York State in the October and NOiember elections of 1864, and it was refused.-- Thereupon he brought a suit, and a jury has recently returned a verdict - for the plaintiff, assessing the damages at one hundred dollars. An order has .been received, by the Waterpruof . Cloth Company, of Bridge port; for one of Crosalafs mosaic. car pets for the Hall of the House of Rep. resentatives in Washington. It. seems that the, new carpet, imported fro.m Eng 7 land, only two months since, for the hall, does no,t otand the. wear, but is already, half wern , oat. - •• • • • • SLAVERY DAM) TO DIE.-" No negro or freedman," says the police code of Opelousas, La., "shall be permitted to rent or keep a house within the limits of the town under any circumstances" "No negro or freedman shall reside in the town of Opelousas who is not iu the regular service of some white per son, or former owner." Slavery, like the turtle, snaps even after its head is off. An Irishman was amusing himself with putting sticks in the mouth of a turtle which he'had de capitated several days before. " Why, Patrick," said a lady wh2 saw its vio lent snappings " I thought the turtle was dead " So he is ma'am, but the craythur's not sensible of it." According.to the opinions of NI. Zagrill, a physician in Cairo, the poison of cholera is conveyed in minute parti cles by the wind. This is why it often passes over certain villages without at tacking them ; the molecules, when pro pelled by a violent storm, are retained at a distance from the ground, in exact ly the same manner as locusts, which , carried by the wind, traverse certain lo calities without committing the slight. est ravages. This, in the writer's opin ion, is also the reason why the epidemic first makes its appearance in the night; at the time the wind abates and the molecules are deposited. CO - A New York letter' to the Buffa lo Commercial Advertiser says : " We have had a balloon wedding, and those entertainments in almost every variety, and there seems to be no reason why there should not be a wedding on skates. The proprietor, of one of our most fash ionable parks has promised to furnish the ice ; all he now waits for are the parties for the ceremony, and if rumor says truly, he will not have to wait long. The only difficulty will be with the par son, for it is inferred from the language of the good book that only "the wicked stand on slippery places. Fortunately for' the ceremony, Aldermen are compe tent to solemnize marriages. eir Christian Berger was convictAd in Philadelphia, lust waek, of the mur der of Mary L. Watts, and sentenced by Judge Allison to be hung.=lt is only about three weeks since the murder was committed, and punishment has followed quick upon its heels. Mary L. Watts resided in Germantown, by herself, and she was found in her house, one morning murdered. She was supposed to have had money, but it is not thought the murderer got much. The evidence was circumstantial but Berger substantially owned to it. ilFir A gardener in the department of the Nord has, discovered a new mode of restoring exhausted asparagus beds. He spreads during-the spring 120 pounds of common salt over a piece -of ground 30 feet long by 6 wide. The asparagus plant, though old and exhausted, pro duced a crop double what might be ex pected from the youngest and strongest plants. Although salt is dear in France the gardener got a handsome profit by it. The middle of March is .the best time to employ the salt. OW Three venerable lathes still_ stir / viva, who were in the choir of young la dies that, dressed in white, greeted Washington as he entered Trenton, in 1789, on his way to assume the presiden cy,—and who strewed his pathway with flowers. One yet lives in Trenton, an other is the mother of Hon. Mr. Chest nut, formerly senator from South Caro- lina, and the third, Mrs: Sarah Hand, resides in Cape May county, New .Jer sey. • / jar The election of A. H. Stephens and Herschel V. Johnson , as Senators from Georgia, is received at Washing ton with regret by the best friends of the South connected with the Govern ment, That two men should have been selected chiefly because of their promi nence in the rebellion, and-who cannot take the oath; simply embarasses the work of restoration, and the southern people in t' e end become the chief suf ferers. . . tEr The manufacturers. of tobacco . have been making great efforts of late to have part of the burden of taxation removed from their shoulders and placed upon those of the producers, but with what ultimate success is not yet known, We see it stated, however, that the com mittee on Manufactures in Congress are expected soon to report a bill graduating the tax on segars according to their value. • us- Eugenie is no longer , looked up to in England, as the ' great oracle on fashion. The English ladies are more . goveraed, now- by the Princess of Wales who is younger and more gay, and there fore better fitted to set the .example: fur It is proposed to hold a meeting of prominent politicians in Washington in a few days to organize a national par.; ty composed of Democrats and conserv ative licpublicay, in r oppositiop to the radicals. tar Letters : received' in New York from Paris eirthat Napoleon will' cer taioly.witbdraw hie troope-from-Mexiep immediately, reqeeeting only that the United:Slates' shell' remain neutral be; tweeh the bonteniiihrparties• theft. TAXATION ON DoiTS.— An interesting discussion took place at the anuua meeting of the Peon'a Agricultural So ciety on the IGth, upon the taxation of dogs. It was stated by one gentleman that there are five hundred thousand dogs in Ohio, and by another that there are seven hundred thousand in Pennsyl vania, and about one million in New York. The society ask Congress to im pose a tax of two dollars on each dog, which would give to the public treasury a revenue from the three States men tioned above. of over four millions of dollars. This might be called a protec tive tariff for the benefit of the wool in terest. ARTIFICIAL SUBSTITUTES.-It is not generally known that soldiers who have lost limbs in the service of the United States are entitled to artiscial substi• totes, that can be procured upon the presentation of evidence of honorable diseharge, and that the wound causing the loss of lin - .5 was received in-service. They aro furnished free of charge, and do not affect any . pension or bounty claim the soldier may have against _the Government. Cr Mrs. Partington declares that the only istay,a traveler can avoid beinrhill ed by railroad collisions, now-a.days, is to take the other taain. ffeb) £oocls. 'Kau Goods. fie» Goo SPAIIGLER & RICH, -11, , ATOULD announce to their friends and the V public generally, that they have on hard a large and well selected stock of FALL AND WINTER GOODS, and arc daily receiving accessio 119 thereto. Our stock of LADIES DRESS GOC.D:i com prise all the latest and most desirable fabrics, • styles and colors. French Merinos, EngliSh Merinos, All-wool Poplins, Coburg.% All-wool Delains, Mixed Poplins, Alpaccas, Lavellas, . Debazes, Mixed De!sines, A large assortment of Plain and Fancy • WOOL SHAWLS, Knit Goods, Breakfast Shawls, Hoods, Scarfs, Clau!:infi Cloths, Sacktnr, flannels, Wnite Goods, Skel eton and Balmoral Skirts, Hosiery and Gloves. DOMESTICS. Calicos, De!ains, Ginghams, Flannels, Checks, Muslins, 'Pickings, Sultinetts, Jeans, Linen and Cotton Diaper, American and Rus sian Towelling, Floor and Table Oil Cloth, Wall and Window Papers. MEN AND BOY'S WEAR. • Plain and Fancy Cassimeres, French and English Cloths, Knit Shirts and Drawers. GloveS and Mitts, Paper and Linen Collars, Shirt Fronts, Neck Ties, Suspenders, Knit Jackets, &c. A full. assortment of the latest styles Men and Boys Hats and Caps, Groceries Sugars, Syrups, Cone, Teas, Raisins, Prunes, Dried Apples, Cranberries. Corn Starch, Farina, Salt, Fish, &c. A full assortment of &Hass& Queensware. Thankful for past favors, we would respect fully ask an examination of our stock before purchasing elsewhere. SPANGLER g RICI.I. Marietta, November 4,1865.4 f. Z. & H. T. ANTHONY & CO., Manufacturers of Photographic Materials, =I - 501 BROADWAY, N. Y. In addition to our mein business of PHOTOGRAPHIC. AA. MULLS, we are headquarters for the following, ris.: Stereoscopes and Stereoscopic Views. Of these we bare an immense assortment, including • VIEWS OF THE 'WAR, Obtained at great expense and forming a complete PHOTOGRAPHIC HISTORY OF THE GREAT UNION OONTIEST Bull RILIIi Dutch Gap, Yorktown, Pontoon Trains. Gettysburgh, Hanover Junction. Fair Oaks, 'Lookout Mountain, Savage Station, Chickahominy, Fredericksburgh, City Point. Fairfax, Nashville, . Richmond, Petersburgh, Deep ;Bottom, Bello Plain, • Monitors, Chattanooga, Fort Morgan, - Atlanta, Charleston, Mobile, Florida. Strawberry Plain', &c. American and Foreign Cities and Landscapes, Groups, Status e9;11.1kb711 ho.. Our id. t Zoo °lv4 .re igt e =r'en f y or r " % o n r PH" receipt sf Stam p . Photographic Albums. We were the first to introduce thews into the United States and we manufacture immense quantities in _great variety, mng log price from 60 Oats to $5O. Our ALBUMS have the repu tation of being superior in beauty and durability to any other.— They will be sent by mail, FREE, on receipt of price. The gr F/NE ALBUMS RADE TO ORDRR. ide will find our Albums the most Saleable they can bay. CARD PHOTOGRAPHS. - - - - - • - - • Oir Catalogue now embraces over Peva THOUSAND different subject. (to which additions are continually being made) of Fmk mmt Americium, &a, viz about 100 Mej-Gens. Lieut-Cole 650 Statesmen, 100 Brig " 550 other Officers, 180 Divines, 115 Colonel& 45 Nary pacers, 125 Anther., 40.grtlets. 11.5 Stage, 60 Prornment Women. 8,000 Copies of Works of Art, Enchain g reproductions of the moat celebrated Engtavings, Painting& Statues. Ver. Catalogues wet on receipt of Stamp. An order for One Dozen Pictures from oar Catalogue, will be filled on receipt of $l.BO, and sent by mall, vas Photographers and others ordering goods a O. D., will - please remit twenty-five per tent, of the amount with their order. rivrimpricco and quality of our good. calmot fell to satiety. y ETTERS REMAINING unclaimed in the Post Office at Maiietta, Pa., THUILSDAY, FE.BRUARY 8, 1866. Mr: A. Armstrong, Miss S. Panning,: Michael Buehler, Mr. L. Parker, Fannie Brown, Mrs. Ann Stspe, Mrs. N. Ellmaker, Mary Thomas, Josephige Holt, . Alfreth Weith, Miss Sarah Kautz. To obtain any of these letters, the ap plicant must call for "advertised letters," giv the date of this list, and pay one cent for ad vertisiug: - ABRAHAM CASSEL, P. M. ATTENTION 1 SPORTSMEN,!,! Eley's Gun Caps, Eley s 'q Gun Wadds, Dupont's Sporting and Glazed Duck Powder, Baltimore Shot ; Shot Pouches, Powder Flasks, sold at 4 JOHN SPANGLER'S. A CHOICE Lot of Books for children called A indistructable Pleasure Books; School and Paper Books, Stationary, Pens,..-Pen holders &c,, at LA NDIS tts TROUT. T. OROIX A ryD NEW PNGLANb RUg' 0 for culinary, purposes, warranted gen ui Ti. D. Benjamin. TOIi,PRINTING of every description ex 0 ecuted with neatness and dispatch at the 0 IL - ce of The 14Iariettian.- CHOICE HAVANA S V I C, A RS, and the best ClMwing and Smoking Tobacco at WOLFE'S. ALARGE LOT OF BUI , F WINDOW , SHADES at remarkably low prices o close out: ' ' , JOFINt.SPANGLEIr OGEIVS Celeorated Pearl Cement and R Oil Paste Blacying at - "TEL GOLDEN MORTAR. A=NEW' TOY:--Egg's_ of Pharaoh's Ser pents (cre,hAlii,) , 4tt LANDIS & TRouVe. 13IWE8T Quality : of- Wines 'and Liquor s - f or medicinal purtioses; at Landis If Trout's S CI IENCK'S NIANDRAKE PILLQ, FOR LIT.En. co:111,1:41NT. A suliS TIT UT FOR cAL os tp i ..... If your - bowels are c TRY TIIEM. If you have worms ray THEM. If ,your breath is had, TRY THEM. If you feel drowsy. TRY TI.II:iT. If You are low spiiiied, TRY THEM. If you have a sick headaelie, TRY If you have taken a drop too mu c h . TAKE A FULL DOSE. They only cost 25 cents a box, TRY THENI. Blue Mass, and other preparations of Ms miry, actually prounce more Sllirennp; death than the diseases which they pofferrtn cure. And yet this corrosive mineral so d:, nounced by the allopathic doctors, is Pie bed by them almost universally in Liver c o : . plaint, Consumption of Lungs, kc. THE MANDRAKE PILLS are composed entirely of roots and berbi. tained from the great storehouse of Nai tr , and their salutary effects will appear ass, ; as the medicine is bronzitt to the test of a ter experiment. SC RENCK'S MANDRAKE PILLS do not produce ar y nausea or sie, 4 „, of the stornaah ; but when given for sia, it may be properto usa them in tion with SCli ENT K'S SEAWEED D)NIC. By this judicious treatmen• the dr gNt i„ ulties are speedily restored to their full and the worst cases of indigestion rna 7 I Y cured.- When we reflect that the liver is lb , larn internal organ of the body, that to it is ed the important duty of !Merin:: the itcg and preparing the bile, that it is subio c i tc , many disorders, and that when it is diseattt or inactive the whole body millers symrch,. icalty, it is not surprising. that a mediccc which can restore the healthy operatiges the Liver should produce wen lerful chance in the general hea7th, a td ettect cores trniclt may appear to be almost miraculauc. ache of long continuance, severe pains in t':e side; - breast - and shoulders, aching of the limb:, a feeling of general weakness and 'wretched• ness, and other alarming and disWssingsi.:7 l . ; . toms ; indicative of imperfect or disordered Lion of the liver, are speedily removed lit the use of SCHENCK'S MANDRAKE PlL's. Costiveness, piles, bitter or sour erneta:i , :u, and that iudesceibable feeling of mental ankiety, languor, lethargy ctrl pression of spirits, which unfit a man management of business and the erk,m,-:‘ , life, are all ielieved by the !13C of Si.Al MANDRAKE PILLS. Do. SCIIENCX.—Dear •it : 1 in sending you a cettilicaw in • many you have already received from in; humanity. I can scarce iy fd-ei !:: sufficiently strong to express un gratification of the Wendel ILA ICE PILLS and IC have ern cted in the entire cure the most stubborn cases of the alt . , et! liver. For three years l suffer - et! scriptioh ; all my friends, as well a: came to the conclusion that my 1 fst was shirr. Sutli was the teriti c • t on to which I was reduced that had bcc.due a but:then ; my V, 11,10 r< -I • in a state of initimination ; I could could nut seep; toy whole bury , wi h pain ; swel,ing WOu:d arise and ankT s, rendering Mein teta in •• • On several occasions I was attar:, :ush of blood to the head. w me to tile ground, and I woul away for dead. I applied to sec: 1 , 6 . • physicians ot our city, sotto admit-.• the medicines that they thought case. but i>f no avail. Ore of them said he could do 5:: • me, end advised me, as a last result ' cod liver NM relishing the 60:1 declined to take it. Accident put 't'sunent in my littads. I called n , i examined me and told me the nat.:r dis ae. You then ordered me d.c• ..• Tonic wilt, an o servalice 01 your word that in our , wick . self another man. 1 fofluive and, as yoz. piedi :ted. att as!ent limited. I cont;;.ucd tour for some time, and n ity thstiu- : mod your invaluably . am once more restored to p rfeet !,, „... most eArnestly met:online: d w•• sufferi4 from affection of the your Pills and Tonic a iair trial, an' •will be effected. I have cent n.aly •• • to you, and they have all been care.. information my fellow-citizens nits . will be freely given by the s•ibm-ritu , :, residence, No 812 Federal street. t:e:e street and Passyunk road. CHARLES JOIIN:;1):•:. Formerly Printers' Ink DR. SC HEN CK will be prplessi ,, n, , ': principal office, No. 15 North Sixth sip, net . of Commerce, Philadelphia, evel2t day, from 9 a. in., until 4 p. tn.; So•S street, New York, every Tuesday, fi 3; NO. 38 Eu inner street, Boston; every Wednesday, from 9 to 3: a other Friday at 108 Baltimore ;tree, more, Md. All advices free, but Ix ough examination of the lungs u pirometer the charge is three d,,llarz• Price of the Pulmonie Syru and Sc" , " . " Tonic, each $1.50 per bottle, or dozen. Mandrake Pills, .25 caul; per • For sale by all Druggists Sr Dealers• [3l WATCHES c~cE_S_Zah r2c- ' Corner of North Queen-St., and Cebtre .Square, Lancaster, Pa, American and Swiss 'Watches IN GOLD AND SILVER CASES. 4,4 EIGHT DAY AND 30 HO' • IN GREAT VARIETY, AND TEE BEST FACTORIES . SPECTACLES in every style of frame,and with glasses to suit any ho need artificial aid. We hare t wer ty years experience in this business. SILVER-WARE'. .d ' Spoons, Forks, Butter Knives, &c starsP- With our name and warranted standard. P.LATEDW ARE., The best Sato We warrant, our - best Table ware—SP ° Platedware in the United Forks, &c.,—to wear ten years in daily use. JEWELRY. Rings, Pins, Sleeve Buttons, Studs and a 41 " riety of every article in this line. HAIR JEWELRY. hundre d Hair Jewelry made to order. Two styles, or samples, constantly on hand. . laTAl.epailing of Watches, Clocks, SP 6 ' 1 cies or Jewelry, done neatly and promP tl P ' H. L. & E. J. ZAHN. Corner• North Queen Street and Centre 4 Squa" , LANCASTER: F' - C7N7c)c)cl tor Sale o 0--- 50 OR . 60 CORIDS OAK WOOD, fr ol e ' ,Price,.Five and Six Dollars ft COPL, Apply , to GEO. W. ST.kfl''' Marietta, .December 30, 1865, L ge 20 ,l'i'AlteZuGrnOreS frec:st .D.IFFES I3.I -mad - • ,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers