De Maricitian, : ;Nit& 4.; -r •4;," ' • MARIETTA. PA : SOLO 4 Vorning, /une 2, 5866• Ifir The Saturday Press among other suggestions which will enable a person to avoid the cholera, recommends.: Don't get.it on .the brain, and, to this end, avoid reading the daily papers. Endeavor, if possible, to keep a clear conscience, and two or three clean shirts Rise with the larks, but avoid larks in the evening. Be' above' ground in 4 611 your dwellings, and above board in all your 'dealings. Love your neighbors as yourself, but don't have too many of them in the smile house with you. la - General Miles has received in: structions from Washington, to give Jeff Davis, on his parole, the freedom of the fort, he retiring to his room in Carroll Ball, at night. Messrs Shea and O'Con nor, his counsel, have been allowed ac cess to the fort and private interviews with him at any time. Mrs. Davis left the fort and was in Washington on the day of the date of the instructions to Gen. Miles; so we may surmise what influence moved A. J. ildr A colony of Maine emigrants, numbering about 120, will sail for Jaffa, ( the ancient Joppa ) in the Holy Land, about the middle of July next. They will take out lumber and building materi. els, furniture, agricultural implements, &c., to start with. Their new home is situated in the midst of orange groves, lemon groves, pomegranate groves, fig trees, grape vines, date trees, and almost every description of Oriental fruit and shade trees. Or A band of outlaws went to the house of a man named Gunter, in Over ton county, Tennessee, one day last week, and on some frivolous pretext took him into the woods, stripped and were unmercifully whipping him. His daughter seized a hitchet, rushed to the spot, and succeeded with heroic bravery in killing two of the ruffians and wound ing others. She and her father have since been driven from the county. gar A Washington correspondent says that there is, at the Capitol, a growing distrust of Secretary McCul loch. He is regarded as one of the bit terest enemies of the loyal majority in Congresiin the Cabinet. Besides, there are may strange rumors afloat as to fi nancial matters, while the general more is, that the work is rather than the Secretary can stagger under. 40" Mr. Kasson's bill, which has just passed both Houses, provides for a new five•cent coin, which shall weigh five grammes of the metric system. Three of them will weigh about one half an ounce, or the weight of one single letter. It will also serve for weights at apothe caries and elsewhere. The act requires the withdrawal of all fractional notes of less denomination than ten cents. Cr Some burglars entered the resi dence of Hon. George H. Pendleton, in Cincinnati, on Tuesday night, while the family were asleep. They made them selves at home, lighted a fire, boiled some eggs, and made coffee, used some silver spoons, and, singular to, say, did not steal them. They helped themselves to some clothing and departed. Grit has been decided that no boun ty or baelt pay can be paid to men who deserted from the army, or to their rep resentatives, notwithstanding the deser ter may have subsequently served out his term of enlistment. The bill which has just passed Congress . excludes deserters from 'the benefits thereof. ilap A colored woman named Syphax said to be an illegitimate daughter of G. W. P. Custis;and therefore a half sister of Mrs. R. E. Lee, has been put in possession of seventeen acres ' of the Arlington estate, upon which she has lived for thirty years. Gr In the case of Col. Jacques, of Illinois, whose trial on an indictment for murder has been for some days in progress, the jury returned a verdict of not guilty, without leaving their seats. eir The friends of Mr. William Lloyd Garrison propose raising a fund of fifty thousand dollars, to be presented to bim in token of their appreciation of his labors-in-the anti-slavery cause. tom Andrew Johnson, Jr„ nephew of the President, has been removed from the agency of the Kentucky State Peni tentiary, by the commissioners of that institution. eir Two more veeials have just arri ad in the New York Bay with Asiatic cholera—sixty-eight passengers died and were buried at sea. aa r Gen. Winfield Scott died at West Point, on Tuesday morning, aged 80 years. fir General Robert. Anderson ie seri eniff ill in New York. sr The eastern end of the old Har risburg bridge was destroyed by fire on Saturday morning last. The flames were discovered about twelve o'clock, and before one o'clock the entire por tion of the structure reaching from Har risburg to Foster Island was burned and fell into the channel, threatening the Cumberland Valley Railroad bridge, situated a few hundred yards below it, and which was only saved after much exertion. The old Harrisburg bridge was erected ender the patronage of the Commonwealth in 1811, and in 1816 the first toll was taken. The original cost of the bridge was $192,000. air The proprietors of he Fort Pitt Cannon Foundry, Pittsburg, intend sending a big twenty.inch cannon from that city to the Paris exhibition. It will be 22 feet long, 51 feet diameter at the breach, and will weigh 50 tons. When completed it will be mounted on an excellent iron carriage, weighing eight tons, and will be accompanied by specimens of balls, shells and cartridges. The cost of this monster will be about $30.000. It requires 100 tons of melted iron to cast one, and fourteen days to cool it off properly. igir Major Gilbroth, sent by General Howard to investigate the Memphis ri ots, has made a partial report on the subject. He says : The civil authori ties have not taken the slightest notice of these terrible riots, and seem to re gard them as simply a skirmish between the police and the negroes. It was cer tainly a very. one-sided skirmish, as from the testimony no resistance was made by the negroes after the first night. or The little borough of Milton , Northumberland county, Pa.. sets a good though rather an expensive ex ample. It supplies lime gratuitously, for whitewashing purposes, and where there is a board or scantling it is sure to receive a coat of white. Little dan ger of the cholera in that place. sr The Eon. John A. Logan declines to be a candidate for next Congress in " Egypt," but proclaims his unwavering devotion to the principles of the Union party. The Unionists of Pennsylvania will be glad to learn that he designs to stump the State in behalf of his old comrade in arms, General Geary. Or Two car-loads of strawberries now arrive daily at Chicago from Cobden, Anna and Villa Ridge, on the Illinois Central Railroad. There is an area of over three hundred acres of strawberries now ripening in those three towns, and promising the heaviest yield that any season has afforded. Er In the Supreme Court in the case of John Mulclahy vs. Dr. Henry J. Bow ditch, for damages for illegally branding the plaintiff with the letter " D." deser ter, while examining surgeon in the pro vost marshal's office, the jury returned a verdict of $l,OOO damages for the plain tiff. A young man named Naze!, of Shelby county, Ohio, bloomed in the muzzle of hie gun to ascertain whether it was load ed, holding the hammer back at the same time with his foot. Hie foot slip ped, the gun went off, and the contents went through his month and the back part of hie head. er We notice the newspapers in all parts of the country seem to be going into ecatacies of late over the wonderful medical properties of Coe's Cough Bal sam and Coe's Dyspepsia Cure. We are glad to know that these reliable rem edies are for sale by every Druggist in the land. A late arrival from Europe brings in telligence of a great financial panic. Many leading banking houses bad sus pended, among them that of Sir Morton Peto, who lately visited the United States, on business connected with one of our great railroad thoroughfares. eir Mrs. Jeff Davis-remains in Wash ington, bringing all the resources and powers of woman's diplomacy to secure the release of her husband on parole. The Washington correspondent of the Tribune says that she will of course ac. eomplish her objects. (f The Grant House at Franklin, Pa., was destroyed by fire on Saturday. Loss $60,000. Two servant girls perish ed in the flames, and a lady who jumped from the fourth story window died of injuries received. g It is understood that Mre. Lincoln is about to purchase a residence in Cbi cago for the sum of $14,000, and that Robert Lincoln is about to be admitted" to the bar, and to enter upon the prac tice of his profession in that city. isar A, young lady named Klinefelter, resi ding in Mifflin township, Cumber land county, died lately of voluntary starvation, having for twelve days and nights refused to taste 'food. Canse, disappointment in marriage: igir An important case came up before the Sgireine Court of Pennsylvania, at Harrisburg, viz : Are conscripts who refused or neglected to report entitled to a vote ? No decision was arrived at. - Semmes is preparing •an account publication of hie cruise in the Ala ,. a ; it will be a new edition of " The L , r%?.THE MARLETTIAN.g-a-, News in Britt It is ascertained that some of the conductors on the city railroads in New York are confederates of pickpockets. Governor Sutter, the first discoverer of gold in California, is supported by a pension from the State. Dr. Benjamin Newland, recently on trial at New Albany, Indiana, for the murder of Prof. Evans, whom he charg ed with seducing his_danghter, has been acquitted on the ground of insanity. Dr. B. L. Lago, assistant editor of the Atlanta Era, committed suicide at the Southern hotel, St. Louis, on the 13th inst.; by taking morphine. Loss of pro perty and disappointed love are the rea sons assigned for the suicide. The White Workingmen's eight hour league of New Orleans, which excludes negroes from membership, struck recent ly, and were much disgusted next day to find their places filled by colored workmen. A young clerk in St. Louis, undertook to kill himself by shooting, because a gentleman would not let him marry his daughter. He went into a lumberyard, and commenced a preliminary prayer, when three of his young friends surpris ed him, took away his pistol, and advis ed him to elope with the girl. A slaughter house has been erected near Chicago, to do the entire slaughter ing of that city. It is 275 feet long by 175 feet wide, and is three stories high, and can work off daily 15,000 head of cattle, hogs and sheep. New York is moving in the same matter. The Freedmen's Bureau agent at Mo bile has notified the Mayor to cease putting colored men in the chain gang, or he will proceed against him under the Civil Rights bill. The Mayor replies that he is simply carrying out a city or dinance, and will continue to enforce it until restrained by military orders. Messrs. McKay 8.-; Aldus, of East Boston, have just finished the largest locomotive ever built in New England for the Lehigh Valley Railroad. It is named Towanda, has ten wheels, with cylinders of 18 by 22 inches, is 30 tons weight, and is capable of drawing 200 cars with 5 tcns of coal in each car. John P. Gray, a lad about twelve years of age, residing with his parents ip Providence, R. 1., was so much exci ted by the passing of the menagerie and circus a day or two since, that he went up into the attic and hanged himself. He was dead when discovered. The passengers of the cholera ship England declare that they were fed upon beef from cattle that were diseased with the rinderpest, and that the officers of the ship sunk many barrels of the ad(' to prevent the authorities at the New York quarantine from knowing its char acter. James L. Gibbs, Collector of Internal Revenue, at Columbia, S. C., keeps dis played in his sitting room a large and elegantly wrought confederate flag made from silk which came through the block ade. Widow Sherman, of West Springfield, Mass., had a husband, a brother, twenty cousins and seventeen nephews, in the Union army during the war, Her hus, band was killed. In Evansville, Ind., all persons offend ing against municipal regulations and unable to pay their fines are to be work ed on the streets at sixty cents a day until their fines and costs are paid. A child in New Jefferson, lowa, was fatally poisoned, a few days ago, by chewing pieces of an enamelled paper collar. The enamel contains arsenic. Samuel Kennedy, the last survivor of the Wyoming massacre, died near York springs, Adams county, Pa, on the 11th inst., in the 93d year of his age. Gen. Grant has directed the master ont of six more colored regiments, while 17,000 will be retained in the service. It is intended to send a number of them out to the far west. At least twelve hundred blexicans were executed in one month, in Zacate cas, under Maximilian's decree condem ning to death those opposed to his gov ernment. The New York board of Health is fitting up the Battery Barracks for the occupancy of poor families while their domicile are being cleansed as a precau tion against cholera. Stephens acknowledges the receipt of about $140,000 in all,, at various times, from American Fenians. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company have a coops of photogr . aohers now en gaged in taking photographic views of the road from Philadelphia to Pitts, burg. General Spinner thinks of resigning his office of United States Treasurar, and accepting the Frankton°, of a New York Insurance Company, Mre. Jeff Davie went to church ,on Sunday laet, attended by Senator Saab bnry. General B. F. Butler has been chosen a major general of the Massachusetts State Militia:. It is believed that Congress will ad- We have been shown, says the Bos ton Journal, a counterfeit gold eagle, so ingeniously made that it is calculated to defy even experts. Apparently it is genuine, so far as weight and appear ance are concerned, and tested by acids it would be pronounced genuine; and even a file, unless very vigorously ap plied, would not show the deception. Upon breaking it open, however, the in terior is filled with a small plate of pla ting, and instead of Wag worth ten dol. lam in gold its value is only about one third of that amount. It is in contemplation to build a new and costly executive mansion on the high grounds east of the. Capitol, and turn the White House into a fire-proof building for the State Department. It was for that purpose leave was asked to bring in a joint resolution directing the proper committees to make a reconnois sance for a site. A. little girl, seven years old, crept out of the fifth story window of a house in New York, on Friday, and falling on the sidewalk was instantly killed. She had been locked in by her poor mother, who had gone out to work. Josh Billings says, "two lovers, like two armies, generally get along quietly till they are engaged." He says farther, " if you itch for fame, go into a grave yard and scratch yourself against a tume stone." The Coppeijohnsons of Maryland held a meeting at Baltimore on Tuesday, un der the leadership of Montgomery Blair. No reporters were admitted to take any part in the proceedings. The trial of Davis, it is now thought,. will be postponed till November end, the indictment altered. Davis' counsel will ask a trial in June, or their client's re lease on bail. It is believed that the telegraph can be constructed through Siberia with lit tle trouble, because the Poles are al ready on the ground. The people of West Virginia have decided by a large majority to disfran chise all rebels and rebel sympathizers. Among the advertisements in a tete paper, 'we read that " Two sisters want washing." In fishing for compliments, there is certain to be a fool at one end of the line. Forgery is now called one of the fine arts. We wish it was one of the lost arts. sr The graduates and pupils of Gi rard College, Philadelphia, celebrated their anniversary on the 21st of May, the birthday of the benevolent million aire, Stephen Girard. The outside at tendance comprised two classes of grad uates, those who had gone from the col lege and entered apprenticeship, accord ing to the will and testament of Girard, and those who were past-apprentices ; and were gathered chiefly from the State of Pennsylvania. The College is not yet 20 years old, and the oldest of its alumni—among whom are shoemakers, printers, farmers, smiths, designers, en gravers civil engineers, architects, cash iers, lawyers, editors and doctors—is not yet 30 years of age. • Or General Grant does not agree with our Democratic friends, who be lieve that the condition of Southern sentiment is entirely submissive and loy al. He writes a letter in which he urges the immediate passage of the Army bill on the ground that it is necessary to garrison different points in the Southern States, where the people are in a condi tion of stubborn revolt against the poli cy of the Government. The General may look sharp for a storm of copper head denunciation. ear The American Statesman sends a prize to every subscriber and club, val ued at from $l,OO to $lOO,OO consisting of Hoop Skirts, Engravings, Portraits, Lithographs, Albums, Books, Sewing Machines, Washing Machines, Gold Pens, Plants, Seeds, and other articles too numerous to mention. Send for copy of Statesman and see catalogue, office 67 Nassau street, New York. ear The birthday of Queen Victoria was celebrated in Canada, on Friday, in a variety of ways. Speeches were made troops, manoeuvred, salutes were fired, and two men were killed, and an enter prising operator struck oil. or A goidier who needed it has in vented a left-handed knife and fork com bined, with which a person who has lost his right, arm can feed himself very conveniently. fir The Legislature of Pennsylvania, in 1764, passed the foll Owing "Re solved, That no member of the Legisla ture will be allowed to come into the Hoare barefooted." sr The freedmen's court in Tennessee have been abolished, the law of the State giving colored persons the right to testify in any cases in any court. Gir The name of the last new color is "Elephant's Breath." It would •be bard to_ imagine the shade from the name. ®' The admission'of Tennessee will speedily follow the adoption of the' re- .%petiai Notitto GIVE NATURE A Ltrr.—People expect too much of Nature They trifle with their health and their constitutions, and then are surprised that they fall sick. The pressure of constant mental or bodily labor upon the animal powers is tremendous. Very few systems and constitutions can bear up against this pressure unassisted. Add to this the unhealthy influences which lurk un seen in thn air we breathe, the water we drink, the artificial heat with which we endeavor to chase away the cold and marrow-searching moisture of winter, and it would seem to re quire almost superhuman vigor to keep in per fect health at this rigorous season without re inforcing the physical energies. But how reinforce them? Certainly not with adulterated stimu ants. There is no poison in the outer air, or in the atmosphere of furnace-heated rooms, or workshops, or factories, so pernicious as those deadly-burn ing fluids. Why use them, when Hostdter's 6Yomach Bitters, a vegetable tonic without alloy, are everywhere obtainable 1 Nothing has ever been offered to the feeble and debilitated so harmless in its nature, so powerful in its in vigorating effects, as this celebrated Stomachic and Alterative. In the army and the navy, in new settlemea ts, and in crowded cities, by old and young, rich and poor, it is used as a Protective and Restorative Medicine, with the most gratifying results. J. LYON'S PERIODICAL Mmes. The great fe male Remedy for Irregularities.—These Drops are a scientifically compounded fluid prepara tion, and better than any Pills, Powders or Nostrums. Being liquid, their action is direct and positive, rendering them a reliable, spee dy and certain specific for 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 p aise 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 should 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 Joust L. Leos, without which none are genuine. Prepared by Dr. Jornt L. Lvorr, 195 Chapel street, New-Haven, Conn., who can be con sulted either personally or by mail, (enclosing stamp) concerning all private diseases and fe male weaknesses. Sold by Druggists every where. C. G. CLARK & Co., Gen'l Agts for U.S. and Canadas. Lir 31:2 A Single Box of BRANDRET/I'S PILLS contain more vegetable extractive matter than twenty boxes of any pills in the world besides; fifty-five hundred physicians use them in their practice to the exclusion of other purgatives. The first letter of their value is yet scarcely appreciated. When they are better known, sudden death and continued sickness will be of the past. Let those who know them speak right out in their favor. It is a duty which will save life. Our race are subject to a re dundancy of vitiated bile at this season, and it is as dangerous as it is prevalent ; but Bran dreth's Pills afford an invaluable and efficient protection. By their occasional use we pre vent the collection of those impurities which, when in sufficient quantities, cause so much danger to the body's health. They soon cure Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Loss of Appetite, Pain in the Head, Hartburn, Pam in the Breast bone, Sudden Faintness an d Costiveness. Sold by all respectable Dealers in Medicines. To Con:sumprivEs.—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 the directions far 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 spread information which he conceives to be invaluable!, and he hopes every sufferer will try his remedy, as it will cost them nothing, and may wove a blessing. Parties wishing the ppescription, 'D E, b:, - return mail, wilt' please address Rev. &mann A. Wzr.son, Williamsburg, Kings County, Ngw-York. IIY Cholera, Diarrhoea and Dysentery I—A cure is warranted by Dr. TOBIAS' celebrated Venetian Liniment, if used when first taken by persons of temperate habits. This medi cine has been known in the United States over twenty years. Thousands have used it, and found it never failed to cure any complaint foi which it was recommended, and all those who first tried it, are now never without it. In the Cholera of 1848, Dr. TOB IAS attended 40 cases and lost 4,being called in to late to do any good. DIRECTIONS :—Take a teaspoonful in a wine glass of water every half hour for two hours, and rub the abdomen and extremities well with the Liniment. To allay the thirst, take a lump of ice in the month, almost the size of a marble every ten minutes. It is warranted perfectly innocent to take internally. Sold by all Druggists, price 40 and 80 cents. De pot, 56 Courtlandt-st, N. Y. [4O-1m DEAD HEADS, or, in other words, heads whose once glorious: locks have WITHERED AND WHITENED, can in a few moments be re-clothed with all their YOUTHFUL ATTRAC TIONS, by a single application of that wonder ful talisman, CHRISTADORO'S HAIR DYE. Grizzled whiskers and moustaches. ladies) curls into which the snow of age has prema turely drifted; and red, sandy or white brown hair, receive, as if by magic, the rarest shades of black or brown from this harmless botani cal hair darkener. Manufactured by T. Chris tadoro, 6 Astor House, New-York. Sold by Druggists. Applied by all Hair:'Dressers. Dumas or YOUTH.—A gentleman who suf fered fox years from Nervous Debility, Pre mature Decay, and all the effects of youthful indiscretion, will, for the sake 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 addreaiing Joule 8..043- Love AND MATRIMONY:—Lac" aad Gomel', if you "lob to tour", Odeon th e 46. th deraigned, who will eend you, without cu te ' and without price, he info rmation 4 r , will enable you to marry happily a n d epttdl, ; irrespective of age, wealth or beauty. T j information will coat you nothing, end if wish to marry, I will cheerfully mein ya ls All letters strictly confidential. The Cu information sent by return mail, lead e, tt. ward asked. Address SABAH B. Len,,,„, Kings county, N. Y. [ 351 ; Greenpoint, To DRUNKARDS.—A reformed m eydse would be happy to communicat e N charge ) to as many of his fellow b tit It will address him, very importa at , t 4 410 1 1 information, and place in their kw, a au e cure for the love of Strong Drink of itykm This information is treely offered by has narrowly escaped a drunkards Address. SETS[B. LIZSDERIOS 4 N 0,5 44 Street, New York. STRARCE, BUT TELVE.—Every yo., t 144 and gentleman in the United States 44 'zeir something very much to their advantage return mail (free of charge,) by i dd, l4l the undersigned. Those having fears of 444 humbugged will oblige by not ootteing tbs card. All others will please address obedient servant, Tiros. F. Casesin, ig ! Broadway, N. Y. gam Deafness, Blindness and Ceterthoit,. ted with the utmost success, by J. Is AAc s, M. D., Oculist and Aurist, (formed) ally. den, Holland,) No. 519 PINE Bt., phis.. Testimonials from the most teliible sources in the city and country cso be se tag his of f ice. The medical faculty ere iliiiteiti accompany their patients, as he hie noieeet, in his practice. Artificial Eyes inserted sA, out pain, No charge for examinatioo. 113 — Ladies use Dr. Velpau's French Fdi. Sold by Dr. F. Hinkle, Marietta, and by n good druggists. Reduction in. Price of the American. TVatches, made at Wa/tkvii,jui, In consequence of the recent great dole. in gold and silver and all the materials* in the manufacture of our goods, end in 16 cipation of a still further decline, we haven. duced our prices to as low a point as they co be placed WITH GOLD AT PAR, so Oslo one need hesitate to buy a watch now Iron the expectation that it will be cheaper atoms future time ; the test of ten years and theme ufacture and sale of MORE THAN 200,000 WATCHES, have given our productions the very hi* rank among time-keepers. Commencing via the determination to make only thoroagby excellent watches, our business has etndill increased as the public became Implant with their value, until, for monthetogetherm have been unable to supply the demand. WI have repeatedly enlarged our factory bald. ings until they now cover oven three urea ground, and give accommodation tismorensi eight hundred workmen. We are fully justified in stating thatwener Make more than half of all the Wa tdn sold in the United Stoke. The different grades are distinguished Oils following trade marks engraved on the plate: I.—"Ameriean Watch C o ," Waltham. Mae 2.—" A ppleton, Tracy & Co." Waltham, MO. 3.—" P. S. Bartlett," Waltham. Mass. 4.—" Wrn. Ellery," s.—Our Ladies' Watch of first quality is ro- med "Appleton, Tracy .It. Co., Wettre, ME! S.—Our next quality of Ladies' Vieth is 111 , med ac P. S. Bartlett, Waltham, Elan , These watches are furnished in a green . riety of sizes and styles of cases. The American Watch Co. of Waltham,Mus authorize us to state that without dietinctioß of trade marks or price, All the Products of their Factory an FULLY WARRANTED to be the beat timekeepers of their cars ever made in this or any other country. MP should remember that, unlike the suirlot" of a foreign maker who can never be Tes N. this warrantee is goed at all times sgsuutik Company or their agents, and that it trier ° most thorough trial, any watch should pro" defective in any particular, it may 111 0 0 exchanged for another. As the Americo Watches made at Waltham,are form& Will' era generally throughout the country, we not solicit orders for single watches. CAUTIO?..—The public art, cantiomd only of respectable dealers. All persole o ing couLterfeits will be prosecuted. BOBBINS Le APPLETOS , Agents for the American Watch COMP 8,2 Broadway, N. Y. Vs NEW GOODS At Greatly Reduced Trio We beg leave to invite all those Who ° ell; want of Bargains to our NEW AND CHEAP DRY GOO% Groceries, Queensware, Glassware, /e' Lions, 4rc., and all other classes of goods genersfilloPti° a first class store. Having purchased tire stock For CASH and at the reeesta'`'"" will sell them much limo the forma tht"' COME AND SEE OUR CHO MUSLINS, CHECKS, TICAS, GINGHAMS, PRINTS, &on 4e " which will be sold right down with the It ; et. Our Dress Goods department OP; the latest dosigns of goods adapted to the son which will' be found full and WW I CLOTHS, CASSIMERES and rESTP IN GREAT VARIETY 01 of which we have a beautiful line of Fiti°,4, Fancy Cassimeres, English and French 74 ings, Plain Black Cloths, both ore i g n domestic, and all other Goods for a of St. _ Queensware, a full line of Toilet, 1 1: 1 , Dinner Setts, covered dishes, &0., ° t c 't f c boics on hand, Groceries, a good supplY Teas. Coffee, Sugar, Syrup and spice s 091 3 Dry Goods cheaper than liT io tol Come and see us and be convinced !L e y say. BOWERS k o t, lideaavr i ;t e i t i to , f r st lll ifi S ce a ßr mg Al Poet i MAY, 31, 1866. Campbell, Miss A. S. Ritchey', Gailbough, A. Smith, Ilir Grail, Miss Lisia B. Shreiner, filt.2. Glines, Mr. William Wiley, Mrs.L,„.:c. Graulich, Mr. Alois Woulgniuthee McKim, John Wilson, bir.e,,:go Metzger. Elizabeth tare of Conn 111 Orendorf, Mr. G. W. & Wilson, 7„lies Pndeaus, Miss M. Zeller, ..„,,r nr . To obtain any of Morel llie r. Tn., 0 plicant must call for ,iadvertss dae7;t' sit: of sd of this list, and PO ° De 6 ht. ^A.SS.IO E.! 41