Int atitttiatt. MARIETTA. PA : Saturday Morning, April 27, 1867. gar The Republican vote in Connecti cut at the late elcction was 1,88 . 1 more than any vote ever before. cast for a Delon candidate in , that State. Thii does not look as if the tide was turning. English, the Democratic millionaire can didate, beat Hawley, the voluiteer sol dier, only by an enormous expenditure of money. In truth, the amount spent by the Democracy on Connecticut was more than a national election, let alone a small State, would justify. .When we recollect how near this little State is to New York city, where the Democracy always keep in reserve and ready for duty, a heavy moveable column of dis posable voters, we can understand the result. or During the recent passage of the steamer Chicago from Liverpool to New York, ao iceberg was encountered which stove in her bow, and for several days she was in imminent danger of sinking. During the excitement one of the steer age passengers furnished a little melan choly amusement by followitg the officers about and offering them money if they would let him to into tl e boats with them. He was perfectly willing his wife should remain on the ship. She was a good Christian, he said, and pre pared to die ; but he was not quite rt sly to go ; and would rather get to New York first where he could have time fur repentance. it During the coming summer the plan is to be tried of notifying farmers by telegraph of approaching storms. The plan is to send telegrams, in advance of the storm, to the county.seats, and notification thence sent to the farmers by the firing of cannon. The farmers will at once proceed to gather in their hay and grain to save it from wet or damage• The trouble is, however, that the sound of the gun will not reach beyond a few miles—and against the wind scarcely at all gar A. T. Stewart is famous, and for nothing but his wealth. All the papers in the country toady after him because be is rich. Dupes Monthly gives him a grand laudation ; the Philadelphia Borne Weekly continues the strain and other papers are loud in praise. We bare heard of none who date to do oth erwise than flatter. But. the fact Mr. A. 'l'. Stewart has but few friends in New York. where Lis gieediness is • known. J A journal in St. Petersburg, Ro sin, announces that "the cholera seems inclined Co repeat its visit of last year Many Cases have appeared in the hospi tals. Our society, proud of the brilliant results of its efforts last year, has again tt 't to work." The Mayor of Cincinnati. in a late message, calls attention to "the necessity of cleaslinere throughout the city, in view of the probable return of the cholera." Situilar,preparat ions bare been made in various other places. W A new process for cleansing the facades of public buildings and dWellinv houses is now being esperimebted on in Paris. A steam engine supplies pipes of gotta percha with a constant stream of the vapor. These are applied to the stone or brick surface of the build ings, one man directing the steam jpt and the other using a brush. The build• ing, after the application ,of this system, looks as clean and new as when erected. fir We notice still, every now and then, in our Southern exchanges, the announcement of a tournament, where queens and knights (so-called) are to smile and joust as queens and knights are supposed to hare done in monarchi al countries and semi•civiliaed times This foolishness is worse than folly now in a ease where thousands are dying of starvation. Or The whole torn of Stormstown, in lialfmoon Volley, Centre county, woe consumed by 6re on Sunday last. It consisted of fourteep hpunee, including three stores and two hotels. The fire broke oat about an ont oven. The ,day being very windy, the flames soon spread. tN,- • illikt,*prospect fora large crop of pee hea to _Delair.are is reported to be very i l aiter ng In SOsseie county a gentleman from New York, is planting about 7000 trees, and other orchards are forming. Delaware peach trees re tain their vigor many years. Sir Daring a recent trip of the Dn lin and Bristol steamer Rosetta, she ran short of fuel, owing, to the very se vere weather, and was compelled to born the , bodies of four hundred hogs which bad died on board. Qbaries Ii youngestson ofr Fred. stick Douglass, has been appointed a TRIIRTBLII Farman of Chicago, who had been separated from her husband about two years, end who was acting as housekeeper for a gentle man of that place, last week adminis tered a dose of strychnine to her little daughter, aged abut two years, in some milk. She sat down quietly with the child in her lap and 'watched the effects of the poison until the child was dead. 1 She then took a dose of the poison her self, and in ten minutes was a corpse. She had been for some time endeavor ing to get a divorce from her husband, at the same time laboring under the delusion that the gentleman for whom she was keeling house would marry ber. A few days previous to the tragedy. the gentleman married another lady, and the disappointment induced her to commit the deed. U At Junction City, Kansas, on the Bth inst., a man named Wm. Moore. while seated at the breakfast table with his wife and children, drew a revolver and shot his wife dead: An attemi t was made by his neighbors to arrest Inin, but his threatening demonstrations lira vented it. In about two hours alter shooting his wife he obtained a pillow laid his wife's head upon it, laid down on the floor beside her, deliberately shot himself through the head with the revol ver, and died in a few minutes. Moore had for several years threatened to enact this terrible tragedy. or A manly little fellow of five years 'el, and cut his upper lip 83 badly that a rurgron had to be summoned to sew up the wound. He sat in his mother's lap during the painful operation, pale, but very quiet, resolutely keeping back his tears end moans. In her .distress, the young, mother could not refrain from saying : "Oh, doctor, fear it will leave a oiafiguring scar !" Charley looked up into her tearful face, and said, in a corn forting tone : "Never mind, mamma, my mustache will cover it." a liar Mr. John Adam blase, of Potts rille, and late of Albany townsbir, Berks county, died at the residence of his grand daughter, in that borough, on Friday, the 'sth inst., aged 94 years. Be was a shoemaker by trade and worked at it until a few days before be died, lie had what is known as "second Sight," and could read without using spectacles. ti is mental faculties were strong; his bear ing was extraordinary for one of his age, while he had °tibia bead a profusion of jet black hair.. isr The statement which obtained general publication a few days ago, that Attorney-General Eitanbary has said to District Attorney L. 11. Chandler, that the case of Jell. Davis must be disposed of at the coming May term, is authors- Lively denied. The Attorney General has given no such instructions to Mr. Chandler, and it is probable that Mr. Davis will be permitted to continue his lessons in painting namolested for some time longer. ar Salt Lake City is one of the most beautifully laid out cities in the world. The streets are very wide, with wafer running through nearly every one of them. Every block is surrounded with beautifril shade trees, aii4 almost every house has its neat little orchard ofapple peach apricot and cherry trees. In fact the Whole nine squares , is alMost one continued . orchard. Gar An lowa woman becothing jealous of her husband, cams behind him and bent his head back, and kissed him, and immediately afterward emptied a bottle of vitrol in his face intending . to put out his eyes. She failed in this, but. succeed ed in Inning his forehead and a portion of the scalp in a shocking manner. ar A general Jur; Bill, applicable to toe entire State—excepting the city of Ph Bade' phia—parsed both II onses of the Legislature, ft day or two before the final adjournment. The bill requires a board of jury commissioners consist ing of three, two commissioners, and the resideot judge. Miss Eller, or Hamilton comity Indiana, whose case has been alluded to, after several da}s of horrible suffering from hydrophobia, gradually became more tranquil ender the "bromide of potassium" ire; t neat of her physicians, and is now reported to be convalescent. ocr Two horae thieves were captured in Tremont county; lowe, a few days since.- A public meeting was called, and they were ordered to chose death, by hauging or shooting. They chose the latter, and were shot by twelve men with revolvers. iir A lady fainted a few days since in the cars. 'A medical gentleman present. who went to ber relief, exclaimed : "Ilse any gentleman a flask of-whisky or bran. dy 9" Over thirty pocket pistols flashed in the air at once. . oar At a fashionable wedding in Bel , tiniore, a short time since, a lady appear id in :a dress wholly of tin foil, gored-mid trimmed, with ear-rings and bracelet's hlso of in • Ur An 'deb paper annnonoes that a Mr,Kennv, returning to tow4-011:_dowo and broke big neck, but bapfikiceiv ed no otber.damagee. _ Jobn G. Saxe is going abroad, and WMOWWir‘atjlaS• i t A ea fer Those of our readers who lack a growth of hair upon the face, or those whose hair is falling out, or have become bald, would do well to try "Dr. Seligne's Restaurateur Capillaire." This prepar ation has been used by thousands in this country and Europe, with the most gre!- ifying results. Testimonials of the most flattering character have been received from the most wealthy and influential citizens sir the country, and . will be sent free to any one, on application,by Messrs. Berger, Shutts &Co , Chemibts, of Troy. New York, the only (Tents in America for the sale of the same. Read their ad vertisem'nt in this pnper. tjoT Of the many cosmetics and toilet articles now advertised, but few prove what they are represented. Messrs. Ber ger. Stoats & Co., Chemists, of Troy, N. Y are advertising extensively sever al articles that have proved themselves jut as represented, for . which they are acting as agents. We believe theta to be perfectly trustworthy, and that parties using their preparations will find them f illy tip to the recomrnen cations given. S-e their 'advertisement in another col- umu far There is now living in Lawrence county, Ohio, a gentleman who separated from his wife, in Penusylvanit, many years ago. fie came to southern Ohio, and married a Miss P., of Marietta.— After the second wife's death, a daughter t-y the first marriage brought about a reconciliation between her father and her mother, and they were re-married more than twenty years after the date of their separation—the first wife becoming the third. Gar The drought, in Cuba has greatly injured the crops; the planters will he content to secure a two•thirds crop, and they cannot realize even that much unless rain Bets in soon. A great many wealthy planters and merchants have failed, and, as usual, political discontent follows so cial and commercial disaster. Crime is very rife, and suicides and murders are increasing with fearful rapidity. Foi eigo immigrakton Into Virgin i destined to be a failure. The sys t .in of treatment practised toward slaves is too deeply engrafted upon the Soria ern mind to 'render them capable of treating white laborers as they should. The present generation mint I a3s away before the South can adapt itself to the requirements of white labor. of Those emitieut men, Dr. James Clark, Physician to Queen Victoria and Dr. Hughes Bennett, say that consump tion can be crnisd. Dr. ~Wistas knew this when he discoveied his now widely known Balsam of Wild Cherry, and ex perience has proved the correctness of his opinion. fir Senator Nye on Friday made sad havoc of the Copperhead whine that the Radicals were neglecting the soldierF. It was rather a sad joke on Senator Dix on, of Connecticut, to have the defeat of General Hawley, of his State, by the Johosonites, cited as an answer to this formal accusation. ar Map makers will be kept busy for the-future A great war in Europe is nequestionately" on the eve of bursting out, which will undoubtedly change - the bounderies of the Old World. In the New World, the sale of the territory by Russia to the United State s will also gi% 0 work to map makers. . gar The trial of the new railroad con sttuctor has been a complete success.— The machine levels the track, lays the ties, deposits the rails and then nails them to their places. It is estimate.l that with a company of twenty men it will-do as much work per day as two hundred men without the aid of the con strurtar. ar A. duel tools place in New Orlear Le., on the morningof March 2-9th, I tween the nianager of the National The a-re and the editor of the German Ga zette. The latter was seriously and r bably - fatally allot at the third fire. 'fats weapons used were revolvers. The cause of the renconii•e was an actress. 4,6 y. Wisconsin has taken the lead in woman's suffrage. Both houses of the Legislature have passed an amendment to the Constitution, to be submitted to the people, extending the right of suff rage to all persons over the age of twenty-one years. - Gar .A panic occurred in Philadelphia behools on Friday over a rumor that col ored children were to tie admitted— teachers being informed that if such was to be the fact their white rupila would withdraw. it A man in Milwaukee, who was recently retoscitatell after having been apparently drowned, has publiebed his sensations. lle found it delightful to drown; bat terrible to revive. . Twenty tire passengers named Smith, registered their names for a late trip of the steamer Bills Memphis, on the Mississippi. • 6 The New Orleans Times says that Lek a Poncbartrain is unfit for swimming his 'Beason. as its waters are covered with a green scum. lir The "I.:iger Ship" Ross Winans has recently made a successful trip in 16tb3s (It 33rier William and Mary College, in Virgin-' is, is to be rebuilt, and help is wanted. It is the oldest college in America, but wto horned down during the war. Thom as Jefferson, James Monrne, John Mar Fhal. Winfield Scott, Peyton, Edmund and John Randolph, L. W. Tazewell, John J. Crittenden and others well known, were graduates of the college. In Belgium, where every post office has its telegraph wire, a message of twenty words is sent to any part of the kingdom for ten cents. In Switzerland, under the same system, both messages sod money orders can be seat at very low rates, and people send more messages than letters. " Wisconsin takes the lead in the wom en suffrage movemeot, tile Senate harir g concurred, by a rote of 19 to 9, with the Assembly resolution proposing to amend the constitution so as to extend suffrage to all persons over the age of 21 years. Under a recent decision of the Su preme Court of:Ohio, the keeper of a billiard table who receives pay for its use, the money being paid by the loser, although no money is lost oo the game, the keeper of a gaming table within the meaning of the statute. A watch has been trianntactured in Paris which is wound up by simply open ing the case to note the time. It only requires to be opened once a month to keep it always going, and it is perhaps the nearest approach to perpetual mo tion yet invented. ear Scarcely too much can be said in praise of onions for fowls. They seem to be a preventive and remedy for vari ous diseases to which domestic fowls are liable. Having frequently tested their excellence we can speak understandingly. For gapes and inflammation of the throat, eyes and bead, onions are almost a spe ,. elec. We would recommend giving fowls, and especially young chicks, as many as they will eat, as often as two or three. times a week. They should be finely chopped. A small addition of In Portland, last Friday, a workman corn meal is an improvement. For scalds engaged in blasting rock peeped round a and burns. take raw onions and pound or corneeof the Casco Bank building to see ma s h as fine as possible and apply at if a charge was going off, and received a once, it will give immediate relief. mouthful of dirt_ by way of information. I ear Ex Brigadier General Joseph Bail- Tile principle damage was done to his ey, Sheriff of Vernon county, NI issour', teeth. was brutally murdered, while discharging the duties of his Office, by tao brotht Lewis and Perry Pixley, on the 26th ul timo. General Bailey will be remem bered as the gallant officer whose ingen uity extricated Commodore Porter's gunboat fleet from a perilous situation at the tinne . of the disastrous Banks ex p'dition up the Rad ricer in 1864. The affair has caused intense excitement in the border counties. The citizens base subscribed $3OOO reward fur the appre hension of the . murderer!. The body of an unknown woman was found in the suburbs of Lexington, Ky, , on Saturday last. It appears that as she was crossing a fence her bonnet strings caught and strangled her to . death. A dog in Fayette county drove off a man who - was endeavoring to steal a tur key gobler the other night. The next day he met a workman on the road and attacked him furiously. The workman in his fright confessed to being the tur key thief. Mr. John Young, of Allegheny town ship, Blair county, died on the sth inst., from a dose of arsenic, administered through malice by some unknown person. The wife and daughter of the deceased have been arrested, charged with a knowledge of the clime. During the neat month so many Uni ted States Senators have - taken berths for Enrore, that should there be necessi: ty for a special session in July, it is prob able that there would be no quorum of that body in the country. As the French Rents droop in Paris under the fear of approaching trouble, United States bonds in Europe go up. This is a true indication of bow a foreign war will affect us. A Pingolar case of poisoning recently happened in Wisconsin. A mother gave her child a dose of strychnine, watched it die, and then administered the fatal dose to herself. - Victoria lately stood in person. as godmother at the baptism of the young Indian. Victor Albert, the infant son of His Highness the Mahprajah Dhuleep Sing. A. T. Stewart's store on Broadway, New York, is to be enlarged during the summer to Fix times its present size, when it will cover an acre and a gaiter of ground. Joseph W. Young, the eldest son of President Brigham. has married Mks Clara Stenbouse, daughter of the editor 0' the Mormon paper of Salt Lake City. Toombs of Georgia, has concluded that, "with all its disadvantages," the II 'Red States is the beet country in tl to live in. Embonpoint is the fashion in Paris now, and some of the most stylish hullos secure it by wearing false India rubber stomachs. The. French Academy have selected ai a sultjt•ct. for a Prizq poem the present, year “The Death of Prosident.•Lincoln. ' The log cabin iu ant en John Brown resided while a citizen of Kansas, is to be sent to the Paris Exposition. The New York Common Council To tid to pay two thousand -dollars 'for 'a file of the Is.ow York Herald. Captain Andersen, et the Crest But ern.steaniship, was at one limas compoa• ',or on a scotch newspaper. . There is a report that the friends of Jobe 11: Surratt are trying to secure lien. Butler as one of his counsels. The length of the public gas-pipes in Philadelphia is four hundred 211.141 eighty- SIX Wiles. George F. Train waa admitted to the oar of thumonati on Tuesday. The rebuilding or thu Lindell Hotel re, SL Louia him begun. There are fifty live daily Papers is Mr. John Thompson, known as 'Smok- giir At a meeting of the Board or D . bur Johnny," from his inveterate use of rectors of the Union National Bono; tobacco, died last week at Salem, Ind., , Joy Bank, held this dap, the r o li o . win et the age of over one hundred years i Preamble and Resolatino3 were p aped g It was noticeable in his case, as in that WIIERRAS, It has pleased an All. of many other centenarians, that while wise Providence to remov e M r , r be recollected scarcely anything that Kline from the P.C(-7)P or earthly 7: took place within the last few years. his bore, after a brief iliaeps and at a Per i od n us i z e e , r t the b i s fa n c o t i v t e ttrsat d tth a . m l . :y s zi memory of events which occurred in h when it seemed to tit r ear , or • •meltneee early days was remarkably vivid and ten- , were yet b fore him, 13 . i t IResolved, That in :pia t . w an e d re d c o o e g s d ominion by his presence General Joseph E. Johnston, in a late etter upon the subject of the first battle of Bull Run, says the victory there was regarded by the confederate troops as ktving decided the question of Southern independence, and ended the war, and thousands of them left the army and went home. The Union army, he says, was less disorganizA by defeat than the coufererate army by its trnmph. I A gentleman who had built a small • house in a seriteatered part of hie grounds for private study, showed it to a friend remarking, " (lore I sit reading from morning till night, and nobody a bit the wiser." ! An old miser wbo was notorious for self-oeniat, was one day asked why be was so thin. "I do not know," said be, " I have tried various means fur getting fatter, but without. success." " Hare I, you tried victuals ?" inquired the Irian?. oar The Methodist conference in ses sion in. New York city have adopted a report, deprecating the increase of world ly amusments among us—such as danc ing, attendance at -theatres, operas, cir cuses, negro minstrels, and the taking of each diversions as cannot ba used in the name of the Lord Jesus. Resolutions were ( unanimously adopted, calling upon all Christian mPn and women to discoun tenance and refrain from all such Fes times. ear The Editor of the Christian Al manac for 1867 has compiled the follow ing statistics of the Episcopal Church in the United States: Dioceses, 34; bishops, 44; priests and deacons, 2,305 ; ordinations daimons, !8 ; priests, 97 ; candidates for holy ord.-re, 226; church es consecrated, 39;, communicants, 161, 224; Sunday School teachers, 17,570; scholars, 157,813 ; contributions, $3,- 051,669 64. SFr A New York lady died some weeks ago in a diitant settlement near Lake Superior. Before her death she requested that her remains should be interred in Greenwood ; and her husband carried her corpse several hundred miles i i an open sleigh to the nearest railway station, whence it was conveyed to N6v York, and safely deposited in the resting place she had deegnated. itar A Southern exchange says that a plantation in Wilcox county, Alabama, of from fifteen hundred to two thousand acres which before the war produced, from eight thousand to ten thousand bushels of corn, and from three o hs'andred and fifty to five hundred bales of cotton was rented the other day for one hun dred and thirty dollars. eir The commission appointed by the President of the' United States to ex amine into the propriety of accepting League Island from the city of Phila delphia for navaitiasposes, has reported favorably. This report was the Conei ton on which Congress accepted the tender. fer G. Dawson Coleman. Esq., Sena. tor from the Lebanon District, paid over to the Treasurer of the Association in Lebanon. for the erection of a Soldie - rs' Monument in that place, $1,030.10. the amount of Mr. C.'s salary sod , mileage for the session just , closed. or It is said that Mr. Stevens is pre paring for publication an argument in favor of Mr. Sumner's bill removing all discrimination on account of color in the exercise of the elective franchise. or The neitrove couluietuorated the death of President Lincoln at Richinond. by public meetioie at which spetqlte preb, to even so small a band as oars. That by it, this Rank has lost a useful, :aitbful and efficient Director. one active in its Service, attentiv e to it, interests, and whose place will nat. Bono be well filled. The community has lost a good citizen, a worthy man and &kind neighbor. Resolved, That to the family or oar deceased fellow Direct° , we tender our heartfelt coudoleoce and most siocers sympathy iu their severe aflotieu. MOUNT JOY, Apri! 25th, 1867. The Pennsylvania canal, from nmbia to Hollidaysburg, was:mid to the Pea nay Ivunia Laud Company. Thoi.T. Wierwan of Harrisburg is th chid' En gineer. =3 ear Gov. tirttry has uppruinted Cu:. George F. McFarland, of Jutlion coun ty, at present the Stimi - Lqicel cirri- to the School department at Ilarriihar2, to be State Superintendent of &Wale Orphans, in ' , lace or Bun. Thomas 11, Burrowes, of Lancastpr. Tna LATEST V ASIIIoNS —Sine the to. vendors and socces-ful introductiob of the celebrated Duplex Ecliptic or double) Spring Moo Skirt, by Nlr. W. Bradley, of New York, the talk throughout the country have given Up the idea of discarding the faction of wearing hoopskirts oo account of the peculiar and graceful manner in which the Duplex Skirts adapt thPaisslvE, t o every exigency and emergency. So get; erally acceptable have these skirts be. "come that the ladies regard them at a special favorite, in view of the swetior Aexibility, lightness and durability corn biued in their manufacture. They also I consider them a lar more srooommil and comfortable hoop skirt than ever has or can b • made for al crowded sembliws, for the promenade or boon dress. Any lady after Reorifiz one rf these skirts will never afteraarie sill ingly dispense with their use. Longer. perience in the manufacture of hoq skirts, has proven to the proi root-tot this invention, that single-yringt will always retain that stiff, unyield.og aid bungling style which has ever characil erized them, whereas the double epilog hoop or the Duplex Elliptic, will he foucd free from these objections. Not withstanding the ability of the man lecturers, Messrs. Wics, Bradley Cary, to turn out over slx skirts per day from their large Mena factories, in New York, they feel oblig ed to request all merchant; ordering the Duplex Elliptic Skirts, to send their orders a few days before they are watt ed, if possible, t they are most coristailt ly oversold some days alsea I. MARRIED At Landisville, SLIUJet, eceaing last, at the residence of the bride's parents, by Rev. G. M. Clawges, MR DAVID MAWS, of 'Marietta, to Miss Marla 11. Plorr., of I andisvile, In this borough, on San lay evening last, by the same, Ma. \\ e. McNEAL, of Mount Joy, to M 135 KATE IinGLE, of Marietta. DIED On Sunday evening last, Ma. long ALMf of this borough, ag..4 67 years. At C,chtantowny on Tuesday April I3d. SARAH C. wife of Thomas 8311.0, (a.m. erly of this place, aged 34 years. C RIPPLLS 10 WALK. ROGERS' ELI C i'litt-ill.-I.C.NCT:C OIL, the peat king of aches tn I pains, is truly s n onderful medicine for rue core i•f Meow thin), Neuralgia, Sore threat, Ciaehs and Colds, contraction of the Moscles,,,ulLog sad swelliig of the Joints, lir tic, Cholera 3/obits, Lysentely, diseases of the Kidneys, Debilit, Pa:P lation of the Heart, weakness ptclalar to females, and will cm tinily cure all pm in any part of the body in ewe to live minutes. C .i.s toothache in one minute. - Corea eapeche in one lointre. ve mo •i• Cures nervous or Stec heattiene in fi utes. Cures Neuralgia in five minutes. five Pail a In the baßti, breast or e ta , in minutes, cures deafness in many es in I 3 to 2J minutes, cures cn.up in one n gaeue to ht. Oh main one to three d )s, fever and one evil. And if ItOGEn's I AVER Pitts ,1 are W used i., connection with the Electra ° r Oil, they n ill cure the DySf el Sia sad L . l ver . Cumpiaint • the pills of themselves are a great Runner of 'le blood and a wonderful tote, I mparting strength to the oehtlitated system. atiengtheiiing b.ringlegs the digestive organs, about a h ialtny action a the Liver, lodoey, , and skin, without. hich no person eau et I health ; the pills are also s awe prevenii elu t e . Ito the Fever and Ague. if a (etc foci ' s ore „ e i K i eu in the fall and swing. Toe oil 0 1111 t ,e ' d 3 are both purely vegetable, and cau be u ` with safety by old or young, male or leal ale ' and always with the happiest eirict. ~,,, pa x Dr. S. Rogers, Sole proprietor, N 0.2" street, Philadelphia. April 20 3m. I!)•.'iraTtli..-uN„TCia(PaNl,!:lSeyi-Ts IGTunS tt 3E a1 11,91, , pupont'a Sporting and Glazed Duck NAV& Baltimore Shot ; Shot Pouches, I.°a-der I' col old at JCHIN SPA4VGLIA'S. ---------- TNAME.I , OF AMERICA, for beentifyir: the complexion, softening the dkin , u.ov II !: tan, freckles and pimples. Sale at Dr. Landis' ...Golden .tlortat QOM ET lIING NEW! Patent tinsp poet et bootie no grim bands to renew, adapts to any condition of the finance. at JOHN 5P!0:2!_1,......6--
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers