Eite aritttiatt. *• - •j Ay 7' 4 • r 74-00* MARIETTA. PA : Saturday Morning, June 15, 1867, eir Wells, the late shuffling, incapable Governor of Louisiana; like Judge Abell, Mayor Monroe, and Attorney-General Herron, dies hard.' He first refused to yield op his office to the quiet demand of Governor Flanders ; but when Gen. Sheridan Bent him an order by the hands of one of his staff officers the valliant official yielded—yielded, he said only at the point of the sword I Now Wells joins with the previously ousted rebels and their followers in an effort to have Sheridan removed by the President, but we do not believe that so gallant and true an administrator of affairs in that military district will be turned out for doing his plain, premptory duty. The Provident will hardly venture upon such a step. Cr A man in Bridgeport, Conn., last Sunday went to church' to bear his "banns" announced. The naive of the lady was given correctly, but to hie hor ror another gentleman was named as the joyful expectant. He rushed fran tically to his inamorata, who said she had been induced to change her mind in consequence of hearing that he had been boasting of his conquest. She remained inexorable to hie ontreatius, and mar ried her new lover. t Sword blades resembling those of Daraascus,are made at Soligen,Germany. A faggot is first formed of alternate fine bars of iron and steel. It is drawn out, doubled and twisted several times, and . then formed into a ribbon. Two such ribbons are welded together, inclosing between them a thin blade of the best cutting steel. After polishing it, it is dipped in diluted sulphuric acid to give it a pattern. war The editor of the Olearmont Eagle oilers a thousand dollars for the inven tion of what he terms a sensible set of horse shoes—light neatly finished steel shoes that can be readily put on and taken off by the owner of the horse or the groom, just as he does the harness, when occasion requires. f ir Mayor McMichael, of Philadel phia, has issued rigid instructions to his lieutenants of police, relative to enforc• ins a late law of the Legislature provid ing for the closing of all drinking sa loons at 12 o'clock each night and on Sunday during the entire day and even ing. *ir A lady applied at the Portland, Me., police office on Monday, in search of a lost cat, for which she offered $l,OOO reward. She brought the ani mal from England, and thought a great deal of it. The cat had on when lost a gold necklace worth $4O which may ac count for its disappearance. ar Walter M. Rogers, a policeman, was murdered at Memphis last week by a drunken man named Tom Prewitt. The murderer approached the officer and told him to get down on his knees and beg for mercy. Rogers declined to do so, when Prewitt shot him dead. Pre witt was seized and put in jail. er At Fairfield, lowa, on the 22nd ult., Joseph Matthews, while partially deranged, deliberately murdered hie wife while she was preparing breakfast. Ile walked from the front room to the kitchen, and with two strokes of en axe killed her immediately. The - Only wit- ness present was aeon of about six years. lair The Richmond Examiner has been reduced in size and price. - It has two new editors, and will be published on the co-operative principle. 'lt also es chews politics and will henceforth de vote itself to the dissemination of news and the promotion of local interests. Gir The ex-Confederate Major Gener al Ewell is quietly cultivating a farm of a couple thousand acres at Spring Hill; Tenn. He very sensibly devotes his at tention chiefly to stock raising and to the cultivation of corn, and plants little or no cotton. er The wife ofG-, A. Niccals, Super intendent Of the Reading Railroad, was buried in Reading on Saturday. -In ad dition to a large concourse of citizens, there were some fifteen hundred, em ployees of the, railroad company in at tendance at the funeral. ifir A. Mrs. Parker,,of Anamose, lowa, has been living for months with a live lizard in her stomach, according to the quacks. Death finally came to her re lief, when, as the result of a post-mort.. em examination, it,was ascertained-that she had the consumption. GE - In Newborn, N. 0 4 ,:ayfew days since, a person who had purchased an old army mattress ripped it oggn -And discovered a big roll of greenbacks in it. There has been much rippiog of old matt r inns . eir A young lady, some six weeks since, residing in Quincy, 111, , was de tained in Springfield over Sunday, in consequence of a failure of the cars to connect. A young man from the same place, reached Springfield by another train and was similary detained. Both were disapointed, and disagreeable.— They met at the table, recognized each other, and although not formerly acquain ted, soon became so. Mutual distress established a chord of sympathy, and the day passed very agreeably. The following morning each took the several trains for their destinations. A few days later, two trains met at Berlin, and at opposite windows sat the young man and the young lady. 11l at ease in that con dition, the former left his seat, and en. tered the other car, and sat down by the side of the latter. Result—they are now on their wedding tour. Cr General Sheridan has written to General Grant his reasons for the remov al'of certain New Orleans officials. He removed Judge Abell because that offic er for nine months had promised, and made it matter of public scandal, that there should be no prosecution in his court againit the murderers of Union men and negroes. He removed Mr. Herron because be refused to do his duty in indicting the men who were known to have organized and conducted the massacre. He removed Mayor Mon_ roe because he controlled the regiment of murderers known as the police force of New Orleans. A gay and dashing young widow, in Medina, N.Y., en traped a young man and married him. An expensive wed ding tour followed. They then settled down in Grand Rapids, when husband became tired of her ways, and abandoned her. But her strategy was equal to her straits. She procured quinine, took twelve grains, and announced her inten tion to leave the earth. Her friends became alarmed, a physician was called and her husband summoned. The qui nine yielded, and so did the husband. Cir Charles Mix, one of the oldest and most respected residents of Barre, Or leans Co., came to his death last week in a singular manner. Elve was removing potatoes from an under to an upper bin in his cellar, and while stooping in the under bin, the upper one gave way, pre cipitating the accumulated weight upon him, and breaking his neck. The fami ly were absent at the time, and he was not found until the,day after the fatal occurrence. Mr. Mix had lived in the town over fifty years. igir A. creosoted sleeper, put down on the Stockton and Darlington Railway in England, in August, 1841, was taken up March 14, 1867, after nearly twenty-five years' service. The grain of the wood although slightly discolored - by creosote' is as fresh and apparently as tough as that of newly-sawed timber, and the odor of creosote is as strong as if the wood had just been operated upon. sur Last week a man was being tried before Judge Mitchell in Washington, N. C., for the crime of horse stealing ; the jury had just retired to find their verdict, when, an auction bell was heard announcing the sale of some bank prop erty; everybody being interested imme diately left the court-room, and the pris oner walked out with the crowd and left for parts unknown. 4.0" An exchange says : Put the feet for half an hour, two or three successive nights in a pretty strong solution of soda, the alkali dissolves the indurated cuti cule, and the corns fall out spontaneous ly, leaving, a small cavity which soon fills. This receipt is vouched for as a certain' remedy. Should it prove so it will entitle the author to the heart-felt thanks of many a sufferer. Imo' The Emperor Napoleon has pre sented to the University at South Bend, Indiana, superb and powerful teles cope, valued at 25.,000 francs. It has inscribed upon it in French ; "Present ed by his Imperial Majesty Napoleon lIL to the Catholic University of Notre Dame du Lac, Indiana, United States!' se- Mr. Henry Hazeltine, a young American sculptor, now in Rome,. is executing for the Union League Club of Philadelphia a colossal figure of Ameri ca twining wreaths of laurel - and imrnor relies for her ..children fallen in the late war—a bold and elegant composition. illar A man at Rochester, New York is raising the famous giant trees of Cal ifornia from the seed, to see how large they will grow in this country , As i takes only twenty-five hundred years for them to mature he will 'have a happy time experimenting ear The story that the iron clad Mien_ tonomal► has been or is about to be sold to Russia is best set at rest by stating that she has been ordered hOme, and will probably reach American waters early next month.. Mrs. Gen. Gaines' new house, op posite the Central Park, New York, is a "Princely" inandion. It will contain a splendid beudoir, billiard' room, picture gallery, ball-room, covered carriage ways, etc. fir Santa Anna, surrminded by all the luxuries which wealth command, is living at Staten Island, New York. ~~ Dr. Livingstone's murder, we are happy in being able to believe, was pre• maturely credited. Sir Roderick Mur chinson has succeeded ia ascertaining that the two Johanna men on whose authority the story rested i have given to different people such varying and incon sistent versions as to justify the belief that the whole thing was a falsehood to justify their desertion of him. More over, news has reached England from Zanzibar that a white man has been at Tanganyika who, there is reason to be lieve, was none other than Livingstone. The letter quoted by the daily papers as confirming, the worst reports, does no thing of the kind. The English expedi tion in quest of him started on the 10th of this month.—The Round Table. shir The Judiciary. Committee took considerable evidence bearing on the question of Jeff. Davis' complicity in the assassination of Mr. Lincoln. They have the originals, or certified copies, of a number of letters that reached him in 1864, wherein the writers proposed assassination, and there is nothing to show that he ever rebuked the authors or discountenanced the scheme. The testimony as to his complicity in Booth's plot is not entirely conclusive, bat it is so strong that at least three of the mem bers of that Committee believe his guilt to be shown. That he had dealings with Booth and his agents is beyond doubt. Ili' A steel steamboat has been built in England, for the use of the expedition which has gone' in search of Dr Living stone. She is built throughout of steel and charcoal iron plates. The latter are 1-16th of an inch in thickness, in short half sections about two feet in length, the heaviest weighing no more than forty pounds, in order that they may be car ried overland to the lakes and rivers to be explored, by the negroes, and there put together with screws, bolts, &c. - The. Pennsylvania Central Rail road Co. have purchased the Susquehan na and West Branch Canals. It is the intention of this company to deepen and improve this line, and use it to assist the railroads in getting the immense lumber trade to market. The lumber men of Williamsport are hampered and their business curtailed to some extent, in consequence of the inability of the railroads to supply cars enough to ship their lumber. Or The British Medical Journal states that the mental condition of the Empress of Mexico shows no signs of improvement. Under the stress of the peculiarly distressing symtoms with which mental alienation is accompanied in her case, the committee who have been charged by the Emperor of Austria with the administration of her affairs and her personal charge have proposed to have a consultation of eminent Euro• peen alienists. lir A Washington correspondent of the Cincinnati Gazette goes into partic ulars of testimony which will shortly be forthcoming casting a terrible suspicion of guilt upon Andrew Johnson in con nection with the assassination of Presi dent Lincoln. This correspondent as serts that Booth and Johnson were on intimate terms with twe'sisters ip Nashville. If the statements of the correspondent be true, Johnson is a greater villian than Booth was. fir Henry Miller has been arrested in Cleveland, Ohio, charged with bigamy. Thirty-two years ago he was married in Germany, but after a few years ran away to London with another woman, whom he married. Subsequently they came to this country and located in Cleveland, where Miller, now an old man, has re cently married a niece of wife No. 2. He is now in jail to answer the charge of bigamy. ear James Alfred Slentz, of Harris burg, has been awarded the contract for building an addition to the Executive Mansion, authorized by the last legisle ture. The cost is to be $13,450, the work to.be commenced' immediately, and finished in six months. It is to be So built that if necessary the original build ing and the additions can be sold as sep arate buildings, as a gain to the State. A young girl dressed in soldier's clothes was arrested in Buffalo on 'Fri. day. She . gave her name as Ann Ring, aged 19, and said she was from "Salt Foist," Syracuse, where her parents reside, and that she had seven sisters and eight brothers ; that they were very poor, and she, with four - sisters had:been obliged to don male -attire arid drive teams on the canal for a livelihood. . A AI re. 'Adger is said to be the leader of fashion in-London. She is a widow, and is described-as a tall, handsoMe-look" ing woman, with a-profusion of tight hair, and jet black eyes. It is said she never appears a second time in the same dress. She has received many offers of marriage, all of which, however, she has "respect fully declined." Gir The ease of George W. Gayle, the man who was arrested for publishing an advertisement offering a reward for the murder , ef, .A ; brahara Lincoln, came up at Montgomery, Alabama, on Tuesday. Gayle presented a full pardon from An drew Johnson, and the csse was dismiss ed. Nrins in Brief In Cincinnati a lady over sixty-two years of age, gave birth to triplets. A dog in Ottawa county, Ohio, re cently killed 35 sheep, for which his owner bad to pay $194. The naval cadets at Annapolis, will Bail on their summer cruise on the 20th inst., in the sloop of war Dale. A Boston paper informs its readers that at one of the recent anniversaries "the doxology was sang and the audience dismissed with the abnegation." One Thomas Kelly died recently at Dubuqte, lowa, and his relatives have dug up $5OOO from beneath the hot in which he lived, and are digging for more. Drop letters now only require a one cent postage stamp, instead of two as formerly. A boy in Waterford, Connecticut, while rummaging in an old garret recent ly, found a stocking full of silver—quar tars, dimes and half dimes. Two negroes were appointed on the police force at New Orleans last week. Bon. James Guthrie, of Kentucky, whose illness has for some time past prevented him from taking his seat in the United States Senate. is recovering his health. The ktichigaci Republicans are unani mously in favor of universal suffrage, and the democrats have not the courage to contest the point. The Connecticut Legislature have just passed a bill making the 22nd o February a legal holiday. .The physicians of Mobile havereduc ed their charges to what they were be fore the war. In last March the first steam fire engine was introduced into China. The press of Hong Kong now considers this invention of barbarians a very good thing and advocates increasing the num. ber to four. Nothing can tend more to the health of the body than the tranquility of the mind and the due regulation of the pas- 810 D There is a tendency on the part of the Mississippi river to form a new channel above St Louis, and leave that city high and dry. An editor at a dinner table, being asked if he would take some pudding replied, in a fit of abstraction, "Owing to the crowd of other matter, we are unable to find room for it." Near Carlisle, Pa., there lives a Mrs. Kissel, who is now 106 years old, is in ge , od health, moves around briskly, and can assist in doing the domestic work, Prentice, the renowned wit of the Lou iqille Journal, is now about sixty years of age. He has a fine forehead but a cause mouth ; is rustic and uncouth in his manners and slovenly in his dress; but he is a good talker, and his wit is spon taneous. ' - —„-„---410— 1 - brace Greeley has a salary of $5,500 a ear as editor of the Tribune. He is Bodisinterested in money matters that lid has accepted a L recent increase of maMary with reluctance; and he has been nipulated by others out of most of his l ock in the Tribune. -Dr. Brown Sequard recommends the use of the swing as a preventive of ner vous attacks which recur periodically. In certain cases of hysteria and epilepsy he has prevented the coming on of the fit by engaging his patient in violent swinging at the first indication of its ap• proach. General Grant has accepted,an invita tion to -visit the Gettysburg battlefield on the 20th inst. Gen. Neal Dow, in his recent speech in London, said an old gentleman had lately asked him when the United States Government was going to pay off the rebel bonds. His answer was, "When you pay off the Fenian bonds." A. self propelling steam fire engine has- been completed in Manchester, N. H.,. and made successful trial trip through the streets. The Fallon - House, White's Hotel, Shaw, Throne Sz' Co's., saw mill and a large quantity of lumber were distroyed by fire on the evening of the 11th inst., at Lock-Haven, Pa. A queer incident occurred to the. New York - tralp on its way to Washington.-- T,he ponidoctor asked a man standing on one .0( the platforms for his ticket, when he responded by pushing the conductor off the train into a ditch. Twenty five miles ,were run before his absence was discovered, when the train was reversed, and the conductor found uninjured, .walking back toward Wilmington. The laws of health are infallible ; the relation between transgression and the penalty is invariable, and the infliction of the latter is certain to follow upon the former. There is nothing about which young persons are more beguiled and deluded, than the belief that they can transgress natural laws and jump the penalty._ Punishment for" a •viola, Lion of natural laws is just as certain as that the sun itself sbines,.and none can violate a law of his body, or any part of it, that there is not, registered in him a SLIGHTLY MIXED.—Major General Jos eph L. Bartlett is a native of Birming ham, and his military career from the period he left his home as a private in the twenty.seventh regiment, under the command of Colonel . Slocum, until he won his present rank, was watched with peculiar pride and interest by his friends and neighbors. Ibis recent appointment as minister to Stockholm furnishes the text of a good story. His brother, it must be remembered, is the Rev. Wil liam Alvin Bartlett of the Union Place Congregational Church, Brooklyn.— When the news of the General's appoint ment reached Birmingham, a party of his friends were collected together, among them was a blacksmith, prosper ous and respected, who seemed puzzled by the announcement, as his comment thereon proves: "Joe! Joe a minister! TT'hy, Joe has no more religion than I have Why didn't they send Bill 7" eir In 1856, Brazil had a population of 7 677,800, of which it was estimated that 2,000,000 were whites, 1,121,000 mixed free people. 800,000 civilized In diens, 600,000 mixed slave population, and 2,000,000 blacks, or African slaves. Thus it will be seen that five-sixths of the population are either negroes or persons of mixed blood, and two fifths of these are slaves. The sun is always shining, the flowers are always blooming, the birds are always singing, the golden grain is always waving, somewhere in this wicked world. NEW GOODS ! Greatly Reduced Prices ! MRS. M. ROTH, Alarket Street, Marietta, Pa., Has just returned from the city N's ith a large assortment of Plain and Fancy Goods, all of which are of the latest style, such as : Coat and dress buttons, Black and white bugle trimming, Marseilles buttons and trimming, Crystal buttons, A large assortment of ladies' cuffs and col lars, Jaconet edging and inserting, Swiss, Tuckdd, Shirred and Marseilles Muslin, Swiss edging and inserting, Fine lace handkerchiefs and collars, Infants' waists, puffs, brushes, gum cloth, Powder, sacks and sacs s, Belting ribbon, Mohair braid, silk braid, Silk floss, embroidering cotton, Beads of all kinds, French corsets at reduced prices, Hoop skirts new styles, Veils, ladies' tuck combs, ladles' hose, Hair brushes and combs, Ear drops and breastpins, Fancy garters, powder, Lilly white, Mean fun, Vegetable Rouge powder, glycerine, • Vhi:e and colored kid gloves, All colors of Lisle thread, Gent's linen and paper cuffs and collars, paper collars 25 cents per box, Gent's pocket-handkerchiefs, Neck ties, hose, pomade, teeth brushes, Perfumery, gloves, woollen and linen shirts, Hair renewer, sleeve buttons and studs, Paper and envelopes, All to be soli at greatly reduced prices. its Mrs. It. is agent for singer's improved Fewing Machine. Particular attention has been paid to the se lecting of small wares, such as Sewing Silk, Cotton and Linen Thread, Whalebone, Hooks and Eyes, Needles, Pins, &c. The public are particularly requested to call and examine for themaelves. Marietta, March 30-tf. Deihibods 171 Q Exit*. ilticint Is a certain cure forldiseases of the BLADDER, KIDNEYS, GRAVEL, DROP SY, ORGANIC WEAKNESS, FEMALE COMPLAINTS, GENERAL DEBILITY and all diseases of the URINARY ORGANS', whether existing in MALE OR FEMALE, from whatever cause origmating and no mat- ter of HOW LONG. STANDING. Diseases of these organs require the use of a diuretic. If no treatment is submitted to, Consump tion or Insanity may .ensoe. Our Flesh and Blood are supported from these sources, and the HEALTH AND HAPPINESS., and that of Posterity, depends upon prompt use of a reliable remedy. HELMBOLD'S EXTRA .T BUCHU, Established upwards of 18 years, pre pared by H. T. HELM BOLD, DRUGGIST. 594 Broadway, New York and 104 South 70th street, Philadelphia, Pa The Web) Eight Roue Coqi oil Buhrtei% Gives more light with less oil than any other Burner. D• Call and see it at JOHN SPANGLER'S. riOAL OIL-BEST QUALITY, V/ AT 50 CENTS PER GALLON, AT J. SPAT. CLEWS BROOM HANDLES, a choice lot received and for sale at J. SPANGLER'S. - 171 N AMEL OF AMERICA, for beautifying the complexion, softening the skin, re moving tan, freckles and pimples. Sale at Dr. Landis'"Golden Mortar." A CHOICE Lot of Books for children called indistructable Pleasure Books ; School and Paper 800 tationary, Pens, Pen holders &c , at DP.. LNDIS'. S OMETHING NEW ! Patent clasp Pock et books, no gum bands to renew, adapts to any condition of the finance, at Dv, I%yeifio ijqiilvo Arc now constructing a railroad Born OMAHA, NEBRASKA, westward towards the Pacific Ocean, makin e with its connections an unbroken line - ACROSS THE CONTENENT, The Company sow offer a limited amount of their FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS having thirty years to run, and bearing alma al interest, payable on the ht?'t day of Ann ary and July, in the city of New fork, at the rate of 6IX PER CENT. IN GULA), AT NINETY CENTS ON THE DOLLAR. This road was completed from Omaha 305 miles west on the Ist of January, 1567 and is fully equipped, t nd trains are regularly run ning over it. The Company has now on haul sufficient iron, ties, etc., to finish the remain ing portion to the eastern base of the Rocky Mountains, 212 miles, which is unaer contract to be dune September lst_ of this yeat, acid is expected that the entire road will be in run ning order from Omaha to its western corice tion with the Central Pacific, now being no idly built eastward from Sacramento, C a l, , diming 1567. Means of the Company. Estimating the distance to be built by the Union Pacific to be 1,565 miles ' the United States Government issues its Six per cent. Thirty-Year Bonds to the Company as the road is finished at the average rate of abeut $28.250 per mile, amounting to 841,206,0u0, The Company is also permitted to issue own First Mortgage Bonds to an equal amount, and at the same time, which by spe. vial act of Congress are made a first mortgage on the entire line, the bonds of the Uu lte d States being subordinate t) them. The Government makes a d :nation of 12s00 acres of land, to Cie mile, amounting to go r 032,000, estimated to be worth .$30,000 COO making the total rvsouices, exclusive of the capital, $115,416,000 ; but the fill value of the lands cannot now be real:zed. The authorized capital stock of the Com pany is one hundred million dollars Of which live in pions have already been paid in, and of which it is not supposed that more than twenty-five millions at 'twat Will be required. The cost of the mud is estimated by compn tont engineers to be about one hundr e d i n I lion dollars, exclusive of equipment. ProSpeCt. for bosioess, The railroad connection between O:nalia and the East is now complete, and the earn ings of the Union Pacific on the sections al• ready finished for the first two weeks in Mar were $113,000. These sectional earning as the road progresses will much more than par the interest on the Company's bands, and the t nrough business over the only line of aiboad between the At.antic and Pacific must be i ft mense. Value and Security Of the Builds The Company respectfully submit, that the above statement of facts fey demonstrates the security of their Bonds, and as additional proof they would suggest that the Bonds hose offered are less than ten million dollars on 517 miles of road, on which over twenty dollars ha ve already been expended -,—on 330 ❑tiles of thiJ road the cars are now running, and the remaia:ng IS? tni:es are nearly com p ',led. At lie present late of premium no bonds pay an as ma al intei est on Use present soot Ut .A7ne Per Cent. end it Is believe d that on the complcion load. IN?, the Government Bond::. they w go above 'i • e Company ii teal but a hnitted atnount at the present low taa, and retain the tight to advance t e their option. Subscriptions will be received iu New York by the CONTINENTAL NATIONA:. BANK, No. 7 NUS- sau Street. CLa ate. DODGE & Co., Bankers, 51 Wall St., JOHN J. Cisco S. Sok:, Bankers, 33 Wall St. and by Batiks and Bankersgenendlr through out the United States, all of whom maps and descriptive pamphlets may be obtained. They will also be sent by mail from the Company's office No. 20 Nassau street, New Yak, on applicatio . Subscribers will select their own Agents in whom they have confidence. who alone will be responsible to them for the safe delivery of the bends. JOHN J. Cisco, Treasurer, New Yerh. BRITTON & AIUSSER'S FAM LY DRUG STORE, Market Street, _Marietta, Pa BRITTON & MCSSER, SUCCCSSOrS to Dr. F. ink lc, will continue the business at the old stand, Where they arc daily receiving additions to their stock, which are received from the most reliable importers and m anufacturers. They would reapecttully ask a Liberal share of public patronage. They are now prepared to supply the de mands of the public with everything in their line of trade. Their stock of DRUGS AND MEDICINES IS F.IIESH AISI) r tt E., BAY ING JUST ARRIVED. y urn Nines ani)(110 I'oll iIiELPICINA L USES War, ALL THE POPULAR PATENT MEDICINES , Dye Staffs of all kinds, Fancy and Toilet Ar ticles of every kind, Alcoholic and Fluid Extracts, A Icaloitl and Resinuids, all tne beet Trusses, Abdominal Sup porters,Shoulder liraces,llresst Pumps, Nipple Shells and Shields, Nursing Bottles, A large supply of HAT, HAIR, TOOTH, NAIL AND CLOTHES BRUSHES. Tooth Powder and Pastes, Oils, Perfumery, Soaps, Combs, Hair Dyes, Invigorators , Coal Oil, Lamps, Shades, Chimneys, Wck,&s, Physicians supplied at reasonable miss. Medicines and Prescriptions catcfully and Ile curately compounded all hours of the day and night, by Charles H. Britton, Pharmaceutist, who will pay especial attention to this Manch of the business. Having had ovur ten year 3 practical experience in the drug business ens bias him tpo patronize e te t e h ee new ti r. satisfaction whu map iiAsso N . 'S Compound Syrup of Tar, on hand and for sate. ' A large supply of School bets, Station. Sze.. always un hand. to all SUNDAY HOURS: From 8 to 10, a. m.,,-12 to 2, end 5 to li p. al Charles R. Britton.. A. Muss Itf er Marietta, October 20, 1866. 1 pHA. LINDSAY, JAW MANUFACTURERS DEALER IN BOOTS &, SHOES , MARKET STREET MAR lETTA, PERI. Would most respecttully inform the citizens of this Borough and neigh borhood that he has at this time the largest assortment of City made work ever offered in this Borough, amongst which may be named the new -style Wiisi) Boot, qiio 514111-01.5. FOR THE LADIES. A. L. being a practical BOOT AND SHOE MAKER enables him to select withon more 'judgment than those who are not.best manner Be r' uea to manufacture in the very D SHOE line. everything in the BOOT AN which he wit/ warrant for neatness and fitore Call and examine the new stair bef urn g elsewhere. CHAPMAN'S CHALLENGE tot he Vett. ries of Popular Scientific Skepicism, io Vindication of the Truth and Superhuman Or, of time Hebrew Records of the Creation, just as those Records read. In magazine form> quarterly, or oftener. 25 cents ngly, or fir, successive numbers for .Ai dress, 1 .2' CB AMA'S, Box 483, P. 0, Philadelphia pa. A work which all should read• ole boots, sloes. harness, tic. For sale oar 5' THE nnke celebrated beautiful I.: v t a ta t. ePreptaf Op a . clip . . .'.l u• store.