ll•btp.tub..tnt Vtunsilrattia afoarnal gl,tbot6 to Volitio, Yittraturt, p . ritalturt, Ras, lijo pg,, 'fora! afntitlignut, Z".. I_,_ BAKER, Editor and Proprietor_ VOL. NINE. PUBLISHED WEEKLY • AT ONE DOLLAR A Y DATABLE IN ADVANCE. OFFICE on Front Street, a few doors east of Mrs. Flury's Hotel, Marietta, Lances ter County, Pennsylvania. TERMS, One Dollar a year, payable in ad vance, and if subscriptions be not paid within six months $1.25 will be •charged, but if de layed until the expiration of the year, $1.50 will be charged. No subscription received for a less period than six months, and no paper will be discon tinued until all arrearages are paid, unless at the option of the publisher. A failure to noti fy a discontinuance at the expiration of the term subscribed for, will be considered a new engagement. Any person sending us Ervin new subscribers shall have a sixth copy for his trouble. ADVERTISING. RATES: One square (12 lines, or Jess) ;50 cents for the first insertion and 25 cents for each subsequent insertion. Pro fessional and Business Cards, of six lines or less at $3 per annum. Notices in the reading col umn s, fire cents a-line. Marriages and Deaths, the simple announcement, FRE E ; but for any additional lines, five cents a line. A liberal deduction made to yearly and half yearly advertisers. Jon PRINTING of every description neatly and expeditiously executed, and at prices to suit the times. ' TEE On PRINTER. A Fancy Sketch, but too near the Truth to make fun of. I see him at his case, With his anxious, cheerless face, Worn and brown; And the types' unceasing click, As they drop within his stick, Seems of life's old clock the tick, Running down I've known him many a year, That old typo, beht and queer Boy and man Tune was when step elate Distinguished his gait, And his Sorm was tall and straight, We now scan. I've marked him, Bay by day, As he passed along the way To his toil; He's labored might and main, A living slant to gain, And some interest small attain In the soil. And hope was bright at first, ' And the golden cheat he nursed, Till he found That hope was but a glare In a cold and frosty air, And the promise pictured fair, Barren ground. Ile ne'er was reckoned bad, But I've seen him smile right glad At "leaded" woes ; While a dark and lowering frown Would spread his features round, Where virtue's praise did sound, If 'twere "close." Long years he's labored on, And the rosy hues are gone From his sky ; For others are his hours, For others are his powers— Ills days, uncheered by flowers, Flitting by. You may see him, night by night, the lamp's dull, dreamy light, Standing there ; With cobweb curtains spread In festoons oe'r his bead, That sooty showers shed In his hair, And when the waning moon Proclaims of night the noon, If you roam, You may see him, weak, and frail, In motio,, like the snail, Wending home. Ins form by years is bent, To his hair a tinge is lent Sadly gray ; And his teeth have long decayed,- And his eyes, their trust betrayed— Great havoc time has made With his clay! ..But soon Will come the day When his Jima, will page away From our view. And the spot shall know no more The sorrows that he bore, Or the disappointments sore That he knew. MY MOTHER, Ali ! well do I remember me, In childhood's happy days, Of a meek-eyed. gentle 'mother, Who taught my lips to praise ; Who told me tales of years gone by, And sung me oft to rest, In plaintive strains of melody, When pillowq on her broast. Ali I well do I remember me, When riper years had come, Of that mother's tender counsels b my own early home And when 1 left, thro' love of change, •The scenes of joyous youth, It was her voice that whisper'd low The words of love end truth. Ah ! well do I remember me, When thr - O , the lapse of years I hanieward turn'd my weary steps Thro' guilt, and wo, and tears; [eye, 'Twits the same sweet tone and melting To me a welcome gave. * * Those sparkling-eyes, those weleonie tones Are now but of the grave. -`'''.; • --...::.. ..., '.... + • A .• A tit :.,.......rittlx-..ct-It+ ■ TEE .STOIAN DRESS; g Tale of Truth, In a city, which shall be nameless, there lived, long .ago, a young girl the only daughter of a widow. She came from the country, and was as ignbrant of the dangers of the city as the squir rils of her native fields. She had glossy black hair, gentle-beaming eyes, and "lips like wet coral." Of course, she knew that she was beautiful ; for when she was a child, strangers often stopped as she passed, and exclaimed, "How handsome she is I 9 And as she grew older, the young men gazed upon her with admiration. She was poor,'and re moved to the city to earn her living by covering umbrellas. She was just at that susceptible age, when youth is pass ing into womanhood ; when the soul be gins to be pervaded with that restless principle, which impels poor humans to seek perfection in union. At the hotel opposite, Lord Henry Stuart, an English nobleman, had at that time taken lodgings. His visit to this country is doubtless recollected by many, for it made a great sensation at the time. He was a peer of the realm, descended from the royal line, and was, moreover, a strikingly handsome man, of right princely carriage. He was sub sequently a member of the British Par liament, and is now dead. As this distinguished stranger passed k, and from his hotel; he encountered We umbrella-girl, and was impressed by her uncommon beauty. He easily traced her to the opposite store, where he soon after went to purchase an umbrella.— This was followed up 'by presents of flowers, chats by the way -side, and in vitations to walk or ride; all of which were gratefully accepted by the unsus pecting rustic. He was, playing a game for temporary excitement ; she with a head full of romance, wad a heart melt ing under the influence of love, was un conciouily endangering the happiness of her whole life. Lord Henry invited her to visit the public gardens, on the 4th of July. In the simplicity of her heart, she believed all his flattering professions, and consid ered herself his bride elect ; she there fore accepted his invitations with inno cent frankness. But she bad no dress dt to appear on such a public occasion, with a gentleman of high rank—whom she verily supposed to be her destined husband. While these thoughts involv ed in her mind, her eye was unfortunate ly attracted by a beautiful piece of silk belonging to her employer. Ah, could she not take it without being seen, pay for it secretly when she had earned mo ney enough ? The temptation con quered her in a moment of weakness.— She concealed the silk and conveyed it to her lodgings. It was the first thing she had ever stolen, and her remorse was painful. She would have carried it back, but she dreaded a discovery. She was not sure that her repentance would be met in a spirit of forgiveness. On the eventful 4th of July, she came out in her new dress. Lord Henry com plimented her on her elegant appear ance, but she was not happy. On their way to the gardens, he talked to her in a manner she did not comprehend.— Perceiving this, he spoke more explicit ly. The guileless young creature stop ped, looked into his face with mournful reproach, and burst into - tears. The-no bleman took her hand kindly and said, "My dear, are you an innocent girl ?" "I am, I am," cried site with,convulsive sobs. "Oh, what have I ever done or said, that you should ask me that?"— Her words stirred the deep fountains of his better nature. "If you are inno cent," said he, "God forbid that I should make you otherwise. But you accepted my invitations and presents so readily, that I supposed you understood me."— "What could I understand," said she, -'except that you, intended to make me your wife;?" Though reared among the proudest distinctions of rank, he felt no inclination to smile. He blushed' and was silent. The heartless convention alities of life stood rebuked in the pres ence of affectionate simplicity. He conveyed her to her bumble home, and bade her farewell, with a thankful con sciousness that he had done no irretrie vable injury to her future prospects.— The reMembrance of her to him would soon be as the recollection of last year's butterflies. With her the wound was deeper. In her solitary chamber she wept, in bitterness of heart, over her ruined air castles. And that dress which she had stolen to make- an appearance befitting his bride I Oh, what if she should he discovered 1 Would not the heart of her poor widowed mother break, if she should ever 'know that her child MARIETTA, PA., SATURDAY, JANUARY 17; 1863. was a thief? Alas, her wretched fore bodings were too true. The silk was traced to her—she was arrested on her way to the store, and dragged to,pyison. There she iefesed all nourishment, and wept incessantly. On the fourth day the keeper.thlled upon Isaac T. Hopper, and informed him that there was a young girl in pris on who appeared to be utterly friend less, and determined to die by starva tion. The kind-hearted gentleman im mediately went to her assistance. He found her lying on the floor• of •her cell, with her face buried in her hands, sob bing as if -her heart would break. He tried to comfort her, but he could ob. tain no answer. "Leave us alone," said he to the keep er. "Perhaps she will speak to me if there is none to hear." ' When they were alone together, he put back the hair from her temples; laid his hand kindly on her beautiful head, and said in soothing tones, "My child, consider me as thy father. Teltme all thou hest, done. If thou hest taken this silk, let me know all about it. I will do for thee as I would do for a daughter, and I doubt not that I can help thee out of this difficulty. After a long time spent in affection ate entreaty. she leaned her young head on his friendly shoulder, and sobbed out, "Oh, I wish I was dead—what will my poor mother say, when she knows of my disgrace ?" "Perhaps'we can manage that she, never shall know it," replied he ; and, allUring her by this hope, he gradually obtained from her the whole story of her acquaintance with the nobleman. He bade her be comforted, and take nour ishment; for he would see'that the silk was paid for, and the prosecution-with drawn. He went immediately to her employer, and told him the story. "This is her first offence," said he, "the girl is young, and the only child of a poor widow. Give her a chance to retrieve this one false step, and she May be restored to society, a useful and hon ored woman—l will see that thou art paid for the silk." The man readily agreed to withdraw the prosecution, and said he would have dealt otherwise with the girl, had be knoWn all the circum stances. "Thou shouldst have inquired into the merits of the ease, my friend," replied Isaac. "By this kind of tho't lessness, many a young creature is driv en into the downward path, who might easily have been saved." The good old man then went to the hotel, , ,and inquired for Henry Stuart,— The servant said his lordship bad not yet risen. "Tell him my business is of importance,"-said Friend Hopper. The servant goon returned and conducted him to the chamber. The nobleman ap peared surprised that a plain old Qua ker should thus intrude upon his luxuri ous privacy ; but when he heard his er rand, he blushed deeply, and frankly ad mitted the truth of the girl's statement. His benevolent visitor took the oppor tunity : to: "bear a testimony," as the Friends say, against the sin and selfish. ness of profligacy. He did it in such a kind and fatherly manner, that the young man's heart was touched. He ex wised himself, by saying that he would not have tampered with'the girl, if le had known her to be virtuous, "I have done many wrong things," said lie, "but thank God, no betrayal of confiding in nocence rests on my conscience. I have always esteemed it the basest act of which man is capable." The imprison ment of the poor girl, and the forlorn situation in which she had been found distressed him greatly. And when Isaac represented that the silk had been 'stolen for his sake, that the girl had 'thereby lost profitable employment, and was obliged to return to her distant home, to avoid the danger of exposure, he took out a fifty dollar note, and of fered to pay her expenses. "Nay," said Isaac, "thou art a very rich man; I see in thy hand a large roll of such notes.— She is the daughter of a poor widow, and thou has been the means of doing her - great injury. Give me another." Lord Henry handed him another fifty dollar note, and smiled as he'said, "You understand your business well, But you have acted nobly and I revere you for it. If you ever visit England, come to see me. I will'give you er cordial wel come, and treat you like a nobleman." , " Farewell, friend," replied Isaac, "thou much to blame in this affair, then too hest behaved nobly. Mayest thou be blesed in domestic life; and Wile no more with the feelings of poor girls ; not even with those whom others have betrayed and deserted." Luckily, the girl had sufficient Ares- ence of mind to assume a. false name when arrested; by which means her name was kept out of the newspapers. "I did this," said -she, "for-my poor-mo ther's sake." With the money given by Lord H - enryAhe silk was paid for, and she was.sent.home to her mother,,, well ifi t oi , lcred with clothing,. Her name and• place of residence remain to this day a agent in the breast of her benefactor. ;Several years after the incidents I lave related, a lady called at Friend hopper's house, and asked to see him. When he entered the room, he found a handsomely dressed young matron, with a'blooming boy of five or six years old. she rose to meet him, and her voice d r hoked as she said, "Friend Hopper, do you know me ?" He - replied that HO did not. She fixed her fearful eyes earnest ly upon him, and said, "Yon once help ed me, when in great distress." But the good missionary • of humanity had helped too many in distress to be able to recol lect her, without more precise informa tion. With a tremulous voice, she made her son go into• the next room for a few minutes; then, drooping on her knees, she hid:her face in hi s lap, and sobbed out, "I am the girl that stole the silk. Oh I where should I now be, if it had not been for ydu ?" When her emotion was somewhat calmed, she told him: that she had mar ried- a highly respectable man, a Senator, of his native State. Having .a call to visit the city, she had again and again passed Friend Hopper's house,looking wishfully at the windows to catch a sight of him; but when she attempted to enter, her courage failed. "But I go away to-morrow," said she, "and I could not leave the city without seeing and thanking him who saved mo rpm ruin." She recalled her little boy, and, said to him, "look at - that, old gen tleman, and remember him well; for he was the - best friend your mother ever had." With an earnest invitation that he would visit her happy home, and a fervent "God bless you," she bate her benefactor farewell. My venerable'friend is noVaware that I have written this'story. I have not published it from any wish to glorify him, but to exert a genial influence on the hearts of others ;' tot() my mite to ward teaching society how to cast out the Dernon Penalty, by the voice of the Angel of Love. 'CURING MEATS.—An exchange, says a , French chemist, has lately asserted that scurvy will never arise from the use of salt provisions, unless saltpetre be used in curing - ; the salt alone_an ewers all the purposes, provided the ani mal heat be all out before salting: He claime_thlt the insertion of pork in pickle alorie is not* sufficient, but that it should be rubbed thoroughly with dry salt after it has entirely parted with its animal heat, and - that then the fluid run ning from the meat should be poured off before packing the pork in the bar rel: This should be done sufficiently lose to admit no unnecessary quantity of air, and some dry salt should occupy the space between the pieces, and then pickle, and not water should be added. Great care must be taken to fill the bar rel entirely full, so that no portion of the meat , can at any point project,above the surface of the fluid ; for, if this oc curs, a change of flavor ensues such as is known with rusty pork. The pick le, of course, must be a saturated solu tion of salt and water, that is, so strong that it is incapable of dissolving more salt. it must be remembered that bold water is capable lof dissolving more salt than hot water.' Ur The following- X R tation is ad dressed 2 N E I—Cold Winter is at Cr, V G tation has D K'd ; the beau ties of the landscape have faded, & R th now appears in sad It A. Old Boreas comes'-whistling a mournful L E- , G over, the graves of the flowers, and ******* seems 2 glislo from a frosty firmament. The freezing blast pierces like at- in 2 the 3- clad bosom of want, while T R's of P T Y con G L D at their respect- I V fountains. All U who R of E Z circumstances, arid do not have M T pockets, 0 2 X M N into the K N D tion of those R ound 11, & for ward with N R G 2 mitigB the distr S SS of the nee D. U should not w 8 for NYXPDN C of your . disposition by the R liest opportuni T 2 B stow upon the poor, who are to be found in every of the country. go' Why is a young lady; just from a boarding school like a buildiag com mittee`? Becaus she is ready to -re ceive-Rroposals Established April 11, 1854_ Fattening of. Poultry, In the hands, of many persons the fattening of Poultry has, almost become a science. They, know how to take a lean turkey, for example, and so feed it as to doable its weight in tv, few days, and at the same time they render its flesh savory and agreeable. These are two modes of feeding poultry for fatten ing ; namely, the natural and artificial methods. The former is that most gen erally pursued in England and America; the latter is the French method. The. natural mode consists in allowing the' fowls a degree'ofliberty in the barn yard and supplying as much nourishing, food as may, satisfy their appetite. This method is generally preferred in Ameri ca, and many experienced poulterers affirm that they can obtain as good.fowls in this way as by any description of forced feeding. ,The artificial method consists in forc ing food at regular intervals down 'the gullets of the fowls. This food consists of a mixture of torn meal, milk and wa ter; or, as in France; barley, which is fed by, means, of filler and funnel, the latter being made of tin with india-rnh ,ber ring, on the bottom to-.prevent injury . to the throats of the birds; 'Some per sons instead of using a filler, employ the finger far staffing down the food, which is prepared in a more solid form, and consists 'of abash made of boiled pota toes, corn meal, sweet niillr, and 'finally chopped. suet. During the period of artificial feAding, the the fowls are kept in boxes, which are well littered and placed in a moderately warm situation: They are :usually fed three times.h day and the period, of fattening -is from fif. teen to twenty days.' In *applying, the food with funnel, the fowl is seized by the wings - near the sfioulder, the head is held forward between the knees and grasped by the left hand,;, the beak is .opened, the funnel inserted, and the proper quantity of the mixture poured doWn.,. Two persons tan feed quite a large number of fowls 'in' this manner in a very short puled. Some persons who make a business of fattening poultry are exceedingly care ful of the food which they apply, and they kept their mixtures somewhat se cret, ascribing a mysterious influence to their particular modes. A mixture of boiled Indian meal, mashed potatoes and sweet milk, with a little finely chopped suet, is as good food for turkeys as can well be 'provided. Fowls 'should always have access to gravel during the period of fattening, as they swallow small stones, these being found neces sary to promote digestioi. Snipe feeders of poultry assert they can give the flesh of fowls any particu lar flavor they desire by the kind of food which they give them: This is prObabli true, as the flesh of wild game acquires flavor of the berries and arom atic buds upon which the birds feed. LouisTillo Jourualisms. In the Charleston Convention Gen. B. F. Butler voted for Jeff. Davis thirty odd times for the Presidency. And now Gen. 8.. is to be hung if Jeff can catch - him. We are not surd that he dosen't deserve it. a 0., Gen. Hindman, who, under the false assumption of authority from a superior officer, compelled an Arkansas bank to give him a million of dollars; forbids his troops to plunder on penalty of death. The Scoundrel wants to do all MM= Infampl3rey Marshall were preserved in a hogshead of whisky, and some tal low were to tap the hogshead andlake a drink, he would probably conclude that the liquor had a- g ood deal - of - holy in't. The. Richmond Despatch charges* a Virginia politician With bleeding the Confederate Treasury." Probably he will try his hand at bleeding an Egypt ian mummy. ..... The U. S. man•of- war Sanctions is to be launched at PrOtsmouth, N. EL, to day. We hoim the Saucy Cass will have a prosperous career. • • Cotton, paper-mill rags, and dra.fted soldiers, are, three things :that it iather hard-to' find substitute's for. Stonewall 'Jackson and Stuart didn't make anything in thelilast raid; except their escape. . . Why isn't a milkman like Pharoah's daughter? Because he finds not a little profit in the water. It is an important part of a good edu cation to be able to bear , politely with the want of it in others. NO. 25. • "When Site Will, • She Wi ; I ." The London Lancet truth of the following one evening a. person came is 0,4; and asked to see the editor. And being introduced to our sanctum, h:; placed' a 'bundle 'upon the table, from which he preceeded to extract a very fair and symmetrical lower extremity, which had evidently belonged to a wo man. "There," said he, "is there any thing the matter with that leg ? 1).3 you ever see a handsomer ? , What ought to be done with the man who cut it off? OD having the mear iag of these interrogatories put before us, we found that it was the log of the wife of our evening visitor. He had been accu torned to admire the lady's leg and foot, of the perfection of which she vas, it appears, perfectly conscious. A few'days before, he had excited. 1...2r anger, and they had quarreled violent'; . open which she left the house, deciali! :- that she would be revenged; on him. ay.', that he should never see the object of his admiration again. The next thily; he heard of her was that she was apa tientin--Lhospital, and her leg ampu tated. -She declared to the surgeon; that she suffered intolerable pain in '1: knee, and begged to have the Jima moved—a, petition that the surgeor complied with . , and thus Lecat,,n , instrument of her absurd and self-k :- taring revenge up.p.t. her husband. A Goon ONE.-. 1 physician was once called upon to tolider his . prefessio-i aid to the wife of a recently marriril Countryman, who by the ray ;vas little versed it the technical terms which ar nsedby having felt medical faculty. The Doc tor felt the pulse and viewed the tcingue of the patient, together with sundry other. wise tricks, prepared a plaster, which he ordered the husband, to lay upon the chest of his better half . , proMising to call again on the following. day, He'came, and after making - tho usual inquiries respecting his charge, asked, if the plaster had been applied agreeably to his instructions. "Sir," said the husband, with the ut most gravity conceivable, "my wife. s• id she had no chest, and thinking it would answer just as well, I laid it cc h.e trunk ! • About this time we might have betrn seen making tracks down the road in a roar of laughter. oir A . gentleman was riding with .1 lady in.an open carriage, all of a ell - mer's "day, and . accidently—men's ern!-, awkward things, are ever in-the way-- dropped an arm around her waist. objection was made for a while, and 1' arm gradually relieved the side of tha carriage of the presure upon. Bat of a sudden (wether from a-late recognition of tho impropriety of the thing, or the sight of another beau coming, never c. , a3 known) the lady started with volcar; • energy, and with a flashing eyt ed. Mr-,frown, I can support myself! Capital was the instant reply, you are just the gal I've teen locking for these last five years---will you marry in:: 40. Let every man avoid all serf gambling as he would poison.. A man or boy should not allow even to toss up a half penny, for thi. often the beginning of a bahit og game ling, and this ruinous crime comes on slow degrees.. Whilst a man mit".s his work be is ,playing the best game, and be is sure to win. A gambler novel . :makes a good use of his money, evca if he should win. tar An old lady walked into the °Mice of a Judge of Probate of Massaclinset and asked, "are you the Judge of Repr bate ?" I am the Judge of Probate. that is it I expect, quoth the old LI you see my father died detestr,d, anri 1 left several infidel's, and I want to their executioner. Cr An Irishman just from the was eating some old cheese, v. - hp't found, to his dismay, that it cont.:, living inhabitants. "Be jabers he, "does your chaze in this eon% have childer ?" or A. poor soldier in a hospit:: Nashville Tenn., with both logs s, away, had .a tradt given him by - in ese. Pay, colportenr, upon the "Evil El'A.r . of Modern Dancing." Doubtless he w mind it. -11 - There are two classes or dio pointed lovers; those who are di3 pointed before marriage, and the unIL py who are dins rpointed after it. a