Editor aria. Proprietca... VOL. NINE. PUBLISHED WEEKLY AT ONE DOLLAR A YEAR, PAYABLE IN ADVANCE n'FFICEon Front Street, a few doors east kf of Mrs. Flury's Hotel, Marietta, Lancas ter County, Pennsylvania. Thum, Oae Dollar a year, payable in ad vance, and if subscriptions be not paid within s i x months $1.23 will be charged, but if de layed until the expiration of the year, $l4O will be charged. No subscription received for a less period than six months, and no paper will be discon tinued until sill 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 enpgernent. ADVERTISING RATES: One square (l 2 lines, or Jess) 50 cents for the first insertion and 20 cents fcr each subsequent insertion. Pro fessional and liutincss cards, of six lines or less at $3 per annum. Notices in the reading col urans,Jire cent* a-line. Marriages and Deaths, the simple announcement, FREE; 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 cult the times. • A 110DIEWS WAITING, When he comes back all glorious, With the love light in hip eye, From the battle field victorious, Who'll he happier than 1 I See, the big arm chair is waitin e, Vaeal:t still, in its old place— Time ! preps quickly on the hours Till i sea his pleasant face ! lle was too young, they told me, To marct against the foe ; Yet, when his country needed aid, Ws mother bade him go rwerc meet slaves should tremble Whom tyrants hohi in thrall; But my boy was a freeman born— Ac went at Freedom's call. 1‘7. 1 7 small weak hand :vould waver The shortest sword to bear ; Cut ha stands ready in the ranks, Anil holds his maesliet there. 11ly faint heart would falter The battle ground to see ; But his is strong in Freedom's might— lie fights for her and me. am watching and waiting, As mothers watch and wait, Whose sops ore in the army now, Ard it is growing late; ly lire's past its tnorning, It's near sunset in the sky'— Oh 1 I long once more to clasp him In my arms before I die. Yet farther off the army goes— Ile will Imam no mote, Till our glorious ['lag is free again To flout o'er sea and shore ; Wherc'er it waved in days gone by, Its colas again shall rest, From the depths of the lowest valley To the highest mountain crest. And he, - my boy, my darling, The pride of my old heart ! Siidiem'er his place may be, I know lie will fulfil his part. Not until the war is over Shall we meet in fond embrace— Time ! press swiftly on the hours Till I see his pleasant face! THE FINE LADY, Iler heart is set un folly ~ An amber gathering straws; She courts eaeli poor occurrence— Heeds:not the hca.tenly laws. Pity her! She has a little beauty, And she flaunts it in the day, While the selfish wrinkles, spreading, Steal all its charms away. her!Pit She has a little money, And she flings it everywhere ; 'Tis a gewgaw on her bosom— 'Tis a tinsel in her hair. Pity her! She has a little feeling— She spreads a foolish net That snares her own weak footsteps, For his for uhom 'tis set. Pity heel Ye harmless household drudges, Your dragy,lcd:dally wear And horny palms cf labor A softer hcart may bear. Pity her! Ye steadfast ones, whose burdens Weigh valorous shoulders down, With hands that cannot idle ; And brows that will not flown. Pity her! Ye saints, whose thoughts are folded As graciously to rest As a dove's stainless pinion Upon her guileless breast. Pity her Put moat, ye hopeful angels That send distress and work, ilottask and sweating forehead, Ye heal man's idle irk. Pity her ! so There is often but a slight sepera tion between a woman's love and her hate; her keen teeth are very near to her sweet lips. Why do physicians have a greater horror of the sea than any body else ? Because they are more likely to seo sickness. JI Iltkigllbtllt ;itruntat Pcbote4 to Volitits, Yittratart,. Agrituiturt, 3tthz of fly aR., goticjottilißuitt; t. Tito Bast Way to Put Homy out at Want, The following information we insert in our columns for the benefit of our read. [From the Phil!a, Ledger, March 27.] One of the most surprising things in the recent conversion of greenback notes into the popular Five-Twenty six par cent. Government loan at par, is the universality of the call. We happened in, yesterday, at the office of Jay Cooke . , who is the agent for the sale of these loans, aid the conversion of the green backs, and found his table literally cov ered with orders end accompanying drafts for almost all amounts, from five thousand to a hundred thousand dollars each, and from all parts of the Union.— The little States of Delaware and New Jersey are free - takers, as are also Penn sylvania, New York and the New Eng land States. But the West is most es pecially an active taker, as well as thro her banks as by individuals. The amount of orders lying before us, all re. ceived during the day, amounted to over fifteen hundred thousand dollars. With this spontaneous proffer of money, See etary Chase must feel himself entirely at ease, and will take care to put him self beyond those money sharpers, whose chief study is how to profit themselves most from the troubles of the country and , the necessities of the treasury.— There aro millions of dollars lying idle all over the country, and while the un certainty existed as to what Congress would do, and the bullion brokers wore successful in running up gold to the dis credit of the Government issues, this capital was clutched close. But as the policy and measures of the Secretary of Treasury are gradually developed, con fidence in the Government and in the future is strengthened, and holders are now anxious to Make their long ueern. ployed means productive—hence the ready and liberal investment in the Five-Twenty loans at par. Almost every town and village throughout the country has individual holders of money, to larger amounts probably than ever before at one time, for which satisfacto ry takers cannot be fouud. Many of those are now inverters in these loans, and the number of such is likely to in crease, until the demand shall put all the Government loans on a par with, at least, the loans of the various incorpo rated companies. The country banks are also free takers for themselves and their customers. On the Ist of July this Five-Twenty Year loan will, under the law, be withdrawn. --, Bas CO., PS., March 20, 2 63. J. COOKE, Esq., United States Loan Agent, 114 SOUTH MUM ST., PnIL'A. Dear Sir :—I see by our papers that you are selling for the Government a new Loan called "Five-Twenties." I expect to have shortly a few thousand dollars to spare, and as I have made up my mind that the Government Loans are safe and good, and that it is my du ty and interest, at this time, to put my money into them in preference over any other loans or stocks, I write to get in formation of you as follows : Ist. Why are they called "Five-Twen ties ?" 2nd. Do you take country money, - or only Legal Tender Notes, or will a check on Philadelphia, or New York, answer for Subscriptions ? 3d, Do you sell the Bonds at Par? 4th. As I cannot come to Philadel delpbia, how am I to get the Bonds ? sth. What Interest do they pay, and how and when and where is it paid, and is it paid in Gold or Legal Tender ? 6th. How does Secretary Chase get enough Gold to pay the Interest? ith. Will the face of the Bonds be paid in Gold when due ? Bth. Can I have the Bonds pfiyable to Bearer with Coupons, or registered and payable to my order? 9Lh. What sizes aro the bonds? lOth. Will I have to pay the same tax on them as I now pay on my Rail road, or other Bonds ? 11th. What is the present debt of the - Government, and what amount is it likely to reach if the Rebellion should last a year or two longer? 12th. Will Secretary Chase get email' from Custom House duties and Internal Revenue, Income Taxes, &c., &c., to make it certain that he can pay the Interest punctually ? I have no doubt that a good many of my neighbors would like to take these Bonds, and if you will answer my ques tions I will show the letters to them. Very Respectfully, S.— Al, j --- '.-44,.._ + ; 1 .... . 1 • 1 4- ~ tit , , MARIETTA, PA., SATURDAY, APRIL 11 - , NO. Office of J AY CooKE,•Surbscription Agent, at Office of JAY COOKE & CO., Bankers, 114 S. Third St.' PHILADELPLIIA, March 23, 1862 Dear Sir Your letter of the 10th inst. is reteii ed, and I will cheeifully give you the information desired by answering your questions in due order. • Ist. These Bonds are called "Five- Twenties" because, while they ire //vent/A - Tar Bonds, they May be redeem ed by the Government in GOLD at any time after five years. Many people sup pose that the Interest is only 5,20 per cent. This is a mistake ; they pay SIX per cent Interest. 2nd. Legal Tender notes or checks upon Philadelphia or New York that will bring Legal Tenders, are what the Secretary allows me to .reeeive. No doubt your nearest Bank will give you a check or Legal Tenders for your country funds. 3d. The Bonds are sold at PAR., the Interest to commence the day you pay the money. 4th. I have made arrangements with your nearest Bank or Bankers, who will generally have the Bonds on hand. If not, you can send the money to me by Express, and I will send back the Bonds free of cost. sth. The Bonds pay Six per cent. Interest iu GOLD, three per cent. every six months, on the first day of May and Novemberat the Mint in Philadelphia, or at Sub-Treasury in New York or elsewhere. If you have Coupon Bonds all you d) is to cut the proper Cou pon off each six mouths, and collect it yourself or give it to Bank for callec• tiou. If you have Registered Beads, you can give your Bank a power of at torney to the interest for you. 6th. The duties on imports of all ar ticles from abroad must be paid ,Goim and this is the way SeereUary . :4haSe gets his gold. It is now beiiig paid in to the Treasury at the rite of Two Hun dred Thousand Dollars each day, which is twice as much as he needs to pay the Interest in Gold. 7th. Congress has provided that the Bonds shall be PAID IN GOLD when due. Bth. You can have either Coupon Bonds payable to the Bearer or Regis tered Bonds payable to your order. 9th. The are former are, in 50's, 100's 500's and 1000's,—the latter in the same amounts, also ssooo's and $lO,- 000. - 10th. No You will not have to pay any taxes on these Bonds if your income from them does not exceed $6OO ; and on all above $6OO you will only have to pay one-half as much Income Tax as if your money was invested in Mortages or other Securities. I consider the Gov ernment Bonds as.first of all—all other Bonds are taxed one-quarter per cent, to pay the Interest on the Government Bonds, and the Supreme Court of the United States has just decided no State or City, or County can tax Government Bonds. 11th. The present bonded debt of the United States is less than THREE Her MILLION, including the seven and three-tenths Treasury Notes; but the Government owes enough more in the shape of Legal Tenders, Deposits in the Sub• Treasuries, Certificates of Indebt edness, &c., to increase the debt to about eight or nine hundred millions. Secretary Chase has calculated that the debt may reach one thousand, seven hundred millions, if the Rebellion lasts eighteen months longer. It i; howev er, believed now that it will not last six months longer; but even if it does, our National Debt will be small compared with that of Great Britain or France whilst our resources are vastly greater. 12th. I have no doubt that the rev enue will not only be ample to pay the ordinary expense of the Govetnment and all Interest on, the debt, but leave at least one hundred millions annually toward paying off debts again as it has twice before—in a few years after the authorized notice. I hope that all who have idle money will at once purchase these Five-Twenty Year Bonds. The right to demand them or Legal Tenders will end on the first day of July, 1863, as per the following authorized notice: _SPECIAL NOTICE On and after July Ist, 1863, the priv ilege of converting the present issue of Legal Tender Notes into the National Six per cent. Loan (commonly called "Five- TwEities" )will cease. All who wish to invest in the Five- Twenty Loan, must, therefore, apply before the first of July next. JAY COOKE, Subscription Agent, No. 114 S. Third Street, Phil's. Those w . ho neglect these Sit per cent. Bonds, the Interest and principal of which they get 9oLD, may have oc casion to regret it. I am, very truly, your Friend JAY Q 0 . SIipSCIOTION AG ',T, t OMce of efiY COOK.. Ai CO., • .IVo. 111 S. 4 2Vird Street, Philadelphia. The' Bents and Bankers of your and adjoining Uounties will keep a.supply of itiEse Bonds on liand; if you prefer to go t=he'r'e and get:them. • low To Pro&ire' Alltsbauth The following true story might, per haps, furnish matter for a little comedy, if comedies were still written in England.. It is generally' the case that the more beautiful and richer a young female is, the more difficult are her parents and herself in the choice of a husband, and the more offers they refuse. The one is too tall, the other too short, this not wealthy; that not respectable enough.— Meanwhile - one spring passes after an ,other, and year after year carries .away leaf after leaf of the blocm.of,youth, and opportunity after Opportunity. Miss Harriet Selwood was the richest heiress in, her native town ; but had already completed her twenty-seventh year, arid beheld almost all her young friends united to men whom eke had at one time or other discarded. Harriet began AO be set down for an old maid. Her Parents became really uneasy, and she erself lamented, in private a paition .hick is not a natural one, and-to which those to whom nature and fortune have been niggardly of their gifts are obliged to submit ; bat 'Harriet, as we. have said, was both handsome and very rich. Snoti was the of things when her uncle,- a wealthy merchant in the north pf England, came on a visit to her pa- Was A jovial, lively, straight map, ace - interned to attack all difficulties boldly and coolly. "You see," said her father to him one day, "Harriet, continues single. The girl is handsome ; what she is to have for her fortune you know ; even in this scandal-loving town, not a creature can breathe the slightest imputation against her; and yet she is getting to be an old maid." "True," replied the uncle; "but look you, brother, the grand point in every affair in this World is to seize the right moment; this you have not done—it is a misfortune ; but lot the girl go along with me, and before the end of three months I will return her to you as the wife of a man as young and as wealthy as herself." Away went the niece with the uncle. On the way home ho thus addressed her : "Mind what lam going to say. You are no longer Miss Selwood, but Mrs. Lumley, my niece, a young, wealthy, childless widow. You had the misfor tune to lose your husband, Col. Lumley, after a happy union of a quarter of a year, by a fall from his horse while hunting." "But, uncle--" "Let me manage, if you please, Mrs. Lumley. Your father has invested me with full powers. Here, look you, is the wedding-ring given you by your late husband. Jewels, and whatever else you need, your aunt will supply you with; and accustom yourself to cast down your eyes." The keen-witted uncle introduced his niece everywhere, and the young widow excited a great sensation. The gentle men thronged about her, and she soon had her choice out of twenty suitors.— Her uncle advised her to take the one who was deepest in love with her, and a rare chance decreed that this should be precisely the most amiable and opu lent. The match was soon concluded, and one day the uncle desired to say a few words to his future nephew in pri vate. "My dear sir," he began, "we have told you an untruth." "flow so ? Are Mrs. Lumley's affec tions—" "Nothing of tho kind. My niece is sincerely attached to you." - "Then her fortune, I suppose, is not equal to what you told me ?"- "On the contrary, it is larger." "Well, what Is the matter, then ?" "A. joke, an innocent joke, which came into my head one day when I was in a good humor—we could not well re call it afterward. My niece is not a widow." "What ! is Col. Lumley living ?" "No, no j_she is a spinster." The lover protested that he was a happier fellow than ho had conceived himself; and the old maid was forthwith metamorphosed into a young wife. April ll 18154 A—Lawyer Dude/ 'Difficulties. . The folloWing,.precious fragment of a diady was pinteduil several day's ago fr6m amen." the sweepings of the ; court. The 'original is gomewliat faced, but there is ,enough left to ex plain itself, and to excite sympathy for the unfortunate author.' The first entry was made at the time of the suspension of specie payments in 1857. The name of the bank in which the "bares were held is illegible from defacement : "1857; October 20.—Bought one hun dred shares of bank stock at 67, $6,700. "1858. July 10.—Received a dividend of four per cent, on above, viz., $4OO. (Here follows the notation of regular semi-annual dividends of four per cent. up to July, 1863, the interest on the in vestment being about fifteen per cent. clear.) "1863, March I.—Sold the above stock at par, say $lO,OOO, and ordered my broker to'buy that amount in gold for market money next winter, for which I paid in currency.sl7,2oo. "March 2.—Slept well last night with my two bags of gold under the pillow. "March s.—Got a at of dyspepsia.— Sick all night and no better to-day. "March B.—Damn the brokers.. Gold down ten or twelve per cent. - Went to bed with an infernal headache. "March 9.—Doctor prescribes a dose of calomel and ,jalap to break up a threatened attack of jaundice. Liver torpid. :Gold down. Damn the aboli tionists. Can't eat. "March I.o.—Weat to the country, leav ing discretionary power with broker to sell my two bags of gold. Country go ing to pot. : - . "March IL—Returned from country. Liver, in awful c4nditiou 14reagul constipation. Gold a little bqttey. Damn.the coulitry,. : P. M.—lnfernal broker sold out my two, bags of gold at the lowest, and now it's up again. Just the way with these fellows. He sends me net proceeds in greenbacks, $15,600 . "Marchls.—Here I am on my back, the devilish doctors at me. I'm a dared fool." Here ends the diary. The sum of the speculation, as I calculated it, amounts to this : With an outlay of $6,700 the lawyer bought bank stock, and for five years received an interest of fifteen per cent. on his outlay. He then sold his stock for $40,000, making a profit of $3,300. By his gold speculation he lost $2,200, got-his liver into an "awful con dition," became "dreadfully coostipa tad," and has a doctoes. bill in pros pect. For•his ten thousand dollars of bank stock, yielding an interest'of eight per cent. a year, ho now has•seven,thou sand eight hundred dollars in "curren cy," yielding no interest at all, and "de preciating" °Very day. ' The emphatic conclusion Of the diary is worthy of practical note. —N. Y. Post. How COAL IS SOLD IN LONDON:-1n the city of London coal is sent to the consumers in sacks containing one hun dred pounds each. These aro loaded on large carts drawn by enormous horses, with scales and weights to each cart, and, if desired by the purchaser, the sack is weighed by the driver. When the honesty of the coal merchant and the integrity of the driver are well es tablished, the weighing of the sack is seldom required. In the purchase of a cart-load of sacks, some three or four of them, taken promiscuously, are tested by the scales, and if found correct, the weighing of the remainder of the load is dispensed with. This mode Of buying and selling coal is the result of many years' experience in the city of London. eir A Witness in court who had been cautioned to give a precise answer to every question, and not talk about what he might think the question meant, was interrogated as follows : "You drive the Rockingham coach ?" "No, sir; I do not." "Why, man, did you not tell my learned friend so this moment ?" 'No, sir, I did not." "Now, sir, I put it to you on your oath--do you not drive the Rockingham coach ?" No, sir, —I drive the horses?" tir This now common expression is a corruption of the word "Domburgh," and originated in the following manner: During a period when war prevailed on the Continent, so many false reports and lying bulletines were fabricated at Ham. burgh, that at length, when any one would signify his disbelief of a state ment, he would say : "You had that from ,lEfambvg ;" and thus "That is Himbiiii," Or:humbug, became a com mon express erinCredulity. 37' A S9=LWEA's.bnT.P.l — .77l O letter, picked .up in camp , by au Ufrder Of one of the thitachunentssla.tiOnc Harper's `erry, has'been for' publication as a cu:lcsltv tu:l,ta , ry literaturb. AVe giva ye., lileratim, and though 'the , may cause, a smile,. Nve cap asst;re t'.::;reader that the evil complained.. n 9 joke. '-1" To his Xlcncy Afister President and Commander in phieftof the‘4l-My,. Honable a r ms our payshinfl.e is both worn out. ,w . ith. the grannit biskit sarved out to n . s y V:LL: tious. Its easier for a %viper to bite a file than it is for the rank and filo to chars hard. tack. S( , nletintes our friends sends us a few boxes of Dayton's Boston Crackers and Milk Bis . kits - from Wash ington, which is reseved with more grat itoml.than the manor is the wil6rness was the Holy . Moses.. Xient Sir, couldut you have those holesomo and deliteful articles substitooted for the slivers of flint as is ruining our t . ,:.;.11 and skinnin the insides of our stunt micas ? Hopping your Xl,;:ney will par don the liberty I .have, and en closing a peco of, hard tecif fin d a pec.i of the Dayton biskit for. comparison, .1 remain your Xl.ency's humble sorer. LIE LAND ,0,1 ; CONTItA. lITES,--In Aus tralia 'the north is the hot wifid, an I t 1.6 south the cool ;.the : westerly- wind the most unhealthy,,aad the east the most salubrious. It is summer with the cL.le ny when it is winner hero, and the ba rometer is conside.red to rise before bad weather and to fail before good. .Tb.o swans are black, ..,and the enles are • white ; the mole. liqs.cgge, 41id has p. duck's bill; the kangaroo (an animal hgtween, the deer aut) the ,squirrel,) has _fire claws on his fore paws, threetalon:s on his hind legs".,like.. a bird, an-1 yet hops °laths tail. ,There, is' a bird (me ,illphaga), -which has ,a' :broom in its anciuth-instead..of.a.toogu.e... The cod is found in the rivem-ttellthe perch in the sea ; the , valleys are cold; and the moun tain-tops warm. • nettle is a lofty tree, and the poplar a dwarfish shrub the pears are of wood, with the stalks at the broad ends ; the cherry grows with the stone outside. The fields are fenced with mahogany, the humblest house is fitted up with cedar, and mrytle plants are burnt for fuel. The trees are-with out fruit, - their loWers witlyut scent, and the birds without song.. .Such is the land of Australia! MIGRATION or Egt.s..—.4 ; qlc•se „obselr vex states thatlhefollowing interestiqg evolution occur when eels come IA from the sea. The aggregate shoal, about ,c , .1 ascend the inland streams ; moves ,tjp the shore of the river, in the feral of .a long, dark, rope-like body, in shape not unlike an enormous specimen of the an imal which" composes it. On reaching the first tributary, a portion, consisting of the number of eels adequate for pro piing this stream, detach thernEelve: from the main body, and - pass •up f•ano. in the subsequent onward rra9.3(c of th•.! shoal, this marvelous system of tie-tar:fl ing, on reaching the mouths of th. - • brooks, a propertionate.qUantity of ti:e great advancing swarm, is repeated, on. til the entire number has been. aeitablY provided with rivulets to revel id--ski?.ll being the wonderfol instinct by which nature ordains that - caeh stream shall be provided with a competent ntimbe . : of these migratory creatures. ""Class in the miacile occcgr.i phy, stand up : What's a pyramfd ?'' "A pile of men in a circus, one on ton of top of the other." "Where's Egypt ?" • "Where it always was." • "Where's Wale's ?" "All over the sea." "Very well—stay there till I you a species of birch that grows all over the country." fpr .& few days ago, two large trunk:i filled with fine-tooth combs, were s - iize,l in Washington on their way to That was too bind. it was cruel. It was remorseless.. Do the - United Stan—, authorities mean that the, poor shall be eaten alive t. The afflicted rebels have precious lit tle use for their own teeth, but a grert, deal for comb-teeth, w Why is a c'rtisty old maid. of fifty like the most beautiful, most accom plished, most elegant and most admira ble young lady in the. town ? Pocau:i, she is "matchless." tar Whatprevents the running ri v running away ? Why, it's tide up, - ' •fi ~~' ..a