Editor and Pro-prietor.. VOL. NINE. PUBLISHED WEEKLY AT ONE DOLT,AMA YEAR. = CiFFICE, on Front Street, a few doors east I of - Mrs. Flury's Wtel, Marietta, Lancas ter County, Pennsylvania. TERMS, 0 .e Dollar a year, payable in ad vance, a , (I if subscriptions he not paid within six months $1.25 will he charged, but if de layed until the expiratidn of the year, $1.50 will be charged. NO F bm- ription 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. ADV FAIT:KM' RATES : One square (12 lines, or less) 50 cents for the first insertion and 25 cents fcr each subsequent insertion. Pro fessional and Business cards, of six lines or less 'at $3 per aunum. Notices in the reading col umns, fire cents a-line. Alarriages 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. JOB PRINTIV6 of every description neatly and expeditiously executed, and at prices to suit the times. TILE HAPPY lIIIND, Out upon the calf, I say, Who turns his grumbling head away, And quarrels with his feed of hay, Buse it is not clover. (Ave to roe the happy mind, - That will ever seek and find Something fair and something kind, All the wide world over. rTis passing good to hare an eye, That always,mahages to spy Some star to bear it company, Though-plannks may - be ridden ; And Mrs. Eve was foolish, very, Not to be well content and marry, With peach, plum, melon, grape and cherry, When apples were forbidden. We love rare flowers, but suppose I.37e'l'e far from Italy's rich rose, Must we then turn up our nose At lilliee of the valley ? Can't we snuff at something sweet, In the "bough pots" that we meet, Cried and Snld in the city Street, By "Sally in our alley 1" Give me the heart that spreads its wings, Like the free bird that soars and sings, And sees the bright sides of all things, From Behrmg's Straits to Dover. It is a bank that never breaks, It is a store thief never takes, It is a rock that never shakes, All the wide world over. We like to give old Care the slip, And listen to the "crank and quip,' At social beard from fluent lip,— No fellowship is better ; But he must lack the gentle grace, That marks the best of human race, Who cannot see a friendly-facer-- In mastitf, hound, or setter. Our hungry eyes may fondly wish The revel amid flesh and fish, And gloat upon the silver dish, That holds a golden plover. Tet, if our table be but-spread With savory, cheese, and oaten bread, T.c thankful if we're always fed, As well as the wide world over. We may be poor—but then, l guess, nur tmuble with pomp is less, For they who wear a russet dress, May never fear the rumpling. And though champagne froth never hums Between bur fingers and our thumbs, Red aploplexy rarely comes To dine with plain static dumpling. AMERICA, I LOVE TREE STILL America, I love thee still, There's glory to thy name, There's brightness beaming from thy birth. And honor from thy fame. There's beauty in thy naked soil, Bespeaking smiles of love, The rocks and blooming vilds proclaim Protection from above. America, I love thee still ; Beneath thy valleys rest The pilgrims of a tyrant's power, Bright emblems of the blest— 'And round them clothed in silence, lie The mouldering patriot's fame, Embalm'd in secret memory's fire, Immortal honors claim. America, 7 love thee still, Though traitors dire disown f-.T.,he holy rights and ornaments, Endeared to freedom's home : Though misty clouds o'erspread the light, And fears tbgether blend, Hope's cheering rays foretell my pride Of glory to ascend. America, I love thee still— Thou art my native land— The joys, so pure can ne'er he found Upon a foreign strand, 4 Tho' pleasure's path, and fortune's smiles In other climes seem fair, The brightest of their hopes and joys, Cannotwith thine compare. America. I love thee still— Resplendent glories gleam, Through all thy deeds. Thy sacred lights Shall be my theme. Pure from the realms of victory's sky, The.crown was given ro thee— 'Mid starry lights, eternal stands rt , Lill aitaioeptoent Vensglimia *urnal prbot6 #oVolitics, Niftraturt, a,ricutturt, NCPUs of the p q , Notal ainttiligtott, tt't. • It is one of the saddest facts in-life that marriage is often a failure; and it is so, in many cases, not because of any great vice on either side, but simply by reason of a false estimate of the condi tions by which the married state, like all other states, is governed. The rpot of the evil lies in perverse principles affecting the whole social intercourse of the sexes. In the minds of a large pro portion of young men, the feeling with regard to women is a mixture of sham gallantry and real • disrespect. They have no opinion of the female intellect, and ne reverence for the female charac ter. How so low an estimate of the fe , male nature can be arrived at by any• man who recollects that he has, or has - had, a mother, (for we may set aside as of no account the few monstrous excep tions to the sacredness of the maternal character.) is difficult to explain ; but the fact is too often manifest. It is a vice of fashion and of training, which like most vices, has the power of repro. during itself by the contagion of exam ple. We may deplore its existence, but we must take it into our calculation,— Young men often find themselves ex pected, on entering the world, to be ex tremely complimentary and deferential to women before their faces, and cyni cally contemptuous of them behind them backs. The old schoolboy sense of scorn for "thoSe girls" is retained, but it is decorously hidden behind a thin veneer of gallantry. Perhaps it would be more correct to say that there is an attempt to hide the rougher and more genuine feeling, for the untruthfulness of the profession is made more' manifest by its fulsome exaggerations. The showy nonsense uttered by young men in ball-rooms is resented at heart by all girls of. intellectual capacity and com mon self-respect ; but it is unfortunately encouraged by the more frivolous, who do not detect the real indifference it masks, or who yield themselves willingly to an enchantment which they know is false, but which they feel is pleasant. 's There are of course, two forms of gal lantry—the true and the spurious.— That feeling of tender, protecting re gard for women, as the weaker of the two sexes, which seems to have origina ted with Christianity, or at any rate to be more directly encouraged by the re ligion of -equality •than by `boy other, is TitieLgenuine gallantry of cultivated and -considerate men. It ands its 'loftier expression in the solicitude with which manly natures shield women as far as possible from the rough accidents of life ; and its lighter in the brightness and gayety of social intercourse. The spurious development of gallantry we all know too well. It is the -reproduc tion in general society of the simpering airs of a Beau Bruminell rendering ger viceit self distasteful by officiousness,and compliments offensive by their gross ness. The type of true gallantry may he seen in the Chevalier Bayard ; th; of false gallantry in the vulgar gentiF y and barely disguised selfishness of Sa nej Pepys, Esq., Secretary to the A.drai ralty, and hangeton at the Court of Charles 11, or in Charles II himself.— It was, indeed, in the reign of that mon- I arch that spurious gallantry became first systematized, and both professed and practised as an article ofsocial religion. We have long ago risen out of the worst corruptions of that evil time ;_ but we have not yet entirely shaken our selves free from the low estimate of wo men which was fostered and vaunted in the latter half of the seventeenth cen tury. The misconception, as we have already shown, is widely diffused among the unthinking, and it results in the-fre quent failure of the married state. The young fellow who from his eighteenth to his five-and-twentieth year has prided himself on having "no opinion of wo men," excepting as a kind of pretty plaything, suddenly finds at the latter period that he is under very heavy, yet very pleasant, bonds ti one of that de spised community. He has lead flirta tions and trifling fancies a dozen times before : The summer pilots of an empty heart Unto the shores of nothing ; but now he is really in love. To that extent he is sincere ; and so far his sham gallantry merges into the true. But he has been so accustomed to false preten ces, that• his very sincerity takes a form which is itself insincere. He has no idea of truth apart from exaggeration, and has so accustomed himself to the language of excess, that be can speak in no other tongue. The old habit of unreality clings to the new-born truth, and ruins it. Because he Ws the lady pralable and kiad, considerate for others, (i . ke . 3:6) : • 41 Ct tit-Ilia/It+ MYER OR ANGELS. MARIETTA, PA., SATURDAY, JITNE , 6, 1863. and prone to do gracious things gracious , he fancies her supernaturally perfect. He constructs an ideal out of her best qualities, and does her a substantial in justice by expecting that she is always , to act np to that impossible measure of perfection. She ceases to be mere wo man, (which ought to be, sufficient to satisfy any reasonable man,) and floats the ether of his fancy a winged angel. Her admirer is never modest enough to ask his conscience what right he has to expect an angel for his companion, him self being none. He probably makes DO effort on his own part to rise above the weakness of humanity—the petty accidents of temper, common at'times to all of us ; the sordid instincts of daily life ; the selfishness that insinuates Welt' under s,o many crafty forms ; the meanness, distrust, and want of charita ble allowance, that grow with our growl h, unless perpetually checked and beaten down. He does not consider how far perfection on one side, and im perfection on the other, would be a pos sible or even a desirable , association.— He pays - his sweetheart the egregious and even cruel compliment of trying her by a standard wholly impracticable and artificial, arbitrarily fixing her to it, and shaping all his future prospects by a law which he ought to know is non.tg iskeet. HO '['ha man who began by thinking all women fools, and who passed out 15f that opinion into the belief that one particu larwoman was an angel ; marries in the glamor of the latter faith, and antici- pates a lifetime of celestial ministra tions. Let us say the honeymoon is all honey; still, when. the active, yet mon• otonous round of, daily existence com mences, it will be- strange if the angel does not sometimes prove mortal.' She may be a true-hearted loveable woman ; she may have all the devotion, the self sacrifice, the quiet grace and harmony of her sex; but she will also have her wayward humors. She will be out of spirits once in a while, out of health sometimes, and out of temper at others. Why did not Jones, her husband, think of this before? Why does he resent it now, as if his wife had married him un der false pretences ? She never put herself forward as a seraph . ; that was his mistake. Vet Jones thinks himself deceived because, after a little while, he finds those gauzy wings which be would needs fasten to the human shoulders of Mary Jane dropping off iato nothing. ness. Affection and trust, sustained and rectified by mutual charity, are not enough for him. Those -are the condi tions of the beet of mortal friendships; but they will not satisfy the prodigious requirements of Jones. He had bar gained for au angel; and because he has not got one, all is a failure. Thence follow heart-burnings and quarrels ; sep aration ensues, and perhays the Di vorce Court brings the miserable error to a close. Marriage is the touchstone before which the deceptions of courtship fade, and are forced to declare themselves for what they are. Shakespeare, with that wonderful power which he possessed of implying a profound remark in the ver bal mistakes of some of his characters, makes Slender say to Justice Shallow, when the latter recommends him to marry Anne Page, and asks whether he can love her : "I will marry her, sir, at your request ; but if there be no great love in the beginning, yet Heaven may decrease it apon - better acquaintance when'we are married, and have more oc casion to know one another. I hope upon familiarity will grow more con tempt; but, if you say, 'Marry her,' I will marry her." The great dramatist knew from his own experience, as well as from general observation, that the love in the beginning, w;iether much or little, is frequently "decreased upon bet ter acquaintance," when the couple'"are married and have more Occasion to know one another." Did he, with all his in sight, make the mistake of expecting too much ? Certainly Shelley did in his first marriage. This would seem to mil itate against our assertion that real po ets are not likely to fall into such Fi rers; but it should be recollected that bOth Shakespeare and Shelley were mere youths when they were -wedded-- the one to Anne Hathaway, the other to_ Harriet Westbrook. The worst of the matter is, that the mistake is fre quently committed by men of maturer years. The court martial in the case of Gen. Corcoran, for shooting Col. Kim bail, has conclnded its investigations. The result isjustification of the Gener al; GIVING AWAY ME BABY. A MOTRER'S STORY "It was the third day after my hus band's funeral," said the widow, "and I was so stunned by his sudden death that I could do nothing but sit and think over it, and try to realize how it could be so. Only the Sunday before he had been sitting with me, watching the baby as be sat in the sunshine, laughing and clapping his little hands, as the shadows of the trees were flung across the bare floor, and moved by the passing breeze. Now the child was sitting in the same spot, the warm October sun streaming in on his bright curls, and making him look so pretty—so like a picture ; but the father was gone from us forever. "It seems to me I mast see his dear face once more ; that he would surely lift the latch and come in, and take our child up, and say, as he so often did, 'Mother, what would you take for this little brother?' "Even the baby missed him, and would come and stand at my knee, calling 'Pa pa! papa!' until I thought my poor heart would break. Thb two oldest children were at school, the rest were out playing, so that. I was quite alone. By and by the baby was tired of his and came and got up into my lap. illamma cry—mamma musrn't,' he lisped out, and wiped my wet face with his chubby bands; but I could only hold him closer to me, and then cry more bitterly. "Just then Mr. and Mrs. Lorrimer drove up in their handsome carriage.— They lived not far off, and were our richeit neighbors. When I had invited them in, and had dried my tec,rs a little they seemed at a loss how to begin the conversation ; but Charlie had slid away from my side, and went sr.d stood at the lady's knee, and pointing to her heavy gold bracelet, said, 'Pretty ! pret ty P in his childish way_. She took it off and gave it to him saying : - "Won't you come to bo my little boy, Charlie 7" "My mother's heart took fright at once. They had no children arid I seemed. to feel tte plainly cs they had told me, that they had come to ask for one of mine. "No, no, mother couldn't spare him,' I said, quickly snatching him away, al most rudely, I fear. My dear woman,' began Mr. forrim er, have you thought seriously of the impossibility of your getting along with five children under twel:e years of age I It has required all your husband'a ef forte,to make a living for you—how can you hOpe to do without him ? "We offer,' • rejoined in his wire, 'to take the most helpless of your little" ones, to give him all the adVantages we would our own child ; and surely you must see that God's hand is in it, hat through us he intends to help you.' "r needed not tell you how long I withstoOd all their arguments. But at last, overcome by their entreaties, I consented to consider the matter. In two days they came for the answer. I never mentioned their visit to any of the children, end I bad changed my mind alinost every hour since I had seen them. At last, convinced that it was for the child's good, I consented to give him up. When I went to dress him to go, my resolution almost failed me. I lingered over every article I put on him, and made every dear curl over and over before I could get it to.please ;and I kissed the little white should : . ers until they were all rosy. But at length, he was, reedy, and I thought •he never looked so pretty. He Was full of animation, fur he was old enough to know what it meant to 'go riding,' and he clapped hie hands and laughed aloud at, the horses as they were driven up.— I handed him to his new mother, (the children supposed that he was to come back soon,) and he never even looked at, me. Oh; how jealcins my aching heart grew "When I came back into the house, the first thing my eye fell on-his cradle. I -could only throw myself on it and sob alqud. , Then came the trial of tell ing the whole truth to the children.— None of them seemed reconciled, and I felt that the worst was to come when the two oldest should return from school. I almost dreaded to meet them especially Willie ; be was like his fath er,: so quiet and calm Outwardly, but hiding beneath his apparent coldness strongest, deepest 'feelings. . But the others went to meet them as they came home, and I was pleaSantly disappoint in the Way the oldest took it: He • • • seemed to fees that I. had dose it foi Establish~c7 April 11, 185-I._ the best, and that he must hide his own sorrow for my sake. He was more thoughtful for my comfort, gentler than ever, only very still and grave. "The day ended, as the longest will at last, and it came time to go to bed. I had taken Willie down stairs to sleep near me. Since his father's death, the other children slept just above us.— Well, when I came to lie. down, there was the empty pillow! Baby had al ways laid his little rosy face as close to mine as he could get it, and slept with one little warm hand on my neck. All my grief broke .out afresh when I thought of him. Willie raised up at last, and said, earnestly; "Mother, it's Charlie you are crying for isn't it 1'; "Yes,' 1 answered, know it's for the best; but, oh ! it's so hard to give him up:, "Mother,' ‘ continued the child, 'when father died, we know it was all for the best, because God took him -from us btit I have been thinking ever since we laid down how poor little Charlie must be crying for ynu, and how God gave him to us, to love him and keep him ; and now you have given him away. If lle had meant him to be Mr. and Mrs. Lorrimar's baby, wouldn't He have giv en him to them at first r "The child's Words carried more weight with them than all the argu ments of my rich neighbors. 'After considering a moment, I said, impalsive ly: "Oh, if I only had him back, he shonid never go away_ again, no matter how poor we might be !" "The moon was shining so brightly that it was almost as light as day, and presently Willie said: "Mother, it's only half a mile across the tields, and.they won't go to bed for a long time at Mr. Loreitner's—let us go and get Charlie. Why, mother, I seem to bear him crying now." "Urged by tho childs entreaties and the foUd promPtings of my own, heart, I consented. I think. I never walked half a mile so quickly in my life, and neithelv , spoke until we reached the mansion. Then wo stopped a moment foe breath, and, sure enough, we could hear baby screaming at the top of his voice. We went round to the sitting roomdoor and knocked. They seemed half frightened when then they saw who it was, but asked us in 'politely: A hired nurse was walking with the child up and d'own'the floor, trying- to pacify it. Mrs. Lorrimer bad wearied herself out, and was lying on a lounge. "Come to mother,' 'Mine said, and he brought the little fellow to me at once. • "How he clung to TOO Still sobbing, yet smiling all the while to find himself in my arms ! "I cannot give him up,' I Said, at last when I Could get my voice clear. 'You Inuit let me take him home." "They evidently thought - me"eilliest: of .omen ; but their cold Words only made me more determined; and e 'star ted bank'in' ess than halfan hoer after we came, I carrying the baby. .Willie offered to help me, hut I felt as though I could carry him in my arms forever. "When I had laid him .bed; not fast asleep, but still lobbing,, and reaching out his little hands to feel if I was there I said - : - "God helping mt., come What will, I will never part with one of my living children again I And I never did. "I need+not tell you hov with joy, the rest of the children were, when they found the baby in bed next morning; they almost fought over the little fellow; and from that day forth it was their greatest pleasure to amuse Charlie ; and have him with them. "When the affair came to he known, many blamed me, and many favors that my rich neighbors might have done me, they withheld, I think, for my folly, as they called it. But a few poor- women, like myself, that had alivays nursed their own child - ren, said I did right.-- We had many trials, and often scarcely a crust of brad in the house; but- our hardships only bound us the more closz ly together. • "All my children proved comforts and blessings to me ; God took care of one for me; but as Willie said, we knew that was for the best. The rest mar ried in thecourse of time, and left me; but the prop of my old_ days, the one . whose industry and management gave me this plentiful and comfortable home has never left me sineb the day I gave him away."—Little Pilgrim. The politician who undertakes to do tke people, generall7 undoes kimseff, NO. 45. LOUISVILLE JORNALIDIS, A Correspodent calling himself -Kit ten" writes from "Fort Hell at Bran denburg." Perhaps he is the oft-men tioned "cat in h ell without claws." A good many lawyers, out of busin ess, !Live joined the army, We suppose that, having no other prosecuting to do, they concluded 4o help prosecute the war. • A clergyman in Pennsylvania has ex cluded rebel sympathizers from the com munion table. Indeed we d'in't like to commune with them ourselves. If the salamanders or tire-eaters of Charleston get entirely out of food, they will. perhaps set 6re to their city for the sake of one good meal. Gen. Van Dorn was defeated by Gen. Curtiss at Pea Ridge ; badly whipped by Geo. Roseerane at Cori:at' ; and fin ished by Dr. Peters near Murfrees boro. In would seem that the rebel ladies in the portions of Tennesse visited by the Federal troops can't be considered as exactly presentable. A letter to the Chattanooga Rebel says that they have been "stripped of everything." We met a man a few days ago from beyond the robe! lines, who said he had not seen a fowl upon the table for six months. In that region an old soden t'.7,.ry hen would be deemed a feast for the gals. Somebody writes to the Grenada Ap peal that General Buckner is "willing to be judged by h!s works," Which of his "works" does he want to be judged bye Those that General Grant pro• posed to move upon immediately? The •order of Gen. Shackleford re quiring the ...;iti/ens of Todd county to take the oath of allegiance of go South took effect on Li ,nday last since which time *there have been lively times in "driving out and swearing in." The Richtnond Whig admits the se• rions damage threatening Vicksburg, and acknowledges that Richmond, too, would be a little shaky should an im mediate attack bo made upon it. The New York. Times says "a soldier never should be politician." The poli• ticitms aim generally to think that they should never be soldiers. It is pleasant enough to learn that the Richmond Whig, which all along scoffed at the id'aa of any considerable soaring in the South, has perished of unendurable misery. With its expir ing breath, it cried aloud that it was dying of Confederate taxes. We sup pose the Editor will now go forth fro© his bankrupt establishment as a sutler or some othor sort of camp-follower— "As maggot; crawl fr.;;:a out a tuined nut." No cue should live without labor labor is - n grelt bles sing. Nev-r corn plain that you are obliged to work, but go it with alacrity and cheerfulness. Is makes Men hea'thy, procures them food, clothing, and all the necessary comforts of hfo, and places a strong barrier against the temptation to be dishonest. When Mattge was very little girl, her father faand her chubby hands full ol the blossoms of a beautiful tea-rose, ot: which he had bestowed great care.-- "My dear," he said, didn't I tell you not to pick ens of, those flowers without leavt.?" "Yes, papa,"- said Madge, in nocently, "but all these have leaves." The evils from which a morbin mac suars most are those that don't hap pen. Rather curry a man's horse than his favor. ilostlere are less offensive than 85't9Phanti• troubles that ;year the heart ou.t,„/Iteis easier to throw a boinhsheli a mile than a feather--evest witli artil lery. Man creeps into childhood, boundu into youth, sobers into manhood, softens into age, totters into second ghildhoo ti and stumbles into to the cradle prepar ed For us all. car Mrs. Partington says tbat he cause' dancing girls are stars, it is n ,, reason why they should be regarded heavenly bodies. 'True merit can be compared to a, river, the deeper it is the less noise i: makes. So with knowledge : the learn ed mind is still, deep, and thoughtful the shallow brains: are tribulent like is shallow wirer, running headlong ti -thy . (nen.