BY FRED'K L. BAKER. Not Zlrobalit A Highly Concentrated Vegetable Extract. A PUUENUJ. DA. NOOFLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS PREPARED BY DR, C. M. JACKSON, PHIL'A, PA. L L effectually cure Liver Complaint, 1V D lipepsia, Jaundice, chronic or net twos diseases of the Kidneys. and bad dis eases arising from a disordered Liver Of . &M -ach. Such as Constipation, in o ward Piles, tut ness or blood to the bead, acidity of the Stow. ach, Nausea, litartbuin, disgust for food, ful ness or weight in the stomach, sour Eructations, sinking or buttering at the pit of Lie Stomach, isWinuning of the Head, hurried and difficult Breathing, fluttering at the Heart. choking or suffocating sensations when is a lying posture, ilanness ot V/$1.013. dots or webs before the Sight, lever tt..d dull pain in the Bead, defi cieocy of Perspiration, yellowness of the Skin and Ly es pain in the Sine, Buck, Chest, Limbs, &c., sudden Bushes ot Heat, burning in the !Flesh. coi.stant imaginings of Evil, and grief, depression of Spirits. And wilt positively prevent Yellow Fever. Bilious Fever Lim.— hey conniii. no Me1t...1101 or bad Whisky.— They yr LL CURE the above diseases in ninety nine cases out of a hundred. The proprietors have thousands of letters front the must eminent Clergymen. Lawyers, Poynieiens, end Cltizens, testifying of their own pus Lai knowledge, to the beneficial of fonts aind medical virtues of these Bitters. Do you want something to strengthen you Do 3 u want a gone appi Ito 1 Lo ou want to build up your const,tut,on 1 Do you want to feel tell I Do you want to get rid of Ner vousness? Do you wait energy I Do you wut t to sleep Do you warn a brisk sad Vigorous feeling? If 3ou uo, use DUOVLAN German Dille's. PARTICULAR NUTICE.—There are many nrel uist.ous sold under the name 01 Bitters, put up in gnarl bottles, compounded of the e, elipet tc lucky or eumutou tutu, costing front to lU cents per piton, the taste disguised by Ili ir:e or C. , ruaider Seed. his chits of fiftieth lies caused and will con tinue to cause, as lung as they can be sold, Luhdieds to Lae the ueuth of the drunkard.— tht fr use the avert-ill is kept euhunually under the niduet,ce 01 alchohotic stimulants of hue worst kitAl, the ucsi re fur liquor is creatcd and h aid the itsult is all the horrors attei.oant upon it el'Ulli.iL/11 . 8 tile and death. kor Illene who desire and will lions a Liquor Nth:is, tie publith the following receipt Get one bottle vl Dori:hind's bitters and 11.11 X with thae quarto el pad [Handy or whisky, and the result will be a preparation that will far excel in medicinal vn•tues and true excellence any or the numerous Liquor Bitters in the and will cull =tale leas. You will have all the virtues of lloullantes Bitters in connection with a good article of liquor, at a touch less price than these inferior prepare ttvr•s ail; coat you. AST) IS T. 161% :01.171 We call the atten tien Cl ail Li—laicals or bends in tile army to the tact that "lloolland's German bitters ' will cute nlite-teutha of the diseases }minced by exposures and privations tuenieLt is rump lire. lh the lists, published almost daily lu the newstapeis, on the arrival tif the bias. it wall be mitived that a very large pro- Fult.vit ale sulk:ling limn debility. Every tuft of that L4/11.1 Call to readily cured by Doi Gummi Itirters. Inseases result ing Ir, ui disorilirs of the digestive organs are gpeet,uy removed. We have no hesitation in intitibg that, al thine Betters were freely used shin :g our sualims, hundreds of lives might he bttVca u,at otherwise will be lust. Mc call the paitiewur attention to the fol lowing reininkabie and well authenticate, Cum ill oat or toe nation's heroes, whose lie to use, his language, riled been saved by the Bitters :" rEttLADELPHIA, August 23d, 1862. Alessrg. Junes ey Lteuns.—Weil, gentleman, ycttl Itouilsild s German Bitters have saved my lite. There is no Mistake in this. It is vouch- Id for by numbers of toy CuairtideS, Seine of wbooe usnies are appended, and who ate fully cri r;lxunt ul ati tut, cireniusial.ces Witty case. I are, and hare ()ten fur Me last four years, a member of shear - lan's celebrated battery, and under the immediate command of Cap tain le. B. Ares. 'lnrou h li the exposure at lei dem upon ni) arduous ilutica, 1 wasattack ad iu .NuVentber last wt.b thllamation of the lungs, and was fur seventy-two days in the hospital. This it as lotion ed by great debility, heilMtencd by an attack of dysentery. I was then removed stern the White house, and sent to tots city on truant the Steamer "State or Atomic," troll whicn Handel `•tin the 25th, of June. :since that time 1 have been about as low as any one cowl arid retain a Spark of k hinny. For a week or more 1 was ac,„“ ly unlit to swatluw anything, and if I did loice h 11101551 down, it was immediately thrown up again-. 1 cuuto no, even keep a glass of water on M 3 stowed'. Lite could not last under these cummistatices: and, accordingly, the physt Cons who had been working manfully, though unsuccessfully to rescue me from the grasp of 'Le email Archer, frankly told me they could do no more for me, and advised me to bee a cieigymen, and to make such disposi tion tat rii) Willie'. funds as best suited me.— At. acquaintance woo visited tne at the hospi tal, Aar. Fictlerick Steirihron, of sixth beiow Arch glee, auviscd we, as a forlorn hope, to t.) ) our Bitters, and kintily'procuted a bottle. From the time I commenced taking [nem the go. ray alitido S t,l ocath r.ceeed, and I am now, thank trod for rt, gctting better. Thu' 1 hove taken but two butties, I have gained ten pounds, and 1 tool sanguine of being per- Milted to 11 jOili my wile unit dat;gh(or, stein whom I hate heard nothing fur eighteen mutates: fur, gentlemen, 1 am a loyal Viigiu lan, irutn we vi y of Front Itoyal. 'ln your invaluable Bitters I owe the certainty of lite w [itch has taken the placo or vague tears —to your Inners aril I owe the gloutious pri vilt•ge of again clasping to my bosom timse Who are neatest to we in life. Very truly yours, ISAAC MALONE. We fully concur In the trunk of the above stuteweist, as we had deapaired of noting uur con.rewle, Mr. iNlutune, reendeti to health. .I,lulLuddiebuch., Ist New York battery. 4eor 6 e A. Ac.iey, Co. C., 11th Maine. Ltwni Chevalier, yxd New y,,rk. I. E. :ponder, let Artiiiery, battery F J. li. fasewell, Co. 13, 3d Veiniont. Henry B. Sertnno, Co. B. do. Jinni). T. Macdonald, Co. C. tits Maine. John F. Vlara, Cu. F. bin Maine. Nathuniel Thomas, Co. 1%. 3 95th Penn. Jutin Jenkins, Cp. 11 7 10(ich i•euu beweie ut counieirtits ! See that the sig- Nature al ••C. it. Jackson," is on toe wrapper of each bottle. Puce per bottle 73 ci.nts or halt tor-S4 bliouto your erecter druggist not have the atliCie, do nut be put oil uy ary of the intoxi eatinE; prepttratioua that may be offered iu its piece, but bend to u., dud, we will forward, lieuttreiy o: , ciitd, by exeress. etincipat Office and Manufactory, fro. ti3l AILC/3 .STREET. TONES & EVANS, (Succersors to C. M. Jackson & Co ,) Proprietors. 12 - For sale by Druggists and' /freshtrs in *rimy terwn in the iltiitect State,. .'ll - 4...ri2ttian u4tycacitt venttsgilmuia gonna!: ptintar f olitzts, yiteraturt, Agriculture, Dellis of te Yotal nittritttiait TS PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY, AT One Dollar a-var ; tOnable in abbantt OFFITT : CRULL'S Row. Front Street, five doors below Flury's Hotel. TERMS, 0.. e Dollar a ear, payable in ad vance, a , d if subscriptiors he 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. ADVERTESING RATES: One square (12 lines, or less) 50 cents fur the first insertion and 25 cents far each subsequent insertion. Pro fessional and Business cai ds, of six lines or less at $3 per a.inum. Notic.-s in the reading col umns, fire cents a-tine. 1% C arriages and Deaths, the simple announcement, FREE; but for any additional lines, tive eenis a line. A liberal deduction made to yearly and half yearly advertisers. Haying recentled added a large lot of new Job and Lard type, Cuti, Borders, &c., to the Job Office of " The Mariettian," which will insure the fine execution of all kinds of Jon & CARD PRINTING., from the smallest Cord to the largest Poster, at prices to suit the Wartimes FORTY-NINE TO-DAY. Another stroke on the bell of time, Another cycle of human life, Another step from the summer prime, Another lease of care and strife. My glass reveals the self-same face— The eyes with their accustomed ray; Yet in them I the hint can trace— My boy, you're forty.nine to-day. The self-same face, but still I see The havoc thereon time has made ; Mine own have no immunity From change that other cheeks invade. The same deep wrinkles on the brow, The same commingling of the gray, Speak that I cannot disavow— nly boy, you're forty-nine to-day. I read the record time has traced, Whether of folly or of wit, Too deep to ever be erased, For what i.thereon writ is writ. It needs no cunning tongue to tell The story that its lines portray ; I knoW the tale it bears too well-- kly boy, you'ie forty-nine to-day And few but I may read the lines— The inner meaning they impart : Each word in burning tracery shines, I've learned it long ago by heart. A creed of mingled good and ill, A Jog book kept on life's rough way, That other years and acts roust fill— My boy, you're forty-nine to-day. early years, where have ye flown Where fled the buoyancy of youth? Alas! though we times touch disown, Our mirror tells us all the truth. , Twete well to own the serious fact, Admit the steps of mild decay, And with a riper wisdom act— My boy, yoU're forty-nine to-day. But notin grief I bid farewell To years that in the past are lain ; No moment does my heart rebel That joys may not return again. Witt cheerful trust I'll bide my fate, And culture calm content alway ; * Exempt from draft, I'll patient wait— My boy, you're forty-nine to-day. ARTIFICIAL. Ica.—A •great degree of cold is produced by a mixture of saltpe tre and Glauber salts, and there are now manufactured in England and exported to India, &c., in large quantities, chemi cal mixtures known as freezing powder, by means of which rough ice can be pro duced in fifteen minutes, at a cost of is 9d, or about 4d per pound. This pow der, introduced into a little machine, invented by the same person, may be used upon the table to ice wine or water with the greatest celerity. A. bottle of champagne may be iced in ten minutes for 3d. So great is the intensity of the cold produced that the sparkling con tents of the bottle may be actually transformed into a spongy mass. THE BOSTON SHOE TRADE.—The Shoe and Leather Reporter says that the draft is very heavy among the journey. men in the shoe• manufacturing district! of Massachusetts, and that labor, in consequence, is very scarce and high. There still continues to be a fair de mand for the boots and shoes for the Western market; and, now that the contending armies have retired from Pennsylvania, goods are in considerable request in that quarter, and according ly, we note increased shipments to the larger towns in that State. ONE. OF THE CHIVALRY-- It iB said that alter Vicksburg surrendered, one of the rebel officers—Gen. Lee, of South Caro lina—in order to display his spirit, opened a vein in his arm and wrote hie parole with blood. We should think it hardly necessary that a gentleman, hav ing proper faith in his simple word of honor should endorse it in ink taken from his own veins. There is a Quix otism about such an act that makes it ridiculous. Gir New Lisbon, 0., where John Mor gan was caught, is Vallandigharn's birth. place. So John stopped where Val was set a going. MARIETTA, PA., SATURDAY, AUGUST 15, 1863. COURTSHIP. Falling in love is an old fashion, and one that will yet endure. Cobbett, a good, sound Englishman, twitted Mal thus, the anti population writer, with the fact that, do all he could, and all that government conld—ay, all that twenty thousand governments could— he could not prevent courting and fall ing in love. " Between fifteen and twenty-two," said he, •"all people will fall in love." Shakespeare pushes out this season to the age of forty-five. Old Burton, writing on love-melancholy; gives us a still further extension of the lease ; and certainly "there be old fools as well as young fools." But no one is absolutely free from the universal passion. The Greek epigram on ' a stat ue of Cupid, w hich Voltaire, amongst a hundred of others, has happily produced, is perfectly true : " Whoe'er thou art. thy master see Who was, or is, or is to be." Probably no one escapes from the passion. We find in trials and in crim inal history, that the quaintest, quietest of men, the most outwardly saintly, cold, stone-like beings, have had their moments of intense love madness.— .Luckily, love is as lawful as eating, when properly indulged in. Cobbett tells us how an English yeo man loved and courted, and how be was loved in return ; and a prettier episode does not exist in the English language. Talk of private memoirs of courts—the gossip of the cottage is worth them all. Cohbett,'who was a sergeant-major in a regiment of foot, fell in love with the daughter of a sergeant of artillery, then in the same province of New Bruns wick. He had not passed more than an hour in bar.company, when, noticing her modesty, her quietude, and her so briety, he said, "That is the girl for me." The next morning he was up early, and almost before it was light passed the sergeant's house. There she was on the snow scrubbing out a wash ing tub. "That's the girl for me," again cried Cobbett, although she was not more than fourteen, and he was nearly twenty-one, " From the day I first spoke to her," he writes, "I had no more thought of her being the wife of any other man than I had the thought of her becoming a chest of drawers." lie paid every at tention to her, and, young as she was, treated her with all confidence. He spoke to her as his friend. his second self. But in six months the artillery were ordered to England, and her father with them. Here was indeed a blow. Cobbett knew what Woolwich was, and what temptation a young and pretty girl would be sure to undergo. lie therefore took to her his whole fortune, one hundred and fifty guineas, the sa vings of his pay and overwork, and wrote to tell her that if she did not find her place comfortable to take lodgings, and put herself to school, and hot to work too hard, for he would be home in two years. "But," as he says, "as the malignity of the devil would have it, we were kept abroad two years long er than our time, Mr, Pitt having knocked up a dust with Spain about Nootkit Sound. 0, how I cursed Noot ka Sound, and poor, bawling Pitt." But at the end of four years Cobbett got hie discharge. He found his little girl a servant of all work, at five pounds a year, -in the house of a Captain Brisac, and, without saying a word about the matter, she put into his hands the whole of the hundred and fifty guineas unbroken I What a pretty, tender picture is that I —the young sergeant, and the little girl of eighteen, who had kept for four years the treasure untouched, waiting with pa tience her lover's return ! What kind ly, pure trust on both sides I The his torical painters of our Royal Academy give us scenes from English history of intrigue and bloodshed. Why can they not give us a scene of true English courtship like that? Cobbett, who knew how to write sterling Eaglish bet ter than any man of his own day, and most of ours,,does not forget to enlarge upon the scene, and dearly he loved his wife for her share of it ; but he does not forget to add that with this love was mixed "self-gratulation on this indubi table proof of the soundness of his own judgment." air The lap-stone used by the mis sionary pioneer, Dr. Wm, Carey, when• he was a shoemaker, is now among the highly valued relics at Stepney College, England.