!Mbii BY FRED'K L. BAKER. - 1 ILlsp PRIZES • . . for Subscribers to the ;IWIz'r;,11) IFeekly Fmnily fotern.al AT $1:50 PER ANNUM. ~piendid prizes are sent to clubs: evrry club of forty subscribers a best $55, Sewing Machine, with o.ll,lupies to the getter up of the club. f or e ve p club of twenty, and less than 40 „!,teribers, we vciil gnaw $1:25 for each sub father on the price of :mid machine. For tk ely a splendid steel en prm.r of Ire,e.l.nt A. Lincoln, lull length, ;ndren Jobt•on, Gen. Grant, or Sherman,on b .crie $3 each, with an extra copy up of the club. eVerY club orthree, one of those splen ,si s teel el:cavil:o of the Union series of YAM:VAL. PORTRAITS Presidents Johnson and Lincoln, Grant, (lens. Sherman, Sheridan, Fremont . , Admirals Far r4t4i ar.l Porter, and George and Martha v,,, E !,,,L;0n, each 19x24 inches ; worth $2. ;:": : - Thre splendid portraits should adorn SfuNniml i, the largest, cheapest and paper published, suited for every frn'. Try it once and you will never be it. Scud for copies and get up your AtkireAs, AMERICAN STATEFIIIAN, 67 Nassau-st., :%cw-York. :3•6m I \T• . J_ North Queen-St., and Centre .91)101 - C, Loncw;ter, American and Swiss Wil:elleS it GOLD AND SILVER CASES.' F.: 4. PAY AND 30 HOUR, f,: ra.L.tr VARIETY, AND FROM TUE 13F.ST F.ACTOItIES. ',CL,E.S la every style of • us:l with Otises to suit s„ nio need al olleint aid. We haye expenence in this business. 1I , En-W ARE. OuttPr,stamped wimp and warranted standard. PLATE :DWARF.. 1 :•[. plAttniwnre in the. United States. nod our beat Table ware—Spoons, Iris, wcar ten years in daily use. TEW la,lt Y. Sleeve Buttons, Studs and a va rlet; of every article in this Hue. HAIR JEWELRY. made to order. Two hundred , orslunples, constantly on hand. '-j - llcTaning of Watches, Clocks, Specta- L ,, urJewolry, done neatly and promptly. H. L. E. .1. ZARM, r . s on - th Queen Street and Centre square, LANCASTER, ?A. .1 NTOVES! STOVES!! STOVES!!! STOVEP, WOK STOVES, • ST OV ES JOHN GLE R'S. R , ' , ;LoR Sl'OVr.B, PARLOR STOVES, PA RL OR STOVES, - !! , 13URN ENG STOVES-AT JOIN SPANGLERS. STOVES,—VULCAN STOVES, , Ji;)tEATI.'G TWO OR FOUR BOOMS WITH ONE FOURTH PPLY N O IV READY—CALL AND SEE THEM .AT l'` l, .flikr's Hardware and Stove Store Ucr) et Street, Marietta,. Pa. , :27. 0. 4gaizepc, : , :tuotittr ant Oonbtganur. I, i , :nest respectfully take this meads of Ninc: Ina friends and the public generally he lal commenced the drawing of DEEDS, MORTGAGES, u~tin fact • JUDGMENTS, ;do. ivery Lung in the CONVEYANCING , ' ,. l" ' ln g gratuitous intercourse with a 1_,,• • the Lancaster Bar, he *ill be ens= 'TM instruments of writing f.lend at the office of " Tun — "Lindsay's Budding," (sec lir Post Office corner, or at Market street, half a. square megal House," Marietta.- is Mortgages, Judgments and I is, and for sale. • • N & HAMLIN Cabinet Organs, Lyles, aoapted to sacred and , r $BO to 4600 each.• FIFTY •:r Medal; or other first pre hem. Illustrated Catalogues ss, MASON & HAMLIN', BoS- B ROT II ERB, New - York. usicd—]y.] .SSOCIATION. PHILADELPHIA, PA, Urinary and Sexual Systems eliable treatment. Also,_ the E!t, an Essay of wqraiag and ; in sealed envelopes, free of 1, Da. J. SICILLIN Hoodirsori, ‘Uon, No. 2 South. Nioth-ott jan! Is $6..543%. BAICER, 'ORNEY AT LA LANCASTER. to. 24 NORTH DLIK furl. House, where he, wPI, ht ot his profession trinthre les. IN G of ever.? • description ea neatness and di : ! eh at the Cki VI t 'A' in PUBLISHED WEEKLY 'ONE DOLLAR an A EAU A YEAR PA YABLE IN ADVAATCE., °Vice in i 1 LINDSAY'S r3UILDING," second a. floor, on Elbow Lane, between the Post Offie- Corner and Front-St., Marietta, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. ADVERTLNING KATES : One SITO tre (10 lines, or Less) 75 cents for the first insertion and One Dollar and-a-half for 3 insertions. Pro fessional and Business castle, of six lint s or less at $5 per annum. Noticzs in the reading col umns, ten cents a-Line. Marriages and Deaths, the simple announcement, FREE ; but :or any additional lines, ten cents a line. A liberal deduction made to yearly P nd half yearly advertisers. Having just added a " NW:VIM RV MOUN TAIN Ir./BREA PRESS," together. with a large assortment of neva, Job and Card type, Cuts, Borders, &c., &c., to the Job Office of "Tit c MA NI ETTIA 1 , 7," - I , llliCh Mill insure the t ne and speedy execution of all kinds of Joe & CARD PRINT/NO, frof . n the =attest Card to the LARGEST POSTER, at reasonable prices. The Second Wife They tdd me ho had won before Another's hedrt than mine, And laid his gist and deepest love Upon an earlier slu•ine. They sail my spirit oft must grieve, . 111. my lot would cast With ono who held so sacred still Remembrance or the past. I heeded not ; my bark was launched With his own lifels swift tide, And earth holds nat a happier heart Than cnia . e—a second bride. r knew that he had laved and lost what lire inay,aPer give back, The flowers that bloomed is freshness once - . [lace withered in his track I knew that she—the angel called— . Looked imt from yon blue heaven, A. watcher o'er the earth-bound soul From which her own Was riven. Together do we Oft recall This dream of other years, Nor do .1 love him less to know, .1.10 once had eause for tears. Moro blest am I that it bath been My love's appointed task To wake anew the 'charms of home,' Io which his semi may bet.. DIFFICULTIES OF LAWYELIS.-A testy lawyer in court found himself bothered with a knotty witness who wouldn't es plain, as he desired, the difference be t Ween the thick ' and 'long ' kinds of whalebone. • Why, man,' said he, you don't seem to know the distinction be tween thick and long.' Ya'as 1 dew:' ' Explain-tt, • Wa'al yon'r thick headed, but you ain't long-headed, no how said be. Another was non plea sed in the following conversation : Law yer.. Did the defendant knock .the wit ness down with malice prepense? Wit ness. No, sir ; he knocked him down with a flat-iron. L.—You misunder stood me, my friend ; I want to know whether he attacked him with any- evil -intent. W.—Oh ! no, eir ; it was out side the tent. L.—No, no, I wish von to tell me whether the attack was at all a preconcerted affair ? W.—No, sir ; it was not a free concert affair, it was in a circus A maiden lady, not remarkable for either beauty, youth or good temper, came for advice to Mr. Arnold - as to how she should get rid of a troublesome suit or. "0, Mary, marry hini l" was the ad. vice. " Nay, I would see him hanged first. h " No, madam, marry him, as said to you, and I assure you it will not be long before he hangs himself." ilEr The! natives or- Bonlbay; - India, a're greatly astonished at the lighting of the streets with gas. The : lanTlighter is followed by a large crowd every even ing. They will sit for hours and watch. the Haines, feel if the posts get :hot, wonder .why. it don't., and thus . they Sit and argue the ins and outs of the :clues' , Lion until-they get tired and go hoine. ea- Tom Moore Said to Peel, on lools, ing at the picture of an Trish orator, " you can see the very quiver-of his lips." "Yes," said Peel, " and t,. e arrow. coin . ing out of it." Moore was tolling this to one of his nountryinen, who said, " meant arrah corning out Of ' fill ; Lney'Stone says: "The cradle is iv woman's ballot box." Then *eve howl/ soma nolwwful voting ‘ehere, two ballots were deptisiteq-dt'a tini . . fir W bit iThat which 'ocCii - rs 7 Otic.e in a minute, twice in a momefit t .una not once in a blinclrid years? The letter Tr ajukpeOcut Veroplimia *mat for t ffioint MARIETTA, SATURDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 3, 1866. Captain Jack Ballast's Story My story?. *Well, I don't-see why I shouldn't scratch- • it down. There's nothin' to he ashamed of in it, 'so far as 1 knoW, NO though you reelax story writers mayn't call it, "romantic!' I think the wind sets that way myself; and there's a bit of love in it, too, though yoe'd never think I was a subject for a love story to look at me. I'm old enough, dy'e see, to feel safe about the draft, and brown enough to be a Hotten tot ; and as . for flesh—well, no matter ; some of you slim young dandies will be as stout as I lie if you live as long. Besides, that fracas at Gibraltar didn't improve my looks. I'll tell you_ about that before the story is over, .I reckon ; at presentl'd better heave ahead, Fat as I am and old as I am, there was a time when I was as slender a young fellow as ever shipped afore the mast agin his parents' leave. ' They, Lord bless 'em ! wanted to make a coon= ter juniper of•merand I triad measuring rags about a year. Then I couldn't stand it any longer, and jumped the old counter for good, and cut and - went' td sea. had a hank-aria' for it a good while, and the only thing I ever -regret; ted was the' way my poor mother took it to heart. Wait a bit. Honor bright, there was one thing That was Jeuuy . Blush, old Blush's only daughter, and the prettiest girl I over cast eyes on. tier skin was just, as soft and fair as any baby's. As for her hair, I've got a bit in my old desk upstairs; and though 'it's crossed the ocean about a dozen times, it's so bright now, you'd take it for a gold chain coiled down under Ikb bit of blue ribbon it's tied with. Old Bush was my captain ashore. 1 mean to say, he wasthe lies,d_o4e_big dry goods store where they first sent me 1 to tneasui ing rags, and. , Jenny used to come over every day after ribbons and calico, and the like, and; Lea-love ye I - I don't find fault with the womethfolks looking after such thiags, theughAdon4, seem a man's place to sell 'etn.. She looked mighty pretty when she pat 'ern * on, did. Jenny. Father.and old Brush were fast friends, and when . thoy found outthat I was sweet on Jenny they put their, heads together and ,resolved to sanction the watch. I was to be taken into partnership, d'ye see, and was to seep into the rag business when the old man stePped out. " Dry Goods, Whole sale and Retail," was the .sign, but I aiways called 'em rags. Well, Jenuy and I were fond of each other, and knew it already ; so, the did folks'becng agreeable,, we- saw ar , good -deal of each other; Sundii.fs' and even ings, to say nothing of the •errands she made to the store. And I 'used to wish I could make up my mind to it and stay ashore ; but I couldn't, not if I'd died for it. I heard the Wave - a -beating about my bed in thy dreams. I bated the cloth yard and the scissors so they made me ill. And one night I told Jenny so. She cried a bit ; but by-and-by she own ed that she didn't hate ma for• it, and' we talked of the time when I.shotrld be a captain, and she should make every voyage with me, and have a cabin like a parlor to herself. Then she let me kiss her. P're,ps she kissed rue back ; and I cut off the yel. low curl .1 told you of ..with, a pair, Of scis sors—the only pleasant job. 1. ever -did with the confounded things in 'ell My life. That night I ran a*ay, and - though blubbered like a baby when I passed mother's door, you-couldn't have coaxed me back again. Whata man wenta to be he Will be; and th'ere are men meant from their cradles for the • water es ear tin as the fish are. I got aletter from. old mammy-that cut me up, I. don't deny; bat I knew she'd come round, and I didn't guess the, worsthovv should When- it first came fo me that a matt that sold , rags was better than a sailor it,lteo_k,tnyt breath away. 'Dais was when 1 . first went home, d'ye see! Marnialit, she, scolded and cried, and kisSed tat Martha and Melinda, and hrother. Charl'eS AtigtistUs . pii.ched jolo the . fero z cions. Says' they:•" You've disgraced your family—we have been respectable and ginteel folks all our liyesi, and now we're to have a common sailor for a ;brother:"..caught' it—a reg'lar gale; 'and father put in.his oar regarding.. dis obedience., When. that'caaie I 'cleared out and parched over 'to old Blush's.- Nobody warat - h - olife - blr.Tfilifig,`Od she , ; ran to wins. W ell,. wis ~w ere bill ing and cooing, as swectitearts mostly 'do, I recion', Vilien old Minh came home to tea. I never' heard - a, gale of MIA 'What do you want here, sir ?" says Says I " Don't you recollect me, Mr. Blush ? I'm Jack Ballast."' . Says he "I recollect you well enotkib, and how dire ..you shoW your face hire ?" Says I " I came here to see- my Jen- 8y. ,, "You'r Jenny 2" says he. "My gbod fellow, Miss Jenny Blush is no match for a common sailor before the mast; and -whatever there may have been be tween you when you were entitled to'my _respect is all over now. You have your phoice'of walking quietly out (ourself or of being kicked, cert. ' Any one but Jenny's father would have been floored for that. I, just look- Od down and saw my, fists shut up of themselves, and. tried to.keey,'em so. Says I, coot as I,uonld, donl moan to be'before the mast all my life, sir. I expect to be a captain some day." "And," says old Blush, " a man with no advantages, brought up to the sea, might boast o' that ; but you might have been a:partner in our 'firm, sir. You might have been'a gentleman, and had as good a business in the dry-gbdds line as any man alive. Azid you. have chos en to be a roving rascal. And I'd see my daughter in her grave before I'd give her to you. Sam, show this person out." That was the nigger just come aboard the parlor with the coal hod. And when he said that my. fists were beyond my control, and the last I saw of old Blush he was on his back on the hearth-rug. Then says I to . the'darkey, "Touch tne if you pant to, you rascal." and started out. rs , I saw Jenny on the.sly next day and tried to get her to ""run away ; but - the girl had a ivill of her own and knowed her duty.- Says slier I can - *obey my father, Jack. IJoye you . dearly, and I.ll:neyer marry noy,otte else.; but over between us.. Idon.t tkiplizpa would have relented even : , if , you- hada V been so, violent; bet now he never will. You've-done it yourself, Jack, she said, turnibg white and looking away from me, "You like the -sea best, and you ye got it instead of me " hoe were . the la'st words' she said and I was going away when I beard her give a little cry, and turning -saw .her arms streteked Out tbWards me; theb I went back and folded •her to my bosom, and kissed her a hundred times: And Pnr afraid:Dowse& her: hard 'old father from the .Ibottoth. of my - soca, though 'twitsat loud; formniud ye; a 'woman is - a womdp,. and :w.o.rdt good - :etiongh for , other men's ears:ain't to be spoken* be: fore her. The sight cif,Jenny, as ..T., left 1. her, with her yellow hair blown back an der the, bare tree branches, .all bright with icicles, haunted me for many a long. -day; and thoughj loved the sea, _there wen times when, fooking over the ride r I used; tofanCy a 'voice deepdown in the waves whispering her words over again "You've done it yourself, Jack, you . .- liked the sea better than me, and you've got it." It doesn't take long for the 'years to - . • go by:either on land 'or ocean. `They . , • • went With me ill with ether folks. I got on well enough. Before I knew- it I MO see,orkl . mate,.then first m then captedo. -I Suppose 1 should-have ed the sea until they*bu'ridMe'in 'it if it hadn't been for my first. mate,. John Malin. I loved that fellow as I might It brother; if I'd -had a better- one than Charles Augustus.::At Gibraltar- Ham. -lin got into .a .r.o.w with - some, liingliSh soldiers. . They'd alit been drinkfag to gether.;..of course Ltook his part. They had firq-arms about them, and used them' , 'on each other: I didn't save ..Hamlin for, they shot .him dead ; but I got -a couple.ef bullets, n toe, and .Lwas pick ed up just , as. near puyy Jones' - locker as any man eyormas.who didra go into it. I got well actaln but was on the' ,invalid list ; .and.as.rd laid up ,a handful of mon-, , ey and i was past 40, I mad,a,ap ray.inlnd to 'slay at home and take care -of John Hamfin's orphan children. He had, wo, of theta, both girls.- I.settled down in - No* York and fetched theul,home, poor half starved creatures, , -for the woman they boarded with was:given to drink,. and' 'kept theta on 'bread and treadle i ind r as they - Cold - me I must, I put theni le' black froCks--they'd have felt just as badln red—and settled down to be eikm - -' fortablti. 'Soon - I looked out for a dap. : lain to-pasi Sunday as - it ought to .bel and the Rev. Ebert ' Tonker'il' Church' being'hartlY,l - shiPlied him 'along' with thetilkii,' 'and as I. aliiiin"...dri iriY f j a t : : i; 4 e " .. rieler'priliendlieboV t,' go the. plate ;ben V ii 6 Vie tted 'A.I3 a 14. ii - Vr = 6)] rife fv: Rev. Eben 'fooker was a addable man. --tie uged 1..9 4TO- -Ts and talk to t) me about my soul ; and though I can't shy but what I dropped asleep some times, he knowed his duty when he did it. _A ,captain's duty is one thing, and a chaplain's is another. One day he spoke about poor Ham tin's gals. Says be, "You send them to school, I hope." Says I, "I haven't done it yet—gals are better without learning, if they can read their Biblei and cipher out their butcher bills." ISut`he kept'on, and pretty soon Llet him examine 'em, Lord love ye, they hardly knew their letters. The school in' as well as the board lad gone for gin. The poor heathen are scarcely more benighted," said our chaplain. He in sists On my saying pastor, but t'other sounds the best. ; "We 'must' find an instructress for them, captain." "Surely," said wanted to do the best by - poor Tom'S Children that I could surely; just mention a schoolmarm, chaplain." Said he, " my - own are tinder the care of the person who playa the .organ—a highly estimable lady in reduced circum stances._ Her school is close by. No. -- Broome street."..' So we wrote tbe name and address on a card, and I promised to, take the gals there. Monday mo rning we . set shil. . I bought 'em bookti and satehhls and ;slates, and by nine o'clock we were-at 'the door. q'hen I looked for -- the card, and, behold ye, I'd lost it! 136'Wever, I 'was in port, and• could :the. lidy as school-martn." Betsy was piping her eye, - and P;eg was bawling that she wanted to go home. But, says No, no, gals, I don't want 'you to grow ,up benighted as the heath. ras >sv thhat tie,eliaplaia..cailile noiv." So I lugged 'em in end made.my rev erence. • ." Duty, ma'am,',' says ; "-here's two galls asneeds instruction. Rev.' Ebert Tookeprecominended , ye to-give it to rem, and whatever extra it for playing the organ:let 'em lira sit for it's you that works it in the top of the loft 'o Sunday§ —you know how to do it. Gappen Jack Ballast at jour service. Send your bills to him, and he'll foot 'em." • I ain't bold , with women. a bit bashful; afore : strange.,'uns even yet. And I haAdt looked at her. But when I spoke out my name she gave a4ittle scream and started back. Of course I couldn't help looking at-her then, and she wassittingilOwn with ter handker chief-before her face: , Says' "Beg p'ard'on,' are You' ill,' mum?" • . = Says she, still not loohing "Did you say your name was Captain Jack Ballast ?" -" "" "Jack Ballast, at your service," said' I. - Says sbe, "Oh, Jack I don't you'hnoW - me ?" Sayer, '" Look up and make, Sere." —And she lifted up ,her face and_l saw —well, if it wasn't the pink-cheeked-girl I knew. It wasn't a girl at all, but in a minute it was Jenny Blush again—a great deal Satire than - I was young Jack Ballast. "Jenny,' says I,*"611", Jenriy, is it re ally -you ?" Aud theh the cafoi - dame into her cheeks, and her eyes glittered, and she whispeted, "oh, not' before the school, Jack ;' for I had caught her to my heart and kissed her.. We had not much-time to .palaver then,-but came for• her again in the 'evening and took her for a walk. And she told me-how the-rag-store - had been shipwrecked, and old , Blush dropped dead of apoplexy 'when he kndw of it. And how my brother - Charles-Augustus had offered her his hand, but she had said no,•andPreferred,te,earu n hgr living to. marrying one aheilid a mot : love while there was one living, whom he did; 'And now it was fifteen years ago:—fifteen weary years. . - Then says I, "Jenny, darling, I love you better than ever, now-rie found you again. When yen told my brother there was some one living you loved did you "es, Jack," said shc. • Says I "Now youiip seen. Me-4a. weather beaten scarred old sailor—do .• yuti think the.same.Mr.: - Saba she; 4 "lbalw ayti Esdi 11, Jack?' '"Oome• on than," Says -1. Arid' nut; another.warduattl we•camei.toqiie Efev ',ben 'tookees. Thereft:ralig: the "lie' `Why, nay %Au% oplight Mi'liere, Jack ; Says* I; "To make the ~clmplain mar ry us, love.' , Says she, " It's too sudden. 3 can't.. .w, haM ~~~~~tb:.~~ VOL. XII.-NO. 26. •' No matter for people," says I And in we walked. And for all she told me that no woman was ever married before in a delaine dress and straw bon net, the chaplain didn't find it any ob stacle, but spliced us. And so after nineteen years I got my Jenny for my own. I don't think she's sorry for it, and I know I ain't ; and as for poor Tom's children, she's a mother to 'em. And whether there's any romance in my story or not, it's a happy one for me in the ending, as sure as my nam, is Jack Ballast. Iscatnurxry P ERSONIFIED.—There is living on Martha's Vineyard an old man , who has never been off the island, and the extent of his knowledge is bounded by the confines of his home. He has been told of a war between the North and South, but as he has never heard the din of battle, nor seen any soldiers, he considered it a hoax. He is utterly un able to read, and is ignorant .to the last degree. An excellent story is told of his 'first and only day at school. He was quite a lad when a lady came to the district where his father resided, to teach school. He was sent, and as the teacher was classifying the school he was called up in turn and interrogated RS to his former studies. Of course he had to say that he bad never been to school, and knew none of his letters. The schoolmistress gave him a seat on one side until she had fin idled the preliminary.examination of the rest of the scholars. She then called him to her and drew on the black-board the letter A, told him what it was and wished him to remember how it looked. He looked at it a moment and then in quired ( be stuttered ) " Et•h-how do you know it's A ?" The teacher replied that when she was a girl, she had been to school to an old gentleman who told her so. The boy eyed the .A fora moment and then asked, " H•h how did he know ?". This was almost .a stunner, but the teacher suddenly recollected that he had told her that when a boy he had been to a school to a lady, who taught him that it was A. The boy eyed the letter a little long er, when he burst out with " H•h-how did• he.know but she 1-1-lied-?" Theleacher coOld not get over this obstacle, and the poor .boy was sent home as incorrigible. A QUAKER WOMAN'S SERMON My den+ friend - ET, there are three things I • vcry mach wonder at. The first is, that children should be so foolish as to throw up stones, clubs and Vrickbats into fruit trees, to knock down fruit; if they Would let it alone ft would fall itself. The second is, that men should be so foolish, up:a frayen SO wicked, as to go to war, and kill each other ; if let alone they would die themselves. And the third and last thing 1 wonder at is, that young men should be so 1.111Wi60,83 to go. after the young women ; if they would stay at home, the young women would -come af ter- em." r firA shreardlereacher, after au elo quent 'charity sermon, said to his hear ers : lam afraid, from the sympathy displayed in your countenances, that some of you may give too much. I cau tion you, therefore, that you should be just before you are generous; and wish you to understand that I desire nu one who cannot pay his debts to put any thing in the p'ate." The collection was a rare one. • Cr To be a woman of fashion is one of the easiest things in the world. A late writer - thus describea it : " Buy ev- erythiog you don't want, and pay for .nothing you get; smile on all mankind but your husband,; be happy everywhere but at home ; neglect your children and nurse lap-dogs ; go to church everytime you get a new dress." Cr The truest_Qhristion politeness is cheerfulness. It is graceful, and sits well - on old as well as young. It is the best of all company, and adorns the wearer of it more than rubies and diem. onds-set in gold. It costs nothing, and yet is valuable.- Er Genuine neighborly. love knows no distinction of persons. it is like the ono, which does not ask on what ikshall shine, or what it-shall warm ; Amt-shines and warms by the very law or its own being. So there it; nothing hidden from its light and - hed ' Gar A sinewd-4ittle fellow who had just beitin to readiliatin, astonished the 111'81TEet: by the f.3ll;witig translations : "Vir, a wan ; gin, a trap— 'Virgin, man-