.o=;g II FRED'K L. BAKER. PUBLISHED WEEKLY, IT UM DOLLAR AND A HALF A YEAR, PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. glee in" LINDSAIN BUILDING," second per, on Elbow Lane, between the Post Office Corner and Front-St., Marietta. Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. /DPERVIIING RATER: One . equere (10 bees, or WO 75 cents for the first insertion and One Dollar and-a-half for 3 insertions. Pro tendons! mid Business cat ds, of six lines or less it 86 per annum. Notices in the reading col umns, ten cents a-line. Marriages and Deaths, tie simple announcement, rar.E ; but tor any additional lines, ten canto a line. A liberal deduction made to yearly a ad half yearly advertisers. Baying just added a " NEWBURY Moon rats lomat Pawn," together with a large th attnient of new Job and Card type, Cuts, kc., &c., t 0 the Job Office of " THE MasivertAn," which will insure the hie and 'Teeth' execution of all kinds of Ton & CARD P11111'11 4 09 from the smallest Card to the Warr Ponca, at reasonable prices. DR. HENRY LANDIS. Dr. Henry Landis Dr. Henry Landis At the "Golden Mortar," At the "Golden Mortar," Market Street, Marietta, Market St re et, Marietta, keep constantly on hana Keep constantly on hand Drugs, Perfumeries, Fancy Articles, Patent Medicines, Coal Oil Lamps and Shades, Howe Sr. Stevens Family Dye Colors, Shoulder Braces and Trusses, Papers and Periodicals, Books & Stationary, Portmonnaies, &gars, Prescriptions carefully compounded Prescriptions carefully compounded Remember the place, Remember the place, Dr. Grove's old Stand. Dr. Grove's old Stand. Give us a call. Give us a call. IL L. k E. J. ZAIhIf, e feutelei , s, 4. Corner of North Queen-St., and Centre Square, Lancaster, Pa. WE are prepared to sell American and Swiss Watches at the lowest cash rates! We buy directly from the Imparters and Man ufacturers, and can, and do sell Watches as tow es they can ,be bought in Philadelphia or New• York. A fine stock of 3locks ' Jewelry, Spectacles, silver and Silver-plated wore constantly on had. Every article fairly represented. H. L. k E. 1. ZAHM, Corea North Queen Street and Centre Square, LANCASTER, PA February 17, 1866.4 f. CHEAP READY-MADE CLOTHING!! Havingjust ieturned from the city with inkely selected Lot of Readylnade Clothing, which the undersigned is preparento furnish a reduced prices; having laid in a general assort ment of men and boys' clothing, which he is decent iced to sell Low, ron CASH. His stock tteeita of OVER-COATS_, DRESS, Faocir AND COATS, s PANTS, VESTS, • Pxs.r.scxxxs, RU s osours, (knit) OVERHAULS, CRAVATS, „ lit AW IRS, SKIRTS, Hox , UNDERSHIRTS, LLov es,t3HSTENDERS, &c. Everything in the htiiihing Goads line. Call and examine be °llDuchasing elsewhere. Everything sold at Wrests suit the times. JOHN BELL. Corner of Moto Lane and Market St next door to Cassel's Store. 1866 THE LADY'S FR/END , The best of the Monthlies—devo ted 10 LITERAT URE and FASHION. $2.- 41 Ode. We give WHEELER & WIL- L N'S celeb rated $55 Sewing Machines on the Wowing terms:-- Twenty espies andthe Sewing Machine, $7O. F, 4 4ele tY copes and the Sewing Machine, $B5, r oe/copies and the Sewing Machine, $lOO. Se ed /3 seats for a ample copy to DEA CON & PETERSON 319 Walnut street, hilmielphis. DR. J. Z. HOFFER, ,- DENTIEtTi ..- • „ Or THE BALTIKORE COLLEGE li r" OP DENTAL SURGERY, LATE OF HARRISBURG. 0 !„ street, next door to It e114.v1111100 Drug Store, between Locust, %lout Onsets. Columbia. ROBERT C. HARRIS. . PLASTERER. 1,„ 111 „,,rolt located in the Borough of Marietta , h.;l_" 4 r espectfu ll y offax hie services to the V, r eri and being to do his work stid it reasonable prices, hi to meri s te ws a liberal share of publicp atronage . "erisits, 1865.-3t* ti 4 NIEL G. BARER, " .ITTORNRY AT LAW, LANCASTER, PA. OPPiC It 34 NORTH DUKE ST, EC? t g i e t ire the Court House, where he will at eus ° branched. Practic e of his profession in all its OIL WM. B. FAHNESTOCK, OfFICt:--112.ttx-sT., NEAltir okrearsz ST lee & Panam : Vs Store. ' o Faom 7 To 8 a. M. OMC ifotist..l E I sot. " BTo7 P. sr. LARGZ LOT OF BUFF' WINDOW SRADEB et remarkably low pricer—. 'tllarittian+ It Is So I've seen many a girl Who would marry a churl, Providing he'd plenty of gold, And would live to repent When the money was spent, When she found that her heart bad been sold. It is so ! It is so! You may smile if you like, But it's so ! I've known many a lus Who would thoughtlessly pass Whole hours promenading the streets, While her'mother would scrub, All the while at the tab, Never minding the cold or the heat. There is many a man Who will "dress" if be can, No matter how empty his purse, And his tailor may look, When he settles his book, But his patron has vanished, or worse. I know people so nice, They will faint in a trice, If you mention hard labor to them ; Yet their parents were poor, And were fond to endure Many hardships life's current to stem There are many about With faces "long drawn out." Who will prate at the harm of a laugh, Yet they will cheat all the week, Though Sundays quite meek, To my mind they're too pious by half. It is so ! It is so ! You may smile if you !ike, But it's so ! REMARKABLE EPITAPHS. —The follow ing, says the Sunny South, is an inscrip tion in the cemetery at Scooba : Tho rottin 00T fURGOTTON But it hardly comes up to another in a village churchyard in Georgia : - Opin yer ies 1 for here lies all that ken rot. rite where she sot when she was happy,- Our Liza Jane kalled home again To jive her pappy Live so that you— and I may tu Jine them and forever pray agin chills and kollera. An Adventure in the Great Pyramid The state of Colebridge's mind when he wrote his fragments of Rubla Kahn must have nearly resembled that of any reasonably excitable person during a first visit to Cairo. Just a degree to vivid to be a natural dream ; many de grees too beautiful and wonderful to be an ordinary daylight vision, the rich dim courts, the glorious mosques, the marble fountains, the showers of southern sun light poured on stately palm tree and slow-moving camel, and shifting many hued crowd, ail form together such a scene as no stage in the world may par allel for strangeness and splendor. One day spent in roaming aimlessly through the bazaars, and the gardens, and the mosques of Hassan and the Gama Tay loon, does more to reveal to us what Eastern life means—what is the back ground of each great Eastern story, the indescribable atmosphere which per vades all Eastern literature—than could be gained by years of study. At least, I can speak from experience that it was such a revelation to me, and one so immeasurably delightful that, having performed,the long journey to Egypt mainly with the thought of the attraction of the ruins of Thebes and Memphis, Karnak and Philte, I waited patiently a fortnight within sight of the pyramids without attempting to visit them, satisfied with the endless interest of the living town. At last the day came when the curiosity of some quarter of a century (since that epoch in a child's life, the reading of Belzoni) could no longer be deferred. I had a concern, as good folks say, to visit Cheops that par ticular morning, and to Cheops I went mounted on the inevitable donkey, and accompanied by a choice specimen of that genius of scamp, the Cairene donk ey-boy. Unluckily I had over night or dered my dragoman to wait in Cairo for certain expected mails, and bring them to me in Old Cairo whenever they might arrive ; and of course the order involved my loss of his services for the entire day, spent by him, no doubt, with my lettere in his pocket, at a coffee shop. Thus it happened that my little expedition wanted all guidance or assistance, such acquaintances as I possessed in Cairo being otherwise oacnpied on that partic ular morning, and - upt , even knowing of my intention. Arrived at the ferry or the Nile, just above the Isle of Rhoda, it was with considerable satisfaction that I found a party of pleasstat English ladies Rad gentlemen also proceeding to the Pyre- afiltigtrattut ennsentnia Nonni fax te Nomegirth. MARTETTA, SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE 2,1866. E by the departure of the Overland Mail that day, and of course they could make no delay—as they seemed kindly dis posed to do—to keep up with me and my wretched donkey, or rather donkey boy. If there be an aggravating incident in this trying world, it is assuredly that of being mounted on a non-progressive donkey, unarmed with any available whip stick, spur, or other instrument of cru elty, and wholly at the mercy of a treach erous conductor, who pretends to bela bor your beast, and only makes him kick, and keeps you behind your party, when you have every reason in the world to wish to retain your place in it. Only one tbiog is worse, a mule which carries you through a whole day of weary Al pine climbing, just too far from all your friends to exchange more than a scream at intervals. If there chance on sach an excursion to be ten pleasant people of your party, and one unpleasant one, whom you particularly wish neither to follow nor seem to follow, itis inevitably that particularly objectionable person whose mule your mule will go after, and press past every one else to get at, and drag your arm out of its socket if you try to turn it back, and finally make you wish that an avalanche would fall and bury you and the demon brute you have got under you in the abyss forever. On horseback you are a lord (or lady) of creation, with the lower animal subject unto you. On mule-back, or ass-back, you are a bale of goods, borne with con tumely at the will of the vilest of beasts, not where you please, but where, when, and how, it pleases. To return to my expedition to the Pyramids. Very soon the English par ty were out of sight, and slowly and wearily I was led a zigzag course through fields of young growing corn, and palm groves, and past the poor mud villages of the Fellub-Arabs. Mud, indeed, oc cupies in Egypt an amazing prominence in every view. Mud hovels, mud fields, where the rank vegetation is only begin ning to spring through the deposit of the inundation, mud-dams across a thou sand channels and ditches, and finally the vast yellow mud banks of the mighty Nile. If man were first created in Egypt it is small marvel that his bodily force 111 should be a " muddy vesture of decay." In the course of my pilgrimage on this particular day my donkey-boy cleverly guided me into a sort of peninsula of mud, out of which there was no exit (short of returning our steps) save by crossing a stream of some three or four feet deep. As usual in Egypt, two or three brown Arabs arose immediately when wanted, from the break of • rushes, and volunteered to carry me across on their shoulders, their brack-shish, of course, being divided with the ingenious youth who had brought me.into the trap. What it costs to the olfactory organs to be carried by Fellah• Arabs, language altogether fails to describe. At last the troubles of the way were over the sands of the Desert were reached, and the stupendous cluster of edifices, the three Pyramids of Ghizeh, the Sphinx, the Cyclopean Temple, and the splendid tombs, were before me and around. For miles off, in the clear air of Egypt, where there is literally no wri al perspective, I had been able to dis tinguish the ranges of stones which con stitute the exterior of all the Pyramids, save the small portions of the second and third still covered with their `original coating. It was hardly, as Longfellow says: "The mighty pyramids of stone, That wedge like cleave the desert airs, When nearer seen and better known Are but gigantic flights of stairs." Almost as soon as they come within the range of vision they are seen with their serrated edges and the horizontal lines of the deep steps, marked sharply with the intense shadows of the south. Of all these ruins of Gbizeh—these earliest and mightest of the records 'of our race—the one by far the most affect ing and impressive, is assuredly' the Sphinx. A human face, nay, an intense ly human face, a portrait full of individ uality even in its solemnity and colossal grandeur, gazes , ns with the stony eyes before which have passed Hebrew prophet and Greek philosopher, and the Roman conqueror, and Arab Khalif. Had Napoleon the Great told his troops that sixty centuries looked on them through the Sphinx's eyes, he would have used no unmeaning metaphor. Even the very ruin and disgrace of the mighty countenance seems to render it moreaffectiq F . fmmeasurably sub lime, half pitiful, nay, grotesque• in its desolation, it stands, with it4i.j ? row calm ly upturne4 to heaven, and a somewhat deem a ruddy Sash upon its cheek, but with every feature worn and marred since it has stood there a stony St. Sebastian, bearing through the ages the shafts and insults of sun and storm. I must not pause to muse over thi Sphinx, nor yet to describe the gradual revelation which comes to the traveller of the enormous magnitude of the Pyra mid, as he slowly wades at its foot through the heavy sand, and perceives when he has walked thrice as far as it seemed he need have done, he has but reached the half of the base. The English party, who had ontridden me, were concluding their luncheon as I reached the Pyramid and after declin ing their cordial offers to share it, I ask ed one of the ladies, " Had she visited the interior and Cheops' chamber ?" "No. Some of the ladies and gentle men had done so. The Arabs were a wild set of men, and she did not like to put herself in their power." Deeming the lady's caution must be over-devel oped, and too intensely interested to make very serious reflections on what I was doing, I engaged the Sheik at the door of the Pyramid to provide me with proper guides so soon as the English party had ridden away. Five strong Fellah-Arabs volunteered for the service, in spite of my remark that three were enough, and we were soon plunged into the darkness of the first entrance-passage. All the world knows how the Pyramid is constructed ; a solid mass of huge stones, all so per fectly fitted that scarcely a penknife might be introduced in any place be tween them. The passage at the - widest scarcely permit of two persons going abreast, and are for long distances so low as to compel the visitor to stoop almost double. The angle at which these passages slope upwards is also one which, on the slippery, well-worn floor, renders progress difficult as on the ice of the Alpine mountain. But oh ! how how different from the keen pure air, the wide horizon, the glittering sunlight of the Alps, this dark, suffocating cavern where the dust, and lights, and breath of heated men, make an atmosphere scarcely to be breathed, and where the sentiments of awe and horror almost paralyze the pulse. Perhaps my special fancy made me then, as ever since, find •a cave, subterranean passage, or tunnel, unreasonably trying to the nerves; but , so it was, the awe of the place well nigh overpowered me. The Arab guides helped me easily in their well known way. One or two car ried the candles, and all joined in a sort of song at which I could not help laugh ing in spite of both awe and lack of breath. It seemed to be a chant of mingled Arabic and English (alanguage they all spoke after a fashion), the En glish words tieing apparently a continual repetition : "Very goot lady, backshish, baekablab ; Very goot lady, give backshish” ; and . so on, de capo. Twice we had to rest on our way from sheer exhaustion, and on one occasion, where there is a break in the continuity of the passage, there was an ascent into a hole high up in the wall by no means easy to accom plish. At last, after what seemed an hour, and I suppose was about fifteen minutes, since we left the sunshine, we stood in .Clieop's burial vault, the centre chamber of the Great Pyramid. As my readers know, it is a small oblong chamber, of course wholly without light or ventila tion, with plain stone floor, walls, and roof, and with the huge stone sarcopha gus (which once held the mummy of Cheops, but is now perfectly empty) standing at one end. The interest of the spot would alone have repaid a jour nay from England ; but I was left small time to enjoy it. Suddenly I was start.. led to observe that my guides bad stop ped their song and changed their obse quious voices, and were all five standing bolt upright against the walls of the vault. " It is the custom," said one of them, "for whoever comes here to give us backshish." I reflected a moment that they had seen me foolishly transfer my purse from the pocket of my riding-skirt to the walking-dress I wore under it, and which I had alone retained on entering the Pyramid. " Well," I said, as coolly as 1 was able, "I intend, of course, to give you backshish for yoUr trouble, and ff you choose to be paid here instead of at the door; it is all the same to nee; 71 shall give three shillings. English (a favorite coin in Cairo), as I said I - Only wanted three men." 4c.Ti, roe chilfinffitariLnigannawh Va. want back high I" "There they are. They are quite enough." " Not enough. We want backshish !" I must here confess that things looked rather black. The Fellahs stood like so many statues of Osiris ( even at the mo ment I could not help thinking of it), with their backs against the wall and their arms crossed on their breasts, as if they held the flagellum and crux an saga. Their leader spoke in a calm, dogged sort of a way, to which they all responded like echoes. " Well," I said, "as there are five of you, and I am rather heavy, I will give you one shilling more. There it is. Now ycri will get no more." Saying this I gave the man the fourth shilling, and then returned my purse to my pocket. "This won't do. We want back shish 1" "It must do. You will get no more backshish." "It won't do. We want baekshish Each moment the men's voices grew more resolute, and I must avow that horror seized me at the thought that they bad nothing to do but merely to go out and leave me in the solitude and darkne - ss, and I should go mad from ter ror. Not a creature in Cairo even knew where I was gone. I should not be missed or sought for for days, and there I was unarmed, and alone, with these five savages, whose caprice or resent ment might make them rush off in a mo ment, leaving me to despair. Luckily I knew it would be fatal to betray any alarm, so I spoke lightly as I could, and laughed a little, but uncomfortably. "Come, come. You will have no more backshish, you know very well ; and if you bully me, yon will have stick from the English Consul. Come, I've seen enough. Let us go out." " We want backshish 1" said all five of the villains in one loud voice. It was a crisis, and I believe if I had wavered a moment I might never have got away ; but the extremity, of course, aided one's resolution, and I spoke out angrily and peremptorily : " have no more of this. You fel low there, take the light, and go out. You give me your hand. Come along, all of you." It was a miracle ; to my own compre hension, at all events. They one and all suddenly slunk down like so many scold ed dogs, and without another syllable did as I ordered them. The slave habit of mind doubtless resumed its usual sway with them the moment that one of free race asserted a claim of command. Anyway, it was a simple fact that five Arabs yielded to a single Anglo-Saxon woman, who was herself as much surpris ed as they could be at the phenomenon. 0, how I rejoiced when the square of azure sky appeared at the end of the last of the passages, and when I at last emerged safe and sane out of the Great Pyramid I Dante, ascending out of the Inferno, 'a riveder le atelle,' could not have been half so thankful. Away I rode, home to old Cairo on my donkey, and could spare a real laugh under the sunshine, when I found that the wretch ed old' Arab Sheik, with whom I had left my riding skirt, had quietly devour. ed my intended luncheon of dates, and then carefully replaced the .stones in - my Docket MARRlAuE.—Whatever faults Voltaire may have had, he certainly showed him- I self a man of sense when he said : "The more married men you have, the fewer crimes there will be. Marriage renders a man more virtuous and more wiser," An unmarried man is but half of a per fect being, and it requires the other half to make things right ; and it cannot be expected that in this imperfect state he can keep, , the straight path of rectitude any more than a boat with one oar, or a bird with one wing, can keep a straight course. In nine cases out often, where men becotne drunkards, or where they commit crimes against the peace of the community, the foundation of these acts was laid while in a single state, or where the wife is, as is sometimes the case, an unsuitable match. Marriage changes the whole current of a man's feelings, and gives him a centre for his thoughts, his affections, and his acts. Here is a home for the entire man, and the coun sel, the - affections, the example, and the interests of his "better half," keep him from erratic courses, and from falling into a thousand temPtations to which he would otherwise be exposed. There, ford the friend to marriage le a friend to. society and to his country. iss- Why is arress like a a pi 1 1 Sickft,? 4ecq estaht rant s.‘,._ VOL. XII.--NO. 43. Stuff far Smites A. Washington letter writer to a radi cal paper tells a droll story of the Pres ident, by which it would appear that the President was tieing shaved, the other day, when the barber accidentally tweaked his nose a little too hard. " Pardon me," said he, very naturally. " Put your hand in my coat pocket and pull out one," replied the kind hearted Chief Magistrate, " and I'll fill it out for you when you're done." A lady in the market, laying her hand upon a joint of veal, said, " I think this veal is not quite so white as usual." " Put on your gloves, madam," was the reply, "and you will think differently." Not bad for a butcher. It is needless to say that the veal was ordered home immediately. The question, does getting drank ad vance one's happiness, would seem to be put to rest by the Irishman who went courting when drunk, and was asked what pleasure he found in whiskey : "Oh, Nally, it's a trate entirely, to see two of your own swats party faces in stead of one 1" An editor says in a recent letter to a friend : "At present I am in the country recovering from fourteen years of edito. rial life, bad eyes, crooked back, and broken nerves, with little to show for it." Any one would think the three articles enumerated were quite enough to show for it. Judge Jeffries, When on the bench, told an old fellow with a long beard, that he supposed he had a conscience as long as his beard. "Does yourlordahlp," replied the old man, " measure consciett. ces by beards ? If so, your lordship has none at all." Billings says : " I never could End the meaning of the word 'collide' in Webster. But riding one day on the New York railway I saw it all. It was the attempt of two trains to pass each other on a single track. If I remember correctly, it was a shocking failure." There is a boy away down east who is accustomed to go eat on a railroad track and imitate the steam whistle so perfect. 1y as to deceive the officer at the station. Hie last attempt proved eminently sac. cement ; the depot master came oat aad 'switched" him off. Jenkins thus describes the hangings of a New York belle : "She wore an exquisite hyphalutin on her head, while her train was composed of transparent folderol, and her petticoat of Crambam. bnii flounced with Brusels three ply of A No. 1." A fashionable but ignorant young }ady desirous of purchasing a watch was shown a very beautiful one, the shop keeper remarking that it went thirty-six hours " What, in one day ?" A o editor heads his list of births, marriages and'deaths thus, " Hatched," " Matched," and " Dispatched." We remember another who headed them severally, " Visitors," " Boarders," and "'Travelers." "Well, Bridget, if I engage you, I shall wish you to stay at home whenever I shall want to go out." "Well, maam, I have no objection providin' you do the same when I wish to go oat." A wag says of a woman : "To her virtues, we give love; to her beauty, admiration ; and toter hoops, the whole pavement." A fashionable young lady may be said to resemble a prudent honaekeeper, be. cause her "waist." is as little as she can matt® it " I have the best wife in the world," said a long-suffering husband, "she al. ways strikes me with the soft old of the broom." Other goods may have declined, but the the in hoop-skirts on the streets st present is quite Startling. Why is the President a very poor cab inet maker? • Anc. Because, he botch ed the Freedmen's Bureau. A man who can be flattered is not necessarily a fool, but you can always make one of him. Tears are nature's lotions for the eyes. The byes ade better for being washed with them. -A gilt horse shoe is the-latest new frame for "carte de vieite "“poitraite. A dentist it stork at his venetian - imp looks dews is tea =nib. Manhood, a hat ; woonahood, a boa. flat T