BY FRED'.K.„:-14;:.50..ER. f"' aqudlg ' s el/at Oieu, s 4,. NO. 20 NCRTH QUEEPFHTWEirr, LANCASTER. PA.4 NVZ manufacture our own goodokno abling us to sell at OLD TIME PRICES. The largest, best and most complete stock, sod et lower prices than any Mule in the munel. Out immense stock of Spring. and. Summer Goods consists of all the noVeltsee of the sea m, at least fifty different styles fhe most pop ular of which are ' - gbes.per than can be had elsewhere. • Our business connection with our, patrons f or period of nearly 40 years, is a sufficient purontee of our ability to please all who lay AM us with a aall. SH ULTZ & BROTH BUS, No. 20 North queen -at., Lancast.r. cITOVES 1 1 STOVES! STOVES!! STO,MSIII COOK STOVES, eh , COOK STOVES, STOVES, AT /01/N SPANGLERIB.4T, PARLOR STO r PARLOR STOVES, PARLOR STOVER 3, OAS•BURN INO STQTrES AT JOHN SPANGLE - 10k. srorER,STOVES,—PTICAN trOrEs FOR KEA 77. , TWO OR POUR ROOMS vim. OBE 1112 N--FOURTH SUPPLY IV 0 W JitiVADY-•.CA LL N D SEE THEM AT J.Spangler's Hardware and Stove Store Market Street. Mariitta, Pa. 511 A, LINDSAY, ~ ,dOlOl XMANUFACTU AEA it DEALER IN BOOTS & SHOES, MARKET STREET, IVILRIET_T4, PENN Would most respectfully infortn=the Citizens of this Borough end neigh borhoodthat he has At Winne the largest assortment ,ssEClty made son ever offered in tbis Bornugh, amongst which may be named the new-style Boot, 20 alobe-W Baitnoralts. FOR THE LA.DrE6. - A. L. being a practical BOOT AND MOE URFA enables him to select.. with more pigment than those who are.not, peeont*.- Jes to manufacture in the Very beet manner everything in the BOOT AND SHOE line. which he wit/ warrant for neatness arid fit; rrCall and examine the new ohmic' before e I ie where. Cisia ptutist. a Atlee Boekitts. M. D. D.' D. • S., (\Mail hie cervices in either the.Opetatieei V Surgical or Mechanical D.ePartmoz!to of D EN TIwT it Y. Teeth extracted without pain, by the,.0.7 aihatration of the " Nitrite (Ixida Gas" or Ether. OpricEs : In Marietta every Thee= day and Friday, in the "St. Johratouse," - and Carnet of LaCl/Si and Second eta., ColunalbiL. Malian'', April 14, 18613.4itra K EROSENE & GAS STOVES. TES &COFFEF. BOILERS, GLUE-POTS On, CANS, SG. 447. MI the cooking for a family may he done with Kerosene Oil. or Gas, with less trouble and inlets expense an any other fuel. liselt article mu th mfactared by this Company it guaranteed to perform all that is claimed . fq it. IZP• Send for Circular. a Liberal Discount to the - Tr ade, ictitosioiE LAMP HEATER CO., 216 PEARL-ST., NEW-YORK. OM .tIIIIE BEST OF THE MONH TH E Lit n rarer o—devo T ted L to lES PASH -10; and LITERATURE. Beautiful Steel Eakraviliga. SPLENDID DOUBI.E-SIZED COL ,RED CARRION PLATER. The Latest patterns Dtesees, Cloaks, Bonnets, Embroidery &c., Household receipts,&c. Wheeler & URIC. R. Wilion's Sewing Machines given as minium'. tend 15 cents for a sample copy to DEACON k PE TERSON, 319 Wainlit-id., Philadelphia Dit. W. 51. B. FAHNESTOCK, OFFICE 1— --AIN-ST., NEARLY OPPOSITE Spangler & Patterson!s Store. OFFICEFP.OX 7 TO 8 A. X. nouns. 1 , ITo 2. " 6To 7 ,r. rt. --..._ I I iNIEL G. BAKEMI ATTORNEY AT LAW, LANCASTER, PA. OFFICE :—No. 24 NORTH DIME STREET "Polite the Court }louse, wheie he will at 'id to the practicef hi rofessionisrall it. v4tiouu branches. o P t A TTENTION ! SPORTSMEN! ! -EleY'd Gun Caps, Eley'e Gun Wadd4 ',LIMN Sporting and Glazed Duck Powder qiiimoto Shot; Shot Poucheo, Powder Flasks, uld st JOHN SPANGLER'S; ALARGE LOT OF DOPE WINDOW SHADES at remarkably low prices— claw OW JOHN' SPANGULR. ICQP OUT THE FLIES ! Cheap and or komotal dish covers of wire, at, JOHN 6.P. A NGLEWS. 11/LASS porcelainlined 'praiser vit.g kettles, cheap, at • JOHN. SPANGLER'S. SKIRTS.--Go to Airs. ROTH'S ad see them. ',ST Quality or Wines and Liquors for medicinal purposes, at D. Landis'. 8 °ME:I'IIINC NEW Patent clear; Poali tp hooka, no gum bands to renew, adapts itiY condition of the fi nauce, it JOHN SPANGLER'S. hinA CSOIC ctatdeTh - Leit tq---Tr----3pokis for children catied iltstru Pleseam Hooks ; &boo/ nod ;7/MOlle, Stationary, Peas, Pin ioidena ra. LA ND It'. Cti-1)1 ~.., :Li + Lt... t - ( , [ ,ar• t i l ia, 4 , 4 PUBLTSHSD WESKLYi• ' - AT ONE DOLLAR AND- A HALF 1 IEAR, :PA YABLEIN ADVANCE. Office in " LINDSAY'S . BUILDIND: second floor, on Elbow Lane, between the Post Offic,- Corner and Front-St., , Marietta, tlanceiter,Copnty, Pennsylvania. AtEvEaszszere RATr.rt: One sou . ..re (10 lininti of 1e50)75 cents for the fiiit insertion mid One Dollar and-a-half:fort insertions. i'ro tessional and Business muds, of six lines or less at IS per aanum. Notices in the reading col- . unms, ten ceitis it4ine. Marriages and Deaths, theinaPitiantlouncettlenl;-Yaxx ; butter any additional lines, ten cents& line. A liberal deduction made to yearly e nd half yearly 'advertisers. Having just added a " NEWBURY Mourn- ` TA= Joarma Passe," together with a large assortment of new Job and Card type, Cuts, Border., &c., &c., to the Job Office of " THE Manticrrsen," which will insure the f ne and speedy execution of all kinds of Jos & CARD Par KT r no, from the smallest Card to the shnoxsr Posrxn, at reasonable prices. .ISlanker. A whisper wolte the air— A soft light tone and low, Vet barbed with shame and woe; Now ; Right it only perish there Nor farther go, Ab, me 1 a quick and eager ear a Caught up the little meaning Sound ! Another voice has breathed it clear, And so it - wanders round From ear,to lip—from lip to ear, Until it reached a gentle heart, And t/utt—it . broke. /twits the oniy,heartitfound, -The only - heart 'terns meant to- find ? When,fitat its Recent% woke; It reached that tender heart at.last, And th it it broke. Low as it seemed to other ears, itcaine a thunder•erash to , hers— That fragile girl so lair and gay— Thai guileless girl Impure and true 'Tie said a lovely lamming bird, - That in a fragrant lily lay,. And dreamed tbe summer morn away, Was killed by the gun's report, . Some idle boy hal fired in sport ! The very sound—a death blow came ! And thus her happy heart, that ,beat With love and hope , solast and sweet, When first that word, Her light heart heard, 4 fluttered like ,the frightened bird, Then shut its wing and sighed, And with a silent .shudder—dier Vsatimas. or BAD . Miran.— Bad temper ia °rimier the , result of unhappy circumstances than• of an - unhappy or. pulsation. It frequently, however, has a ptiysical cause, and a peevish child'of ten needs dieting more than correcting., A child of aCtivitemperaMeni, sensitive feeling, and gager purpese,,is more ly to meet with constant labs and rubs' than a dull, passive Child ; and, - if he has an open nature, , his inward irritation is shown in bursts of passion. If you re press these ebulitions by scolding and punishment, you only increase tbe evil by changing passion into sulkiness. A cheerful, good tempered tone, a sympa thy with his trouble, which has arisen from no ill conduct on his part, are the best antidotes. Never -fear spoiling children by making them- too hippy. Happiness is the atmosphere in which all good affections grow. - ' stir Sir H. Havelock had bad con ductioual service in company with his household, among whom was an Irish servant girl. She was melted to tears by the fervency and unction of his_ pray ers, and as she arose from her knees addressed him with much emotion "Oh, miether dear, you're•not lit for a soldier. It's too tender hearted you ale. Sure you was born a praist, and a praist it is you ought to be." Wien=the=flies set on the ceiling as they -usually. do at night, reduce the light in the room so you can just see them, and take a tumbler or wider oPen vassal; two-thirds full:of warm soap sudo and place it quickly over each'group of flies, when they 101 fall into. the suds., ar The President was fashionable at least, when he received the despatch announcing the entrance of the Mesita ; chusetta and South Carolina delegates into the Philadelphia Convention, for, according to his own statement, he played a large waterfall. or The following new version of a Soriptere passage is recommended; fpi the use of Southern Christians : ".Let the little white children come unto me, for of snob is the kingdom of beavenr."r "1 do - not say that man will steal'," said a witness on•trial, A' bat if I Wag algid* - IV - tooit. bigb when he wats altact atut Vermiglbania lota faux Niue Circle. MARIETTA, PA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1866. "If 8 AN ILL WIND. TEAT BLOWS No -1101)Y GOOD.-71 called and !pent a night with an old acquaintance that I had not seen for many years. He was sexton, and dal I grit y fis foi those Wh diedodied in the village' It Was a seaport; and the Widest SAO' niwiy - friend' was a sailmaker, while the youngest son kePt a small bar ness shop; mainly fai the purpose'of Bo , ' commodating_a few farinera WhO traded at the; village.-- In,:the course: of the evening,7l inquired how , the world bad need myacquaintance, and whether he managed to make the two ends meet. , "It's hard work," be said.; " the 'yard' has been doingwothing almost all sum mer. I neverknew a, healthier, season. It Would seem as if no more Were ,going to die. But then," he added, "we nib along in hopes of better times," The eailmaker remarked, "All kinds of busi ness is dull ; I have not had much more than half work-for a mouth, bat I'm in hopes the heavy blow of the last two or three days will send-in a few torn sails."' Just at this the harness maker came in and told hia father that fanner Stubh's horse had run away and smash ed the harness all to pieces. "That's a job for you, said the old man with something like glee and , added, " Have you heard whether Squire Anderson, is likely to live 1" "It is thought," re plied the son; "that'he' will not be able to recover." " Well," said the father, " I liiippoice we limit all die sometime " ; The squire h - tis : gat a nice burial lot; only it's a little hard` digging; but his folks Won't= mind payingw, littler extra! , I only stated one family. leleft by-the first train. in the morning, deeply impressed with the sen timent of the old saw, "It's an ill wind." etc.---7'he Tramp. MARRYING FOR SilOW.—ln the follow ing we find displayed a•volume 'of honest and wholesome good sense. "Put apin here," good swains and lovers. " To. the question . often asked of young men why they do not marry, .we sometimes hear the reply, I am not able to support a wife.' In one case in three, perhaps, this may be so ; but, as a general thing, the true reply would be, ' I am not able to support the style in which I think my wife ought to live.' In this again we see a false view of mar riage, a looking, to an appearanCe in the world, instead of a union with a loving woman for her own sake. " There are very few men, of industri ous habits, who cannot maintain a wife, if they are willing . to live economically, and without reference to the iTinion . of the world. The great evil is, they are . not content to begin life humbly, to re tire,together into an obscure position, and together work their way in •the wcirld—he by industry in hie calling; and she by dispensing with prudence the' money that he earns. But they must stand ont . and Attract the attention of others by fine houses -and fine clothes." IN LOVE WITH THE PARSON.—The Lon don Court. Journal tells us the following pretty love story , : - "A scene lately took place, at the .house of Colonel and Lady —, in the north. The daughter, a very lovely girl, fell in love with the tu tor, a Presbyterian clergyman, and so far forgot herself as to make known to him her attachment. In honor bound, and to r the credit of the Scotch clergy be - it spoken; he reasoned with her, and then, finding argninent of no avail, went to her-father and _begged for his :imme diate disnresal.: The Colonel was as tounded, but when upon inquiry the truth transpired, he was so struck with the young man's deep sense of honor that ha told him he would give him an opportunity of going to Oxford and tak ing• Orders, and that-upon 'entering the Englikh Church he would not only give him &living, but his-daughter also. We understand both parties are, very happy under so kind.andsensibla an arrange ment." The following le the only trace we bore left of. the Parnassian light of a young gentleman in the. country. Verse : "Jane lookt at me so swede, I locikt at Jane, and we both felt considerably nonpluss ed ; we was both happy liough to go-insane, and we eat there for a short time and bussed." " Mike," said a bricklayer to his hod. 1610, " ' if you meet Patrick, tell him to make haste, as we aie waiting te'r him." " Suitt sod roped Mike "hat what will I tell him if I don't-mitt4iih tm ' . . "'T - atitet,"' nevi* doiniod tjiiii4Kor raker? as acre of Verse for ihe Cooks. "We may live without friends, May live, without books : But civilized man e cannot live without cooks. -. He-may live without books—what ie knowledge toot grieving? He may livdFithput hope—what is hope but decojving Y - He may fivi without love—what is pas• sion but pining;? But where is the man that can live,w4h out dining ?" HOME eonwresins.--lii the family-the law of pleasing ought to extend from the highest unto-the lonest. You - are' bound to please "yotir children'; and your children are bound to -please each other;, and you are bound to Weep your servants if yon expect- them to please YOU. Some men are pleasant in the household, and nowhere else. I have known such men. They were good fath ers and kind husbands. If yon had seen them in their own house you would have thought that they were angels almost; but if you had seen them in the street, or in the store, or anywhere else outside the house, you would have thought them almost demoniac. Bat the opposite is apt to be the case. When we are among our neighbors, or among strang ers, we hold ourselves, with eeltrespect and endeavor to act with propriety,; but when we get home we say to ourselves, "-I have played 'a part long enough, and am now going 6' be natural:" So we dowii,-and are , ugly, and snappish, and blunt, and disagreeable. We lay aside those thousand little courtesies that makes "therOnghest floor smooth, - that makes the hardest thing like velvet,- and that make - life pleasant. We ex pend all our •politeness in . placer where it.will be profitable—where it will bring silver or gold: - ' A PratPam Wira.--Shels handsome, but it is not a beauty arising from the features, from complexion or from shape. She has all three in a high degree, but' it is not by these. that she touches the heart--it is all that sweetness of. temper, benevolence, innocence ; it is all that sensibility which a face can express, that forms her beauty. She has a face that just arouses your attention at first sight ; it'grows upon you every moment, and you wonder it did not more than raise attention. at first; Her eyes have a mild but they awe when she pleases; They command like good man ont of office, not by, authority,. but by virtue. Her statue is not tall; ehe is not made, to, an , admiration of every one. She has the firmness that does'hot exclude deli cacy,--ail the softness ; that does not im ply weakness. Her voice is eat, low music,-not formed to rule in public as semblies, but to chardi those who dis tinguish a company from a crowd ; it has its advantage, you must "come close to hear it. To describe' her body, de scribe her miod—one is the transcript of the other. Her understailding is shown in the variety of matters it exerts itself upon, but the goOdoess or her choice she makes. ger politeness flows rather from natural disposition to Oblige, than.any rules on that subject, and there fore never fails to strike those who un demand good breeding ; and those who do not.--Edinund Burke. A WOMAN'S MASK.- W hat a mask the unhappy wife is forced for prudence and self'respect to wear over that poor tear bedewed face of hers t If she does not wear it, and-if she lets the tears fall downin the sight dell, burning plough shares will not be too hot for her feet to walk on, nod she Must carry live coals from the world's altar, though they scorch her trembling fingers to the bone. Full of sympatbyse the world is for her sorrows if only delicately indicated— lifting a corner of the veil daintily—it has neither syinpathy nor respect if broadly shown and rung into its ears through - a six foot speaking trumpet. - • The mask of tbe ill mated sponse, male or female, must be of peculiar manufac ture and most careful manipulation; the kind most usually adopted, because most generally approved of, being one em bodying a, gentle patience, a plaintive manner of martyrdom--Saint Cecilia exhaling Her soul-in mournful music, Saint Sebasiiinlying' speechless under the oriel arrows piercing his heart. 4,pugt,, : enddealy raised to , fortune is like one that for the liest.time•ascends a tower ; his:head - turns; and — those he Sees belivir4Opear like SO many; dwarfs, intrignigaNUNWl: There 111811081r.uv.ageT Tevidatio 1 1 414-46ibi phirii - % 1 Ada;ee' ' rein Xnowfziothing. They have etners-children in a certain part , of Vermont. A schoolmistress of tbe Green Mountain State.. relates the following example. of a boy's • A large, overgrown, ~,boy came to school nue,morning, and I inquired, of him , • *Can yon read ?' 'Doi:llia:ow, was the reply. 4 0,an't you spelLemy.words 'Don't know. 'Do yob- know the , alphabet ' 'Try this word. " 'What does that spell?' 'Don't know.' 'What do you ride on at home?' 'Try this word. 434- 'What does that spell ?' 'Don't knoW.' 'What do you eat at home r 'try this word.' 'l3-e4f— 'Well, what does that spell?' 'Don't know?' 'What do you sleep on at night?' 'Sheepskins.' I sent him to his seat, after this trial,, and took a rest. UM/R= 4 M DEADLY WEAPONS.--Thero seems to be a constaptly Increasing hab it of carrying , concealed deadly weapons by our, young men. It is a. practice that leads to more disturbances and more riot. ing than all other causes combined. Every day as Ave pick up the papers, we" read of the constant use_of Sre arms and. knives. There is no necessity in a well governed,community. for, any one catty ing weapons, and when it is.'.done it is generally for the very.purpose of getting into a difficulty.. It takes very little to , induce a man to quarrel, when be has means ordefedly 'offense on his person, and there are many excitable young men who, in a moment of passion would not hesitate to use them. A. VEGETABLE MoNwrza.—There is an old elm at Stratford, Connecticut, the trunk of- which, two feet from the ground measures twenty-one feet•. in circumfer ence. Ten feet higher. - it is still larger, and two of its branchea•are each seven to nine feet in circumference. The branches and foliage at noon day cast a shidoW that covers over a stilarter or an acre. The tree is said to be about two hundred and eighty years old. . ar One day during the hard winter of 1863, a Miss Arnold applied to General Milroy, then in command at Winches ter, for a permit-to forage for her cow, whose milk was the chief support of the. family. "Are you loyal ? " asked the general, " Yes," she replied. He began to write the permit—td the United States or the Confederete States ?-" "To the Oonfedeiacy, of course." "Thetri Mien give you no permit ; this infamous re bellion must be put down." " Well," said she, "if You . can - put it down by 5 starving Jelin Arnold's cow, why go it' or The Erie Dispatch- gets off the following catechism; - revised and correc ted: Q. Who was the Brat man? A Andrew . Johnson. " Q. How many are "there of him ? A. Threo. , Q. Gan you - name them ? A. I, me, and my policy. Q. What agents are employed in mak ing known his pill to man I A. Treasury agents. Q. Do yon believe in the existence of my. policy, ? A..1•d0. Q. Upon what grounds do you base your belief ? A. New Orleans Angle! grounds. Eight. The class , may take their seats with' the elect. gar A young lady_says the reason she carries a parasol is, quit the BUU is of the masculine. gender, and she cannot withstand hie ardent glance. What ii the hat way to keep e a gentleman'eraffeetione ? Not to return them. The politician who said that his mouth never uttered a lie, probably spoke tbroughliiixioae. " hiyffloni hohlitp 7.ourhendwell tell .me who,wewtheAltzonge4Ann r "Jonah." - • - • • "Why tor "t(inse'the"couldn't hold 'Vlgq gisClihe ditiP:ll VOL. XIII.-NO. 7. The Political Sovereigns The sovereignty of nations, exists In three distinct forme, which may be rles ignated as the Despotic, the Conetitu tional monarchy, and the Republican. Urider 'the first system the supreme power is vested in but one person, in the second there exists in conjunction with the crowned head, a governing class, and in the third and only true and equitable form of government, the sove reignty abides with the multitude. Un der the despotic) rale, the monarch is alone responsible for the existence of laws that deprave and degrade the na tion. In limited monarchies the govern ing crass, that make and unmake the laws, are wholly chargeable with the enactments that either oppress the merm en or that - superiudnce habits of social indulgence, by which a condition of moral turpitude is engendered that smetheriall aspirations towards an in tellectual manhood. Both of these types ofgevernment shackle the highestadorn meat of human nature, the right of self government., and degrade mankind into the mere subject whose permission to live is derived from the mercy of tyranny. Nationalities thus organized, in exclud ing the majority from all voice in the making of laws, withold from them all responsibility, for the existence of stat utes, ihat tolerate licentiousness in their midst, meet' as they may deplore the prevalence of vice and crime that arises from legal enactments, their only possi ble redress is through supplication to the power that derives its greatest strength, from the very sources of cor ruption, that develops the lower facul ties at the sacrifice of the higher, and make man, through his grossness and ignoradcri, a more abject vassal. Bat under the third and highest form of national existence, man emerges from the'condition Of a subject, and assumes the nobler attitude of the citizen. The peer ofhis fellowmen, the political sove reign in whom- is vested both the power and the,duty of creating laws for the governing of the nation. In this oapac ity he possesses an Elective choice, be tween good and evil, right and wrong, and this right being vouchsafed to every individual sovereign, each one is respon sible, accordingly, for the manner in which that freeman's prerogative is ex ercised. It is the ditty of every citizen to wield hie jai:fiance by voice and by ballot' favorable to the enactment of laws that will tend to remove existing evils by the suppression of every source of crime; no one, who deserves the name of a freeman, could quietly behold hie neighbor's property or life jeopardized by the incendiary or the assess* nor can any man perform hie whole duty to ward his country, so long as he contin "nes a silent witness of the legalized misery and sorrow, that the Liquor Li cense system is producing in every com munity. An-eternal night is fast over shadowing the false and fatal idea that liquors are useful to the human system, and the bar, shorn of this opinion, stands forth as a corroding blight upon oar countries' escutcheon, demanding of all men to utter forth their condemnation of this law sustained system of leading mankind-from-the domestic comforts of home ; and, habits of frugality and indus try, down through the dubious pathways of every crime, to the sad terminus of a shameful death, the vast multitude that hourly crowd onward toward the drunk ard's goal, appeal to you through every linearnent of approaching depravity that is engraves upon their c ountenances, to save them ere they perish; and shall our lips be sealed, and our tongues be silent while the Husband and Father's earn ings are- expended for fiery libations, that-cauterize his affections and obliter ate his humanity, and rear upon the ruins of all that is virtuous and good, a &end incarnate to prey upon his household— to create while yet living a widowhood and orphanage most painful to contain plate.:--to strike down with the ferocity of a demon the wife whom he bad cov enanted to love and protect, and to de prive of necessary sustenance his own offspring and exhibit thereby an unnat uralness that the lowest brute instinct abhors. The hecatombs of human sui cides, that tower higher through each secceeding year, appeal to you through every sense of humanity to stay the de stroyer's ravages, and why should th e warnings of the dead and the righteous demands of the living pass unheeded. The power is within your grasp, seize it, wield it aright by using the same agent that now sustains the system, to banish it foreverjnetruct those to whom you have delegatid the law enacting• power to repeal all laws that foster the degrad ing usage. !and enact others that will shiebl society effectually from the drink— inglitabitiread tintil - we shall have labor erLardeptly, and faithfully for the consu ,matiod. of that beneficent object, we ;shall resheAn_unviorthg of the Sovereign ipieleetee#l, "Mak wirsre insisted. B. !.zi.