FRED'K L. BAKER. 13RIVTON & MUSSER'S i t fRM LY DRUG STORE. .Market Stre,t, Marietta, Pa. - - 13BITToNiti Mr.ESEII, successors to Dr. F. , e , will eonuoUe the business at the old it ' where they are daily receiving additions, block, which are received from the trouble iMporters and manufacturers. " I •could respectfully ask a liberal share paironage. re How prepared to supply the de ie!, ihe public with everything in their yi trade. [heir titOCk of fiftl2GS AND MEDICINES ,i 55,11 a Su PVILE, HAVING JUST, ARpIVED. IA pines iquors for mediernal uses ;,.1. TMc POPIAAri PATENT MEDICINES. all kinds, Fancy and Toilet Ar• ever) kind, Alcoholic and Fluid Alealuid and Rustnoida, all i.ii: test Trusses, Abdominal Sup port, rs,shouider Braces, Breast Pumps, Nipple Shells and Nursing Bottles, A large supply of r a, T(I.,,TH, NAIL AND CLO 1 HES BRUSHES. p arid Pastes, Oils, Puriumery, Bair Dyes, Invigorators, Sze. ; i,r.i.l.kiiips,rhades. Chimneys, W-ick,stc, :upplied st reasons le rates. P.eseripti ,ns cart fully and sc• all hours of the day and t, rles H. Britton, Pharmaceutist, s , , , .0 especial attention to this branch . having had over tin years s ieuce 111 the drug business con . ,tistaiitee entire satistaction to all , ..rniize the new firm. of School Books, Stationary, ic.. always un hand. r,UNDAY Hull RS: ..11!:, 10.11 /11 ,—I2 to 2, and 5 to 6 p. m. ifriffiPi. A. 1u o:tuDer 20, 18q6. 11-tf PHOTOC+RAPHIC It. T. ANTtioNv & co., .‘.:4 , ,jarturerß of Photographic. Materials, tulip, ESAU: Al4l RETAIL, n'l NW A 1) W AY, N. Y. n to our Main business of PHOTO ATERI ALS we are Headquar following, viz. ERELveoP EN 8; STEREOSCOPIC V .1: S lm r^an p.. 1 Foreign cities and Land s, Statuary. ete. ‘.,. EON , OPIC VIE WS' OF THE WAR, xtive. loads in the various cam Photograptic • a.zieht coutest. f',J,copic 1 ,- .[Ens (".V GLASS :lother the , lag Le Lantern or the ,c. Our estalo. no will be oilit to :I,tt , ‘ , ri receipt of stamp. I'HoiNGU iPtitC ALBUMS. It ore largely than any üb.ut 200 varieties from 50 cents Our A Ltili MS have the reputa r supeijut in beauty and. duiabili lopt, • Nlt - crir;FiANIS OF GENERALS, 47 ACTORS, e c etc. . ,forr a c e s over PINE THOU 'e,;II subjects ine , thru.g reproduc • ; 1110 t ceieterhted Etignivings. .• ‘•• :OW'S, etc. Untalogue3 scut on s' rs and others ordiring goods C. I please remit 25 per cent. of the their miler. r, ;me° quality of our goods eau , iNES LiQuoas. 411. D. 13 1.1 'JA MIN, DEAI EH IN \V N & _LIQUORS, , :zer of Front-st., and Elbow Lane, MA liIETTA, PA. AGS leave to inform the public that lit ikl , cuiltirtue the WINE Sr. LIQUOR bug. al: Ito branches. He will coustantl) .i; all kinds of tirliPS, Wines, Gins. Irish and Scotch Wl4l.,key, ('erdials. Bitters, to.. I3ENJAM IN'S Alt'y Celebrated Rose Whisky, ALWAYS ON HAND. A very anterior OLD RYE WHISKEY. reepwed, which is warranted pure. D. B. now asks of the pubic . .c , ir4.ful examination of his stock and pri t` a'ldeti will, he is confident, result in Ho. -“.,per b ono others finding it to their ad to make their purchases from him. BEST Or THE MONTHLIES- 1 LADY'S FRlEND—devoted to FA.SW. 'N ah.l LIT I.; It URE. Beautiful Steel L'''.l,o. SPLENDID DOUBLE-SUED .COL- I billoS PLATES. The Latest patterns Ci 041.8, Bonnets, Einbroidcry, &c., receipts, Music, &c. Wheeler & :IQ:1:C, sewing Machines given as premiums. Cents fora sample copy to DEACON "L E fEitmili, 319 Walnut-st., Philadelphia OIL J. Z. HOFFER, DkNTIST, T BALTIIroRE COLLEDE OF DI.:NTAL SURGERY, ',VIT. OF FIARRISBIII tt I. )FP I ck:—Frout street, next door to R o ,Y , litoroe' Drug Store, between Looms liiinut streets. Columbia. O A• WSI. B. FAHNKSTOCK; NEA aI.Y OPPOSITE gpaogler ec Pattereon'e Store. Orr FROM 7 TO' 8 A. M• OFFICE HOURS. 1 TO 2. " 6To 7 tr. et. ANIEL G. BAKER, ATTORNEY AT LAW, LANCASTER. PA. 1 4,1 h.„ 24 NORTH DUPE STREE T 11 e the Court House, where he at. the in practice of hie professionall Its 44cno branches. isle of LANDIS is the sole agent forthe MISH LAWS BITTRICS, in the °u gh 0 1 Marietta. For sale at the _ LDEN MORTAR OGAL HODS, Coal Selves Coal Shovels Ik kers, Stove Grates, Cylinders -andli glof thllereat kinds, kept on hand at JOHN SPANGLER'S. (1,9v8 ceienrated Pearl Cement APO cal Peale Illagking at " TUE GOLDAN - MOM& - .•4J.t.......-.1 .- .11 - .1:.ar . i...f.i...ait . .. PUBLISHED WEEKLY, AT ONE DOLLAR AND A HALF A YEAR, PA YABLE IN ADVANCE Office in LINDSAY'S BUILDING," second floor, on Elbow Lane, between the Pos , Oijic, Corner and Front-St., Marietta Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. Arivramrszsa RATES: One squ ire (10 lines, or leas) 75 cents for the first insertion and One Dollar and-a-half for 3 insertions. Pro fessional and BuSincss caids,uf six !ince or less at $5 per alinum. Notices in the reading col umns, ten cents a-line. Marriages and Deaths, the simple announcement, FREE ; but lor any additional lines, ten cents a line. A liberal deduction made to yearly e nd hal yearly , advertisers. Having just added a " NEW BURY MOUN TAIN JOBBER PRESS," together with a large assortment of new Job and Card type, Cuts, Borders, &c., &c., to the Job Office of " Tur E MARiETTIAN," which will insure the t ue and speedy execution of all kinds of JOB tk CARD PRINTING, from the smallest Card to the LARGEST POSTER, at reasonable prices On the death of our schoolmate,' How ard Sul(zbach who died, October 11th. 1866. Once more the,angel of death has And entered our happv band ; _lnd Howard haegorke from, our number home We trust to that better land. We - :little dreamed wh e n two weeks ago, As he stood up here to speak, That so 80011 the stamp atioata would be Upon, that rosy cheek. Yes, Howard is gone, no more we'll see That bright and happy smile, Which wreathed around his lips, while he Hie playtime hours beguiled. , . Dear schoolmates, let us trust in God, Who has taken Howard home; And say with faithful, earnest heaqs, Thy will—not 011 Id—be done. i. E. a A Traveler's Experience of Woman I have otmetved, among all nations, that the women ornament themselves more than the men ; that wherever found they are the same kind, civil, oblig ing humane, tender beings ; that they are ever inclined to be gay and cheerful timorous and modest. They do not hesitate like men, to perform a hospita ble.action ; not haughty, nor arrogant, nor superciltous, but full of courtesy, fund of society ; itiduitrious, economical, ingenious ; more liable in general to err than man, but in general also more vir tuous, tind performing more good actions than be. I never e addressed myself in the language of decency and friendship to a woman, whether civilized or savage without receiving a decent and friendly answer. With a man it has been othe:r wise. In wandering over the barren plains of inhospitable Denmark, through honest Sweden, frozen Lapland, rude and churlish Fluland, unprincipled .Rus sia, and the wide spread regieus of the wandering Tartar, if hungry, dry, cold, wet or sick, woman has ever been friend ly to me, and uniformly so ; and to add to this virtue, so worthy of the appella. I tkon of benevolence, these actions have been performed in so free and so kind a manner, that, tf I was dry, I drank the sweetest draught, and if hungry, ate the coarsest morsel with a double relish. CAUSES of SUDDEN DEATH.—Very few of the sudden deaths said to arise from `heart diseases really arise from that collie. TO ascertain the origin of sud den deitths, an experiment was tried in Europe, _•and reported to a scientific congress held in Strasburg. Sixty-six cases of sudden death were made the subject of a thorough post.MOrtem ex aniination ;in these cases only - two were found who , died from heart disease. Nine of sixty six died from apoplexy, forty-six cases of congestion of the lungs —that is, the longs were so full of blood they could not work, for want of-suffi cient air -to support life. The causes that produce congestion of the lungs are —cold feet, tight clothing, costive bow els, sitting still until chilled after being warmed by labor or a rapid walk, going too suddenly from a close heated . .roam into the cold air,.especially after speak ing, and sudden depressing news epees ting upon-the blood. These causes •of sudden death being known, an avOidance of' them may serve to lengthen many valuable lives, which would otherN i jse be lost, under the verdict, heart Complaint. That disease is supposed to be inevitable and incurable; hence . many may not take the pains they would to avoid sudden dee.th,did they.keow it lay in their pow- "The eoitor of a newspapar.paya -that ,he , natrer dottad,an' but once in : his life,and.that man 4n a figba .stabs too " • - I,tt ar6tptithut VonsDitrania * . itrnal for te :tome (firth. MARIETTA,• PA., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1866. The Destruction Caused by Alcohol. On Sunday, the 14th of aatober, at 4 o'clock in the morning, a fire broke out in the city of Quebec, which raged till 5 o'clock in the afternoon, burning ten thousand five hundred houses and ren dering homeless eighteen thousand per sons. This is a terrible calamity con sidered simply as the destruction of so much property, and necessitating so much inconvenience, in family life. But there are things beeides property and inconvenience, valuable in other ways than in a money value. Home is a sa cred •place ; houses you can rebuild when they are burnt. but there associations connected with homes which can never be rebuilded. Doubtless many at that fire as they saw the flames.consuming their homes felt that in the burning up of them there perished many associations many relics, many nameless little tokens, not valuable to any one, nor having any money value at all, bat having _ a love value, having an interest for the heart the, loss of which nothing could compen sate for. Then, too, how many hopes died in that tire. No one knows but the poor man himself, how he has toiled for a house, how he has longed to have a place which be could call his own. lie has paid fur it by saving the earnings of years. He expects that he will have it fur life. At once it is swept from him. His cherished expectations are wiped, out in an hour. No longer has he his own house and home. Once again he is under the will of another tor a shelter for the heads of his dear ones and himself. 'We can easily state how many houses have been nurnt, and how many persons homeless ; but no one can qate .how many, happy, holy associations ave been destroyed, how many expec tations blasted, how many anxieties en• gendered. These are as truly a part, of the calamity as the loss - of the property, and no estimate of the occurrence is complete which does not take in one as well as the other, which does not gage the misery caused to human hearts as well as number the buildings destroyed. This great calamity was caused by al cohol. The fire broke out in a groggery. On Saturday night a number of low char acters had• congregated there, keeping up a drunken Carousal till far in the morning. The fire broke out in the bar room, the games being first seen issuing from the bar room door. Now the fact that this awful destruc tion broke out in a ber room, the fact that liquor was at the bottom of it all, fails to excite in most persons' that in dignation which would be excited if any other cause were known to have pro duced this fire. Let us suppose some one to hive de liberately done this destruction; sup pose him to have taken months, even years, to study how to burn down the city, to have laid up all the incendiary materials, andon favorable occasions to have distributed them so that the fire would be helped, on from point to point, let us suppose him to exult in the rain his work would do, in the anxiety it would cause ; then let us suppose him to . , have succeeded, and at the close of the catastrophe let us suppose him to be de tected, and held up to the presence of I all whom he had injured. How would they regard him ? Would they allow him to live among them ? Would they al low him to live at all ? And yet liquor has •done this. Liquor has burnt down a,great part of this city. If liquor did not plan to do the work it did it without any concern whatever. What do tav erns care for property or life ? Are they not quick-sands which swallow up every thing? Yet taverns will be tolerated in that very city. When it is built up again, taverns also will be built, and al though groggeries may burn down 2500 houses, if any one were to burn down one tavern he would be imprisoned for years. The truth is there is too much liberty for wrong, and not enough for right, if groggeries may burn down cities, one may well ask why should groggeries, be tolerated ? It is time to start the sentiment that groggeries have no right which any one is boupd to re spect. That which destroys should be destroyed. Let it be remembered that it was a bar room whicki.destroyed _2500 bowies and rendered homeless 18,000 persons. 'SOBRIETY. a".Ailemus Ward says there are no doily papers published in his town, but there-ie. o ladies'- sewing circle, which answers the same purpose. ifir . "A traveller" wishes as to ex plain what sense , there , is host°Uow-in the terms mrsilroadseeurcties," 10444 , 660 t iv. se security ots *sty cif4,lh4v railroads, Love on the Brain. The sprightly " local " of the Atlanta ( Ga.,) Fix thus discourses on this sub ject. We omit the exordium and pero ration, and give only the`body of the dissertation t . • Ordinarily, the patient, white labor ing under this disease, is unfit for busi ness. There is a sort cf a will-o'-the wisp figure actneing befoie his distorted vision, coming between him and his daily labor, unfitting him for a sober computation of units and tens, and mak ing a Balsam of him ,generally. lie suffers a lose of 'Appetite—to the intense gratification of his landlady. He looks upon bacon and greens with ultra con tempt, and wants something more ethere al. He thinks about toe honey dew of Ilyble, and wishes -some of -the drug stores in town had a supply. He studies Byron and Moore, and quotes from each with remarkable facility. Lelia Rookh becomes a favorite, especially a certain portion of the fire worshippers. The disease is confined to no particu lar age or station. We had, au attack of it when about fifteen. It was so se vere that our mother wanted to giVe us paregoric. We told hdr the pain wasn't that low down. We recovered in course of time. Once it broke out fully in the shape of a certain question to a , certain lady. She answered in a monosyllable .of two letters. It brought. us• to our senses: It swept the mist from our eyes like fog before a hurricane. We hadn't expected anything of the kind, and was sure it had thundered. We looked for the cloud, and Asaw a large white bird sailing on a pond. Thought we were much the same kind of a bird, with our wings.clipped. A few days after we told our chum that we didn't see any thing in that flaunting Dorothy Diddle to admire. And we didn't. The disease develops most singularly in those who are advanced in years. Any one who has seen an old man in love has seen Nature's harlequin. The old dame gets up nothing more ludic rous or more inconsistent. Every oue feels like laughing at the poor old fel low's infirmities. We once saw an old man who was suffering from an attack of it. He was well enough advanced, in life to have half a dozen grandchildren. We knew him, well. He was the play mate of our illustrious grandsire, who wasn't a quartermaster in the Revolu tionary war. I' he had been, we would have been better off than we are now. We had noticed for some time a singu larity in hia conduct. We saw him several times with roses stuck in his button lola. We caught him once reading Barns' Highland' Mary. We were out 'with him once looking at his stock, arid we asked him which was his favorite heifer. He said "widow 'Wilk ine." The cat was.out. We knew what was the matter; but when, several months after, we saw him washing the dishes_while the widow--that was—nurs ed the baby, we thought he was cured permanently. A CHILD'S 51 EMORY.-" Well, my child," said a stern, father to ft 'little daughter, after church, "what do you remember of all the preacher said ?" "Nothing, sir," was the timid'reply. " Nothing !" said he severely ; " now remember, the next time you must tell me something he says, or you .must stay away from church." • The next Sunday she came home r her eyes all excitement; " I remember,some tbing,",eaid she. "Ah I very glad of it," replied the father.; "what did he say " He said, pa," cried she, delightedly, "a collection will now be taken up !'` A fa Old Rev. Mr. R., was one day at tending the funeral•of one of the mem bers of his church when after praising the many virtues of the deceased, he turned, to the bereaved husband: and said " My beloved brother, you have been called upon to part with one of the best and lovelieat of wives "-- Up jumped the . sorrow stricken• hes : band, intermpting the tearful minister by sariowfully saying : "0, no \ l brother 8.,.n0t' the best, but abeont middling-- abeditt middling, brother B," 6.A railway accident lately ,occorred pained by.the axle .of a tender giying way, detaining the treiu _several,yours. A lady inquired of a gentlem,an . pausen, ger why it was so delayed; he gravely replied, "Madam, occasioned by what is often folloWhil . bY,werions conse -Apiebom—itbe•sadden breakiDg , of , s: ten later‘attelobmant." - • • - • - Afraid he might be Dead, Scene—at the 'couutiug room of a morning newspaper. Enter a man . of Teutonic tendencie4, considerably the worse for last night's spree. TEUTON (to the man at'the desk)—"lf you blease, sir, I vents de paper mit dis `mornings. One vot bash de names of de beebles vot kills cholera all de vile." He was handed a paper and after looking it over in a confused way, said : " Pill you - pe so good ash to read de names wot don't have de cholera any more too soon just now, and see if Carl Geinsenkoopenoffen hash got'em 7" The clerk 'very obligingly read the list, the Teuton listening with trembling attention, wiping the perspiration from his brow meanwhile in groat•eacitement. When the list was completed the name of Carl Geiusen—well, no matter zoout the .whole name, it wasn't there. The Teuton's face brightened up, arid he ex claimed Y u don't find 'em '1" CLERK-"NO such name there, sir." TEUTON, (seizing him warmly by the band)—"This -ish nice—this ish some funs; that ish my names. I pin drunk ash never vas, and, py tam, I vas afraid I vas gone ted mit cholera, and didn't knows it. Mine Cot! I vas scart." DRUNK AS TO TUB LEGS.—Robert Wilson was before Justice Milliken, of .13hicago,, last week, charged with intox ication. He plead "halfguilty," stating that he could drink a good deal and be perfectly sensible. His head always re mained clear, but his knees went off too freely, and he became drunk below his hips. The officer fonnd him on a doer step, at an 'early hour in the morning. Leaning back a little he was striking at his legs, and wAs abuiing them in the fiercest manner for ,their base and con temptible conduct. have lived with you for nearly thirty years. 1 have fed and clothed-you; Thavegot you good and nice pantaloons and comfortable drawers. And now, •at-this hour of ~.the nigiit, when it is wet, and I want you to go home; you go back on me, and leave me in this place. Now, aren't you ashamed of yourselves r --a pretty pair that you are ?-.From this time on I'm going to treat you differently. Iholiave I'll begin now, confound you—you shall have a wetting." With that he began to take off his pantaloons, but the scan dalized officer arrested him. He was fined $3 and departed, Murmuring ven geance against his eitremities. HOW TO BECOME UNHAPPY. —ICI the first place, if you want to be miserable, be selfish. •Think all of the time of your.own things. Don't care about any body else. Have , no feeling.for.any. 0410 but yourself. Never think of enjoying the satisfaction of seeing others happy, but rather, if you see a smiling face, be jealous, lest another should enjoy what you have not: Envy all sotto are better off in any respect than yourself, think unkindly toward them. Be constantly afraid lest some one should encroach upon your rights, be watchful againstdt, and if any one comes near you snap at him like a mad dog. Contend earnestly for everything that is your own, though it be not worth a pin ; for your "rights" are just as much concerned as it it'ivere I a pound of gold. Never yield a point. Be very sensitive, and take everything that is said to you in playfulness in the moat serious manner, J3e jealous of your, friends, lest they should not think enough of you ; and if at any time they should seem to neglect you, put the worst construction upon their cundect you, possibly can. An artist invited a gentleman to criticize a portrait of a Mr. Smith, who Was s'omewhat addicted to drink. Put .ting his hand towards it, the artist: ex claimed, "Don't touch it;- it is not dry." " Then," said he, "it cannot be like my friend Smith." we While-a: counsellor. as pleading at the-Irish bar, a-louse unluckily peep ed from under his wig. Curran; who sat next him, whispered what he saw. "You jeke," ,said the barrister. "If," replied Curran, !' you have many such jokes in your head, the sooner ,yon crack them the better." Q'-We once heard of a ver.y ; rich man who-was badly injured by his be-. Mg inn over. "It isn't the aceident,' , , said he, "alit I mind ; that isn't the_ thing'; brit'the' idea of being run over by an old swill'eirt Makes-me mad:" tviigio.P .i4iter W - 04418 0. 1 4 1 -Arah whololicialeAnd 14.PPAla table but we must , not think it will con ttikti wi4er imo ulna I)ejiii:ipte it one, . VOL. XIII.--NO. 12. Lord Mansfield This great magistrate, being in one of the counties on the circuit, a poor wom an was indicted for witchcraft. The in habitants of the place were exasperated against her. Some witnesses deposed that they bad seen her walk in the air, and with her feet upwards and her head downward. Lord Mansfield heard the evidence with great tranquility, and perceiving the temper .of the people, whom it would not have been prudent to irritate, he thus addressed them :—"I do not doubt that this woman has walk ed in the air. and with her feet upwards since you have all seen it ; but she has the honor to be bore in England as well as you and I, and consequently cannot be judged but by the laws of the country nor punished but in proportion as he has violated them. Now I know not One 'law that forbids walking in the air with the feet upward. We have all a right to do-it with impunity ; 1 see no reason, therefore„ for this prosecution, and this poor woman may return hoiue when she pleases." liar life was saved. Sr A stury•is` told of a Western can didate that came upon " a poor white man," who bad a vote to give, if he did do his own milking. The candidate, Jones, asked him if he should hold the cow, which seemed to be uneasy, and the old man consented very readily, he took her by the .horns, and held fast till the operation was done. Flave you had Robinson ( his rival ) sound here lately ?" he asked. "Oh, yes, he's behind the barn holding the calf 1" Aar ".What can a man do ?" asked a greenAnu, when the Sheriff was seen coming up to hiM with a writ in his hand. "Apply the remedy." said anoth er gruffly. rAiiply the remedy ! what remedy?" " Heeling remedy, you silly goose—run like a quartern horse ?" A California editor has the au thority of the eminen t head of the his trionic profession, but just arrived on the Pacific coast, for saying that the only Sailor the World has aver known who was not a ( emphasis) fool was Noah'!'He had but one choice—to go to sea or drown. fad At a recent marriage in the min ing district of England, the bride start led . the minister by making the extraor dinary vow to take bar husband " too 'aye and too 'old from this day fortn't, for betterer horse richerer power in eingernesa else to love cherish and to bay." • er Agady whose husband bad desert ed her, says " Alay two hundred and forty-seven nightmares trot quarter races over his stomach every night." . This probably would be a relief to what he has endured. lir A grim old Judge, after bearing a glowing oration from a young barrister, advised him to pluck out the feathers from the wings of his imagination and stick them in the tail of his judgement. There is a.commercial gentleman who is unusually scrupulous in regard to hav ing. his \ door plate polished, being de termined to " leave an nntarcished name behind him." . A reverend entleman, canon of a ca thedral, had his pocket picked. Why was this canon like an Armstrong gun ? Of course, because he was rifled. " What is the plural of cent ?" inquir ed a schoolnia.ter. "Two ceuts," shouted the sharpest in the class Never purchase love or friendship by "gifts, Mr When thus obtained they are lost as soon as you stop payment. A long, face is no sign of sanctity, and the general crape on a loafer's head does not indicate grief. An Irish painter says that among other portraits he has a representation of " Death as large as life." " Here's to internal improvement 1" as. Dobbs , sajd i when.kie swallowed a dose of salts. A wood chopper ion very polite man, for when he wants wood he goes and axes for it A Man who had been married twice, to ladies Dated Catharine, advised his friend egainek'ln4ing dupli rates Ladies wholgiray themselvea in patent hoopeltittittld'aing, as they dress gentiy,o'erine (rrzEz.) stealing," Why .wpa a 944finpan quo hundred P4I O I I 7 4 ,PVW ,I3 :a;S9WFII Bepe for big head be meet haire powdey.