BY FRED'K L. BAKER. itBRITTON & MUSSER'S i t ft+MILY DRUG STORE, jilarl(et Street, Marietta, Pa. patrrox MrssEa, successors to Dr. F. -pinkie, will continue the business at the old 0 ,,d, where they are daily receiving additions t , ) their stock, which are received from the sot re iabue d importers a ll d a smka an u li f b a e c r t a u l r share Toy o f public patronage. They are now prepared to supply the de- Owls of the public with everything in their line of trade. Their stock of DRUGS AND MEDICINES rural AND PURE, HAVING JUST ARRIVED. ?LIN Mines anO g.iquohs FOR MEDICINAL USES ONLY, AIL THE POPULAR PATENT MEDICINES. iv SION of all kinds, Fancy and Toilet Ar iiclus of every kind, Alcoholic and Fluid Extracti, Alcaloid and Resinoids, all tar best Trusses, Abdominal Sup porters,Shoulder Braces,Breast Pumps, Nipple Shells and shields, Nursing Bottles, A large rupply of HRT, HAIR, TOOTH, NAIL AND CLOTHES BRUSHES. powder and Pastes, Oils, Perfumery, eaps, Combs, Hair Dyes, Invigorators, &c.; conl nit, Lamps, Shades. Chimneys, Wick, &e, Phyaicians supplied at ressona ble rates W.neines and Prescriptions carefully and ac- Nrstely c ompounded all hours of the day and by Charles H. Britton, Pharmaceutist will pay especial ktteution to this branch ;4 the business. Having had over ten years pc.dical experience in the drug business ena -I.lis kiln to guarantee entire satisfaction to all xho may patronize the new firm. ilAssos's Compound Syrup of Tar, on veil and for sale. A lap: supply of School Books, Stationary, &c.., always on hand. SUNDAY HOURS: From S to 10, o. to 2, and 5 to 6 p. I . l,,irieB IL Britton. A. illasser Mari , ttit, October 20, 1866. 11-tf Established 1829 L ititiLTz's -- 0 Old Established ‘ lsat, Cap Gitore, en. 2u NORTH QUEEN STREET, LANCASTER. PA. 1,1 TV. would respectfully announce that our 1) styles for the Fall and Winter of 1866, sir now ready, consisting of (Imalernen's Dress Silk, Cassimere, Plain and livish, Fur and Wool, or rassimerett, .till Cassimere, Soft and Steel exten ded Berme, and Flexible Self-ad justing and D'Ors Ly Brim IIIEW AIL "3111 r • In new, novel and beautiful designs, and at such prices as to make it an indricement for nil to purchase. Caps I Caps I I Cur stuck of Caps comprises all the newest dtyles for Men, Boys and Children's Fall and Winter wear, Our motto is, "Equality to all." The lowest selling price marked .n figures on rash article, and never varied from, at SHULTZ & BROTHER'S, flat, Cap and Fur Store, No. 2.0 North Queen-st.. Lancaster. la' All kinds of Shipping Furs bought.and to highest Cash prices paid. .11, L. 4. E. T. ZAH111; ,feutelees, Corner of North Queen-St., and Centre Square, Lancaster, Pa. W Er eNPredt9rerican and Swiss :tchesatthnetcashrates! We buy directly from the-imparters and Man daclurers, and can, and do sell Watches as as they can be bought in Philadelphia or NI iv- York • A fine stock ofclocks Jewelry, Spectacles, Saver and Silver-plated ware constantly on Land. Every article fairly represented. H. L. Ajr E. J. ZAHII4S Curlier North Queen Street and Centre Square LANCASTER, PA. first National Bank of Marietta. Tuts BANKING ASSOCIATION RAVING COMPLETED ITS ORGANIZATION is now prepared to transact all kinds of BANKING BUSINESS. The Board of Directors mat weekly, on Wednesday, for discount and other business. 1 1 1%ci ank Hours : From 9A.M tO P. m. JOHN HOLLINGF.R, PRESIDENT, AMOS BOWMAN, Cashier , DEL J The Mariettian is published 'weekly, at $.1150 a-year, payable in, advance. Office in "Lindsay's Building," near the Post office corner, .Marietta, Lan caster county, Pa Advertisements will be inserted at the following rates : One square, ten lines or less, 75 cents for the first insertion, or three times for $1:50. Profession al or Business Cards, of six lines or less, $5 a-year. Notices in the reading col umns, ten cents a-line ; general adver tisements seven cents a-line for the first insertion, and for every additional in sertion, four c.?.nts. A liberal deduc tion made to yearly advertisers. Having put up a new Jobber press and added a large addition of job type, cuts, border, etc., will enable the estab- lishment to execute every description of Plain and Fancy Printing, from the smallest card to the largest poster, at short notice and reasonable rates. Out on the porch., by the open door, - Sweet with roses and cool with shale, Baby is creeping over the flow— Dear little winsome blue-eyed maid ! All about her the shadows danee, All about her the roses swing, Sunbeams in the lattice glance, Robins up in the branches sing Up at the blossoms her fingers reach, Lisping her pleading in broken words, Cooing away in her tender speech, Songs like the twitter of nestlicg birds, Creeping, creeping over the floor, Soon my birdie will find her wings, Fluttering out at the open door, Into the wonderful world of things. Mr. Editor :—By your permission I wish to , propound a few questions to your readers. Ist. Is it right for a tavern keeper to take the hard earnings of a poor man for "fire water," when his poor family is suffering for the necessaries of life ? 2nd. Is it right for that man t 3 drink intoxicating liquors, knowing by past unhappy experience, that drunkenness will certainly follow ? 3rd. Is it right for parents to permit their sons to patronize rum shops, thus causing Them in after life to bring their "gray hairs down in sorrow to the grave ?" 4th. Is it right for men and women to say that the cause of Temperance is worthy of support, and at the same time drink domestic wines made by them• selves ? sth. Is it right for church members and church goers to do nothing to ex tirpate this mighty evillrom our land ? 6th. Is it right for officers in the church, to make and sell intoxicating drink ? 7th. Is it right for a Rumseller to justify himself in continuing his diaboli cal business, to say that he is regularly licensed to sell intoxicating liquors ? Bth. Is it right for a moderate drink er to continue drinking knowing that from his ranks the drunkards come to perpetuate the drinking of rum, which the sainted Wesley called " Liquid fire and distilled damnation ?" 9th. Is it right for twelve men to sign a petition for a tavern license know ing that wretchedness and misery follow the course of a drunkard's life 2 10th. Is it right, in view of our re sponsibilities to God, in view of the cries of broken-hearted wives and chil dren, in view of the perishing souls of drunkards, in view of the judgement day, I say, is it , right for any man, in view of the increasing vice of drunkenness to be idle, to do nothing in rescuing us from so direful an evil—drunkenness, which is truly "the sum of all villainies r OFFER, :MORE COLLEGE ", SURGERY, set, next door to R !e, between Lomat Nbia. Surgeon. ;olumbia, would em iity . of informing his 'es in Marietta and be consulted daily, Itween the hours of sir Printers beat the Dutch, and eve rybody else but their wives. We have now in our office one who preached the gospel, ran a side show to a circus, kept a singing school, ran away with a man's wife and two children, practised medi cine, been an agent for a concert troupe, and a clerk of a steamboat. He is now reformed, and settled down to a legiti mate business—that of sticking. type. We'll make a man °aim ye-L.—Exchange. 1867.-tf. T LAW, :ASTER, PA. ITU DUKE STREET where he will et profession in ell ite :vices to the citizens vicinity. is formerly occupied '-st., Marietta. "Here, you young rascal, walk up/and give an account of yourself. Where have.you been?" "After the girls, fath er.' "Did you ever know me to do so when I was a boy ?" "No, sir, but mu thee did." orrall, 'foams.. iontisia store, second floor, 'A, PA. Lizards, scorpions, and other deadly and nasty creatures named epithoraliae volvitantes are said to be generated in sour-krout. Shouldn't wonder. Nonpareil Chemical ready and for sale SPANGLER, C-,eneral Agent. .i.4t.. cjiaili.tj4ia4, rEN.,718, Baby on the Porch. For The .Iferriellian Is it Right? grrkytitlltut Ternsglintnia *urnal for t N,onte (Tittle. MARIETTA, PA., SATURDAY, MARCH 30, 1867. Cousin Bob's Whiskers. There are some people in this world with whom the art of contradiction real ly, assumes the dignity of a science; it is so perfectly understood and so constant ly carried out that I can only imagine it to be the result of deep thought and re flection. A Hale obstinacy now, once and a while, is only a sort of commenda ble self respect; but why people wilt insist npon hazing their own way about a thing for no other purpose than because it is their own way, when it is a self-evi dent fact that some one else's way is de cidedly preferable, is a metaphysical problem which it would require wiser heads than mine to solve. Such people always remind me of a certain river, which took an odd, unreasonable sort of a bend, and which a banign government deemed it best to straighten. A smooth and commodious channel was prepared forthwith, and every means taken to in duce this unruly stream to proceed in the way of the righteous. All in vain ; the disloyal waters refused any such ac commodations, and persisted.in fretting and funning along in their own rough way beneath the cliffs, where a rebellious little city sat defiantly perched, tor menting their unhappy waves with the shot and shell of a terrible conflict. And yet I think it would be decidedly easier to manage the Mississippi than to essay managing a headstrong girl; and of all headstrong girls Nettie Lee is the —well, superlatives fail to express her willfulness. It was provoking. Every body had considered it a settled thing for a long time—ever since, they were children, in fact, Robert and she had been "cut out" for each other, and for the last year or two, they were thought to be as good as engaged, and now, when the poor fellow returned from college, with all sorts of honors and capital let ters to his name, she was just barely civil, and nothing. more. Everybody else was crazy with delight at his arriv al. Auntie had talked of nothing but this for weeks ; uncle gave a grand sup. per in honor of the successful graduate ; half of the girls were desperately in love before he had been home three days ; and Nettie—wilful Nettie, for whom alone he bad eyes or ears—was in the depths of a flirtation with that detesta ble Tom Ellis, whose great red whiskers might serve as torches for Charon him self. • "How can you treat Bob so unkindly, Nettie ?" I asked one night when we were alone in our room. "I know you ke him." "Of course I like him," was her de mure reply. " I have a great cousinly regard for him; and as he has always been very kind to me, why shouldn't I like him 2" "Then why do you treat him so badly ? Why do you flirt with that odious red whiskered Ellis, when you she that it makes Bob so furious that he told me this evening he could scarcely refrain from kicking him out ?" "Which would have been a very gen tlemanly way of treating his father's guest, I am sure," said Nettie ironically. "Come, Fan, we're very good friends.; but don't undertake to fight Bob's bat tles for him—he has plenty to do that I already. As for Mr. Ellis, if I choose to fancy his society, Robert has no right to complain, much less to insult him about my inclination. So there, Fan, don't trouble your poor little head about the matter. Cousin Bob and I have too many friends interested in our welfare already— more than we require I assure you." This was all the satisfaction that could be got from Nettie ; and although she more than once intimated that it was none of my business, I couldn't help interceding, now and then, for poor Bob who looked so lackadaisical and miser able-that every one felt sorry for him. " It is only out of contradiction, Rob ert," I said consolingly, one evening, as Nettie departed for a ride with Mr. lis, "I am sure she cannot like that horrid-looking man." "Do you really think him bad looking Fannie ?" asked Bob, much relieved, he has such a splendid pair of whiskers I"' "Splendid !" I exclaimed. "Splendid ! I think them frightful." "Almost every one admires them," said Bob, with a sigh. " I heard Nettie say the other day, she hated to see a mau with a girl's face," he continued, rubbing his. own smooth chin. Cl. M. C "She knew you were listening, Bob and said it to tease you. I think she heard something about your admiration for Miss Billiage,4nd is having her re venge." . Miss Enphemis , Billings was one of Bob's college flames, and a young lady of a somewhat literary turn—a great ad mirer of Tennyson and Browning, whose works Bob still possessed, as she had re turned them to him, with her comments inscribed in a very delicate hand on the margin. For my part although I have always been rather ashamed to acknowl edge it, I never could appreciate the fashionable style of poetry. I suppose, as Miss Lucinda says, it is because my mind is uncultivated ; but the ideas al ways seem so misty and mysterious, and the world so very wrong side out, that I find the whole affair is generally beyond my comprehension. But Miss Billings was intellectual. Her mind was.a perfect hot-bed of culti vation where all Sorts of knowledge flourished in a surprising degree. Bob's edition of the "English- Poets" was inscribed with her dainty little com ments : " How touching !" " Too true I" '-Sweetly tender ?" making it in my opinion, quite invaluable as a book of interpretation. Of course such an ethe • real poetical creature could never be guilty of anything so mundane as a flirt ation ; still young Mr. Jameson had al ways been one of her most valued friends and he was even suspected of being the subject of one of her odes, commencing, " My friend, when other ties are thine !" which I think was sufficient to excuse Nettie's conduct in a measure. However, the memory of poor Miss Billings had vanished, as she herself would have said, " like night before the dawn," and the sunny, roguish. sparkling little witch of a Nettie, had him bound heart and soul to her chariot of triumph and seemed utterly unconscious or in different to the torture she was inflict ing. " drive me to desperation ye Fannie. I can't say what will be the result if that red-whiskered fellow hangs around her much longer,!' "Then, why don't you retaliate, you foolish fellow? Go flirt with Dora Dudley, or some other girl, and make believe you don't care." " I can't," said Robert, ruefully—" I haven't the heart. I'll call that Ellis out yet! Look at them now," he con tinned with a despairing glance at Net tie : "she's going to sing for him his fa vorite air, Love's Giddings,' confound him ! I asked h'er to sing my song the other evening—l meant that sweet lit tle air she used to sing so divinely last summer; and will you believe it, Fan, she sat down to the piano and commen ced ' Bobbin' Round,' and of course all the girls commenced to titter." Of course I believed it, for Nettie was dreadful enough for anything ; and when her uncle and aunt went to town for a few days, leaving her mistress of the house, she became, if possible; more tor menting than ever. But the crisis came at last. One evening when Nettie was entertaining several of her friends—Mr. Ellis among the number—in her own bright way, and acting towards Bob with the most faultless politeness, a messen ger called him to the door, and we sate him no more that evening. Subsequent ly I heard the poor fellow walking up stairs in his study, and felt that he was struggling with the "green eyed mon ster" that had each complete possession of him- I looked reproachfully at Net tie. She appeared serenely unconscious and I wondered mentally what sort of a conscience she had. The next morning at breakfast Bob was invisible, and Nettie, as mistress of the house, sent Lucy, auntie's little En_ glish maid, to call him. Lucy returned, ,eoking quite alarmed. "Please, miss, I knocked ac 'ard as I could, and Mr. Robert didn't answer; he only groaned." "Groaned!" I exclaimed in horror. "Oh, Nettie!" "Nonsense I" replied the imperturb able young lady. "It was probably a snore you heard, Lucy. Go call him again, and say that breakfast is getting cold." "Please, miss, I'm afraid he's hill. He did groan most dreadful." "Nonsense," returned Nettie • "go do as I tell you. Fannie, don't be such a little - goose ; you look frightened to death." "Oh, Nettie ! how can you be so cool about it? He has threatened to do something desperate for a long time. Who knows but he has taken strychnine, charcoal or something of the sort.? He was perfectly furious last night. I heard him walking hikstudy like a mad . man." " Upon my word, Fannie Fairie," Net tie replied, "I gave yon,credit for, more sense. Bob has overslept. himself, and yon must ,turn it into a tragedy or a sai nide. ,Well, Lucy, did you eall< him again ?" "I did, miss, and he said something or other I didn't exactly understand. It sounded very much like ewearin', miss." " He is in a good frame of mind for a journey to the other world. Come, Fan lot us have breakfast without my lord this morning. He will come down when he is ready, probably." But Nettie, in spite of her bravery, had no appetite, and I was thoroughly alarmed, although I kept as quiet as possible. ".I am going to call Robert again, Nettie," I said after breakfast. "I am afraid there is more than you think the matter with him." "As you please," she, replied, assum an air of utter indifference, though she had become, I saw plainly, quite ner vous and fidgety. "You may suggest that no breakfast will be procurable af ter ten. That may be a powerful in ducement with our slumberous prince." I ascended to Bob's room and com menced a vigorous tattoo . on the door panel. No answer. I called repeatedly but all was silent. "Are you sick, Cous in Robert? For Heaven's sake, what is the matter?" Not a sound answered my excited appeal. Terrified beyond ninasure, anti tremb ling with all sorts of dreadful apprehen sions, I returned to Nettie, determined to vent my feelings on her, whose cruel conduct had, I was confident, driven Robert to the committal of some fearful deed. I was nearly struck dumb with amazement at finding that incomprehen sible girl, with her head against the window panes, sobbing like the veriest baby. Nettie Lee itrtears, and as sub dued as a min ! My resentment vanish ed like smoke ; my arms were around her in an instant, her bright head rest ing on my shoulder, as I whispered— " Don't Nettie, darling—don't cry so ! Perhaps, after all, there is nothing the matter." " There is I there is ! I know there is 1 Oh, Fannie 1 Fannie 1 and to think that lam the cause of it all I" I really thought she was ; bat I was so aston ished at the melting of this icicle, that I hadn't the heart to agree with her. I never cared—for Tom—Ellis—nev er 1" she sobbed, with her face hid on my shoulder. "1 liked43ob better than any one else in the world—always—al ways ; but everybody talked so much about it and seemed to think it all set tled, when we were not even formally engaged, that I determined to let them see I was not to be so easily won." "Nettie Nettie dearest! do you re ally mean it ?" said a sepulchral voice behind us ; and we shrieked in concert, for there was Bob standing in his study door, looking like a wounded soldier— his face all tied up with innumerable handkerchiefs, but his great eyes fairly dancing with delight. "Cousin Bob," I commenced severely "I should like to know what you mean by such conduct. You have nearly frightened us to death." " Say it again, Nettie !" said Robert, utterly unconscious of my wrath. "Say just once more that you don't like Tom Ellis and that you do like me, just—a little." " Better than any one in the world youtaid before, you know, Nett," I ad ded wickedly. Poor Nettie I She was completely cornered. All her independence and sauciness Were gone, and she stood con victed by her own confession, which Robert, wicked wretch, had heard dis tinctly through his study door, when we thought he was up in his bed-room, kill ed, wounded or . poisoned.:Poor little Nett 1 She bore her defeat like a vet eran, and did just only the thing sbe could do—plead guilty. She put both her hands in Bob's and told him she did like him just a little ; and the uncon scionable fellow made her say " better than any one else," and the poor little culprit was foolish enough to say that too. Dear me 1 I wouldn't have be lieved it of Nettie. And then I thought it time to come in with a little practical common sense. So I requested Mr. Rebert to explain his conduct. " What is-the matter with your face?' said I, " I suppose it looks glorified to Nett, but to me it looks very much fly blistered. What did you green and swear for this morning, when poor Lucy went to call you to breakfast ? and when I almost knocked my knuckles out on your door, why didn't you vouchsafe an answer ?" "What is the matter with your face, li,obe!t 7' said Nett, just 'awakening to the fact that it looked like a rare beef steak. " So it is 1" said Bob, looking very foolish, "it's enonghlo make a fellow swear." , - . VOL. XIII.-NO. 34. "Confound it," I added consolingly ; "but what did it-? You look as if an in experienced Indian had essayed to scalp you, and commenced by way of variety at the chin. But what did it ?" "Don't laugh at me, Nettie," Bob pleaded, regardless of my effort at wit; "it was all for your sake." " I told you so, Nett," I exclaimed sotto voce. "He has been trying suicide a la Comanche." "Yon made so mach fun of my smooth face,you know." Nettie looked very contrite and conscience-stricken— "and said that—that you hated girlish looking men, and I—" " I didn't mean it, though," said Net tie, penitently. " Didn't you?" said Bob, delighted, " but I -thought you did, and some swindling rascal—l'd just like to get hold of him I' he went on, ferociously— 'advertised a recipe for making whiskers grow in a few weeks, and=-' Ha-? ha 1 ha? Please excuse mw, Robert. but indeed, I can't help it. Nett, Nett, it is the richest thing I've heard yet l And you expected to out rival Tom Ellis, did - you, Bob ?" Don't laugh at the poor fellow,' said Nett, biting her lips to repress her laughter. It must hurt dreadfully, Robert' It does,' said Bob, ruefully—'smarts like the old mischief. But I don't care so much for that. I was so mad, and I knew you'd laugh so, that I wouldn't answer Lucy this morning; and when Fannie knocked at the door I was down here; and then—and then you talked right by the door, and I couldn't help hearing, you know—' and Bob blush ed, the dear old fellow, almost as furious ly as Nettie did. That night when Uncle and Aunt Jameson came home, Bob, despite bie blistered face, looked very handsome and happy, presented his little betrothed and took all uncle's teasing very good naturedly. He has quite a flourishing crop of whiskers now, and he calls them the trophies of his victory over Tom Ellis and wilful little Nett.—N. Y. Sunday " Stuff for Smiles. Mr. Billings, in hie advice to a young ady as to how she shall receive a pro- posal, says :—"You ought to take it kind, looking down hill with an expreo - about half tickled and half scart. After the pop iz over, if yore luvyer wants to kiss you, I don't think I would say yes or no, but let the thing kind uv take its own course." A cotemporary finds fault with the practice of putting Latin inscriptions on tombstones. But what more appropri ate place than a graveyard can there be for a dead language ? There's always one consolation, what ever our misfortune—it might be worse. Where life bangs on a thread, it would be a comfort to think that it was not hanging on a rr pe. At a spiritual meeting a short time ago, the prophet Balsam was called up, and asked if there were any jackasses in his sphere. "No," he replied, indignant ly, "they are all on earth." Artemus Ward, in one of his moral humors said, that, as a Son of Temper ance he believes in Temperance hotels, though as a general thing they sell poor er liquor than the other sort. Mrs. Partington wants to know why the -Captain of a vessel can't keep a memorandum of the weight of his anchor instead of weighing it every time they go out of port. A drunken fellow recovering from a dangerous illness, was asked whether he had been afraid of meeting his God. "No,"' said he, "I was only afeard of t'other, chap." The .young lady who eaw a baby with out kieeing it ' has acknowledged that her friend's bonnet is handsomer than her own. "The ocean speaks eloquently, and forever," says Beecher. "Yes," retort ed Prentice, "and there is no use in tell big it to dry np." The man who "took a walk" the other day brought it back again, but the next day took a ride and went off with it. The Chineese say a drunkard's nose is a light-house, warning us of the little water that passes underneath. Ag Englishman being asked how he spelled saloon, replied : "With a hest, a hay, a hell, two hoes, and a hen." if you don't wish to get angry, never argue with a blockhead. Remember thp_ duller razorthe more you cat T . self. M 3