Mai BY FREDI L. BAKER. rE.V. , 7fB The lifariettian is published weekly, atslo a-year, payable in advance. office in, "Lindsay's Bulldiny," near the Post office corner, Marietta, Lan caster county, .Pa. Advertisements ivikbe inserted at the following rates : One square, ten lines or less, 75 cents for the first insertion, g three times for $1:50. Profession al or Business Cards, of six lines or less, 65 a-year. ilrotices in the reading cot tons; ten cents a-line ; general adver tSements seven cents a-line for the first i a .qertion, and for every additional in rtioll, four cents. A liberal deduc tion made to yearly advertisers. Having put up a new Jobber press ,?n I added a large addition ef job type, border, etc., will enable the estab- I,:avnt to execute every description of and Fancy Printing, from the in oq st card to the largest poster, at ii,rt notice and reasonable rates. The Reaper. ;nere i® a reaper, whose name is Death, And with his sickle keen, lie reaps the hoarded grain at a breath, And the flowers that glow between. ".51,111 I have naught that is fair 1" said he, Have naught but the hoarded grain? Though the breath of those flowers is sweet to I will give them all back again." Ile zoned at the flowers with tearful eyes ; He kissed their drooping leaves, li WAS for the Lord of Paradise He bound them in his sheaves, 'Yy Lord has need of these flowerets gay," the Reaper said, and smiled; "Peur tt kens of the earth are they, Leo: he was once a child." ' Tl.ec Anil all bloom in fields of light, Tiall , plsuted by my care, A i ,ints udon their garments white, 11b:ie sacred blossoms wear." in! the mAber gave, in tears and pain, The rowers she most did love ; She knew she would ibul.tbem all again, lithe fields of light above. n t in cruelty, not in wrath, Th. Reaper creme that day ; 2 1'.vas an angel visited the greed earth, And took the flowers away. _Prom the Lantatter .exprers On a Raft. Prom Marietta to Peach . Bottion—Grand mid imposing Scenery Running the Rapids— A short trip toiyith taking -I:;derpise at the lower end. ',lacy people make summer tours to far-aff places—to Niagara,, the Moro i:A Cave, the sea shore, or the lakes, ,tarch of the grand and the sublime, knowing, perhaps, that right here at own doors, we have onp dile most Dutiful rivers in the world, whose in grandeur those of any ether in the country. We refer to our riuus Susquehanna. flow many of citizens of this county have ever lobed upon or floated over its surface it winds along and washes the south ern border of the Old Guard? Compar iii:vely very few, Yet this is not so mch to be wondered at a hen we con sider that the stream is not navigable lur boats, and that only about IthE weeks ' 41 4 year, in early spring, is it of suffi eitnt depth to admit of the passage of tarts. But this is the time to make the 'nil, and it can be wide at a trifling nat. We have heard,- occasionally, of c ursion parties poising down on these rude craft, but we have never seen any Haled account of such "voyage," and hove concluded that.those who made ilwere so enraptured With (he granduer ", the trip, that they hept it to , them : 'dvee, lest others might-follow and en it likewise. We—that is one of the cores of the Express—have "done" !nay miles of this rafting, and will not b ' s oselfish as to keep it to ourselves; - tut mill tell all we know and have seen —as far as our memory will accompany us Let us see. It was on Thursday last t hat we received a pressing invitation from our genial friend, ex-Sheriff Boyd, viPit Marietta and raft with him to tin home at Peach Bottom, wbere he, in company with ex Representative Nat. l iaYer, have recently put up a new saw mill—but of that hereafter. The temp Cation could not be resisted, and at dusk we stepped from the cars into Houseal's h otql,at the Upper Station, Marietta. Illouseal' s is the headquarters of the l umberme n , and the scene in and about the h 05.35 is one of much interest to the uatidile looker-on. here are found the up river men," who bring the timber d ciwn, and here they meet the manufact , sari and merchants from- abroad. At this point, nearly ail-the-lumber_c.haageu B ands, Buyers'ore present from New ; 4 + . i _g__ , 1 ~ 4, 4 I Tke - 1 “,1' t,„li 1 + 41 ,_ . er points, mixing with the • shrewd up river men and the hardy and bronzed raftemen. During the running season of six or eight weeks, millions of dollars change hands at Houseal's. Here the bargains are made, the drafts signed, or the money paid down, and each departs for his .home in the bustling city or the solitudes of Clearfield. Night and defy Houseal's is crowded with these peopie, buying, selling or bargaining. They talk nothing but timber from the hour they reach there until the hour they de part. It is timber, and only timber,just as jockies talk horse and only horse, at a race track. You can easily distinguish them. Each carries in his hand a stick, cut from a neighboring thicket. These sticls , s are from three to five feet in length, and if you go down to the rafts, which line,the river for miles, you discover that these sticks are used as measuring rods, and year curiosity is satisfied. .The season, thus far, has been a remarkably good one; and 'prices are said to be "up." The number of rafts which:catne down are almost countless, and one would suppose that the source of supply must give out at no distant day. Old river men, however, say that the same apprehensions were felt thirty years ago, but timber is just as plenty as ever.• The timber here is mostly from the West Branch, and principally from Clearfield county. But we , started out to tell of an expe• dition down the river on a raft, and it is about time that we were at work. Meet- ing some Marietta friends in the evening we discussed the matter over a bottle of pop, and affectionate farewells were tak en. During the talk frequent hints were thrown out that the proposed expedi tion would not consist of a "champagne party," and then suggestive winks, were interchanged between knowing ones. We sought information. We learned that the natives have a vague tradition, that once upon a time, a party of ladies and gentlemen made the trip from Mari etta to Port Deposit, and all the way down they drank Eleidsick and Moselle. instead of Susquehanna water, and Ma rietta lightning. From that day to this —however remote the period—frequent mysterious allusions are made to the "champagne party." It is stated that a certain well known editor of this city, was taken along as historian, but the world has never been treated to any ratting literature from his racy pen. We retired early and slept soundly on one of liouseal's downy beds—two in a bed--until unmistakably emphatic knocks at the chamber door aroused us long before daylight. The sturdy pilot was there, and told us it was time to weigh anchor '—or something like tha —and be off. Down we went through the chill morning air to the river. It we s just four o'clock. The sun had not yet streaked the eastern sky, bat the moon was right over-bead and silver bright. Reaching the raft we found the pilot and crew already there, and as we stepped aboard, the tow line was cast off and we were adrift on the broad bos om of the Susquehanna. The crew con sisted of the pilot and eight men, and with the ex-Sheriff and your bumble jotter down 6f this veracious narrative, there were just eleven of ns, all told. Now about the raft. We crept along at a snails pace, and had ample oppor tunity for observation. The raft, then, was one hundred and ten feet in length and twenty-four in width. The logs, (the lumbermen called them "sticks") of which there were fifty-eight, from fif ty to seventy feet in length '.each, are lashed together with hickory wither and oak saplings. (The cost of such a raft is about $1.500.) At either end istan immense rudder, which keeps the raft in the channel ; and tkus it drifts along, withcint sail or atdam. In calm water there is no putting, on pressure or re vereing the engine at rugged places ; it is simply at the mercy of the river, and but for the experience of the - pilot, would not drift many miles without be ing torn to pfeces in the rapids or among the rocks. For the first three or four miles down, the progress is very slow ; and did the water continue in the even tenor of its'ziay,rlifting would prove quite monotonous. But it does not, -as we shall see by and by. Perhaps it would be well, right here, to say a word about:the pilot—or captain, as we called him—and on whose judgement and ex perience our safety depended. Capt. Christ. Shaman is a medium-sized, thick set, muscular man, of about forty years of age, with 'a clear gray eye; sandy hair and yeltisker;,. bronzed face, and rather pleasing expression of .countenance—, gentle Susquehanna " sea-dog.". haS followed the river from boyhood and grargenbuf Vonsilmitia gournat for te NOM eirdt. MARIETTA, PA., SATURDAY, MAY 11, 1867. not wrecked a raft in ten years, so we felt pretty safe on that score. Bat. like all pilota•we have ever met, whether on the Ohio, the Mississippi ; the James, the bay or the ocean, Captain Shuman has very few words to gay, but keeps his eyes wide - apen,Mid about him, whether floating over unruffled waters or dashing down the rapids. Now, with this brief and imperfect photograph of the pilot, we will go ahead. Just as the sun is gilding the spires and windows of Wrigiitayille, we reach the abate at the Columbia dam. Here we meet the first "rough water." In we go. The raft creaks and bends, and we "ship a lea" that sweeps from stem to stern, but we are soon through and once more on calm water. A few miles further down, we round Turkey Hill. This is a bold, pre &pitons bluff, and here begin a succes sion of rocky bluffs, some towering sev eral hundred feet overhead. It is- here that the grandeur of Susquehanna scen ery forces itself upon the mind. The water is rough, too, and we dash along at the rate of six miles an hour—and, as we go, we pass in the course of a mile, enough grand and romantic points that would make the fortunes of any half do zen of rivers in the country, did they possess them. These views follow in such rapid succession that it is almost impossible to take a fair look at any ode, before another diverts your attention. These bluffs are rock and earth. The rocks are frequently covered with a soft velvety-like moss, and between the crev ices and along the side's shoot up the cedar, water oak, sycamore, dog-wood and other smaller trees. We run through Connelly's break, a short but ugly rapid which takes its name, like many other such along the fiver, from the person who has, at some time or other, been wrecked in it. Next comes several im mense rocks, jutting out into the river, towering a hundred feet into the air, and -known as Star Rock, Sliding Rock, Burk's Point, Ste. Passing these the river becomes more swift, and in a few moments after we are running over Fry's. Falls. This is a long and dangerous rapid. The water all round is churned into a foam, dashes over on the side's, and the raft strains and groans and twists as if going to pieces at every turn. The pilot is at the bow giving directions snatching the rudder, or looking out .to avoid running upon the rocks. This is the only place during the excursion, that he has manifested any excitement. It is considered the most 4angerous point on the river. That this is not without foundation may easily be inferred _fron:t the fact that three or four wrecks were lying upon the rocks, and thetr crews working to getlhem oft. When a raft once strikes here there is little chance for her—she invariably goes to pieces, and he must be a good swimmer who can stem, the torrent. Loss of lifet is not unfrequent. Wherever ships sail' or boats run,- there are a class of men known as "wreckers." We have them on the Susquehanna and during the sea- son they are quite active. If a raft goes to pieces or ,e log breaks loose, the wrecker is, about with his boat, and book. He tows the log-ashore, ties it, and waits the coming of the owner. Should it be claimed, he claims his salvage. If not claimed; he Sells it, often doing a good day's work. The wreckers are nu merous at Fry's Falls. A short space of calm , water arid we strike another rap id called " Running between the Broth ers "—so-called from the fact. that on each shore of the river, and directly op posite, are two bluffs strongly resembling each other. Leaving the Brothers we have comparatively smooth water until we strike the darn at Safe Harbor. As we near this spot, the prospect is- any thing but pleasant to weak nerves— which we haven't, but some people have. The river roars and hisses and _seethes over its rocky bed, as if it would grind to pieces everything that would come in its Way. But it don't. We went right up to the encounter without quailing, (we might just as well have gone that way ae any other, seeing we had to go whether we wanted to or oo) and dash ed right over the breast of the dam into the seething cauldron on -the other side. The raft carried us through in safety, but she performed some carious -curvet ings'and twisting, suggestive of a gener al smash up. :At this point the character of the scenery changes as well as the charac ter of the river- The bluffs are, not so large and imposing, -while the river is 'dotted with little islands, and bold and massive rocks loom up right in the mid dle of the channel. We' run- through Eshleman's Sluice, a short but saucy lit tle rapid, and — nicit aillein view of , the navigation here is a little difficult and wrecks are frequent. The channel is tortuous, winding round and round these huge boalders, which are washed smooth by the ever dashing water. We pass Ellis'. Rock, the Upper and Lower Neck, all along which are'many things to see well worth seeing, but which the rapid carrent permits but a glance and thus prevents us from referring to them in detail, On either side, or on the islands, miniature cascades dance down the bluffs or over the rocks. The scene here, if not so imposing as farther np, is really enchanting. • We are now near the York county side of the river, hav ing hugged the . Lancaster shore all the way down, bat we soon get over again. We next strike McCall's Ferry. The river at this point is exceedingly deep, and not two hundred yards wide The surface is smooth' and we glide along quietly. From one of the little coves that dot the shore, out shoots a skiff, and rapidly approaches the raft. To .the uninitiated it seems as ifs custom house officer was about to take up his. quarters with'us, or else that some bold buccaneer intended to levy tribute. We were soon undeceived, however. The boat was simply a floating restaurant— carrying solids and liquids—and inas much as we did not provide ourselves with refreshments before starting, the visit was a grateful one. The dough nuts were good, and the apple jack equal to any we ever found in the Old Domin ion, once famous for its apple-jack and healthy niggers. But we must push on. We run over McCully's Fulls, and next we are dashing , through the rapids known as, Neal's Fishery. This is a long and swift stretch, and carries us into Fite's Eddy, where we overtook a raft that was in sight all day, but which the eddy holds in its grasp as if unwilling it should go further. We help our distressed brethren out, and have a "good time" I getting out ourselves, which we finally do, and 'in a run of a mile or so we strike calm water. Here the river is a mile and a half wide, and as we float along it saems as if we were gliding over a sun gilt bay instead of the turbulent waters that came with us. There is' no occa sion now to watch the rudder so closely, and all kande stretch , themselves - upon deck and enjoy a nap, or , drink in the beautiful panorama of water and bluff. Three miles further OD we strike John son's Mount, a huge knob-shaped island rising up ,out of the water like a sea monster, or "any other man." A little further on we .rua ashore and tie up. Here is. teach . Vottcom"lkere 48-,our , buttl-liere is' oar joiltney's end." The distance from Marietta to the last, nam ed point is thirty miles , and the trip Was made from 4 o clock a. m., to 11 a. m.—or just , seven hours. We doubt whether so much can be seen in so short a period on any other river in the world. Those who want to enjoy a new sensa tion, should try a raft on die Susque hanna. Much can be learned, much seen, mach enjoyed, and there is just abont enough danger to make the whole thing exciting.- The season will proba bly be over by ge close of this week. A New Yorker, an extensive lumber dealer, takes down a party of friends in the course of a day or two. If the people at whose very,,doors this river runs are acquhinted withlts beauty and its granduer, many are not better posted in regard to the extent of the lumber trade which floats over its sur face. Take a few facts and ; figures.:-On' an average fifty , rafts pass down the riv-, er each day. The average,,value of each raft is fourteen hundred dollars The season, say„ lasts _six weeks, counting seven days to the week, and we have an aggregate of twomillion, nine bun - deed and forty dollar*. Of course -much tint; her is bought up and manufactured at Marietta.andOolumbia. The great ma jority of rafts run down to Port Deposit, Md., from whence they are conveyed by steamboat to Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York and other,points. At Pella Bottom we enjOyed the hospitalities of our friend, ax-Sheriff S- W. P. Boyd, who, as we stated at the beginning of this sketch, in , connection with ex-representative Nathaniel Mayer, have formed a copartnership for the manufacture of lumber and the sale% of coal. They Five jiist erected a new saw mill, which has nci,equal in, the county. The, mill is one bandied and tweniy-Six feet in langth by twen t ty.iii width, and is run by a Jonval Turbine wheel. Peters creek, which-,supplies the water power, has a fall-of eighteen , or nineteen feet, and is never ,failing. Alttbe latest im proved mill machinery, Including 0-Im 7 stead s -self-setter, have been put in. Although the mill has been in-operation b, ~week jt tarns_ oak aboal Bv .. , thou sand feet of lumber per day. A. circa . lar saw for cutting laths and palings, is also in operation, and it is the intention of the proprietors to put in a shingle machine, and also a pair of , burrs for grinding plaster, &c. The mill was con structed by Oliver J. Bollinger, of Glen Rock, York county, and gives entire satisfaction to the proprietors. The lumber is sold in the neighboring coun try, and the demand is equal to the sup ply. The contemplated Columbia and Port Deposit Railroad will run for a distance of two miles through Sheriff Boyd's property, and within fifty yards , of the mill, which will, open the way to distant markets. Peach Bottom will then have every facility for making itself a thriving business place. The Boyd estate, is quite an• extensive one, and has been in the family for many genera tions. It embraces a mansion house, eight tenant houses, including a store and tavern stand, on the Lancaster county side, and on the York county side two dwellings, lime kilns, &c. The place has an interesting history. The new mill is built on the site of one erec ted by james Porter, the great-grand father of Sheriff Boyd, previous to the year 1764. This is as far as the records go back. Mr. Potter came from Octo raro Hundred, now Cecil county, Mary land. At that time there was no house within seven miles, and when the man sion house and mill were being built, supplies for the workmen had to be brought a distance of fourteen miles. The mansion house has since been en larged and remodeled. Wm. Porter, son of James, kept a store in the house in 1764. He had occasion to send' to Lan caster for au iron bar for his shutter, which was forged by a blacksmith. The blacksmith, who was acquainted with Mr. Porter, concluded to surprise him by making the bar ornamental as well as useful, and punched upon it, in rude let, ters, thq, legend: "Win Porter keeim good rum,- April 17,-1764. This bar is still preserved as a relic of "ye olden times." ilar If there is anything in our lan guage that puzzles a Frenchman, it is the different eignificatioris of the same word. The perplexities of a persevering Monsieur arising from the word fast, are more numerous than one would sup pose. For instance : " Zis horse, sair, he go peek, what you say ?" "Yes, he is sfast horse," "Ah I pardon Moniietir, but your friend say he fast'inake his hoists, nod' , he tie him to. post so be no go at all." . " Very true, he is made fatt . hy being tied." "Ab, zat cannot be ; be cannot go aeP but what you call a man zat keeps ast 7" "Oh, he is a good man that does no eat.on fast days." " But I have seen one! bon- vivant, who eat and drink,and ride, and : do ev ery zing. Ze people say .he is a bad man—he is very fast." " Tree, that is called living a fast life." " Ah, certainment; zen all ze da►ys o his life mooet be fast days." " Certainly they are." _. " Eh Bien I Does le eat, every ilay,T l " Certainlihe does." " Zen how can he keep fast ?" " Why, he keeps going, to besure." "Mail, tenez I You tell me t i o ; itand fast when you want me to keep still, and , go fast when you want me to run—diable take ze fist." THE HEAD TIIRNEVROUND.--.A crazy man was. found at a grind stone sharp en,ing a large butcher knife, and every now and then examining the edge to see if it was keen. "What are yon doing here 2" "Don't you Bee ? Shnipening this big knife." "Yes, bat what are you - geing to do with it when sharpened 7" • "Cat old Ben Brown's bead off, to be sure." "What I you won't kilniint; will yo - u '?" "Oh, .no I I'll only cut his - head off and stiolt.it right, on again hind-side befoie, just to let the old fejlow look back upon his past life I It *Could 'take him all . the rest of his life to review." What a queer idea the lunatie had• in his head;! And what itit.were so, that every man when he reached a certain age, had his face turned round, and was obliged to spend the rest of his days. in looking over his -past life. Wouldn't there be strange sights? A fishionable, butignorent lady, de sirous of purchasing a watch, was shown a very beautiful one, the shop keeper remarking that it went thirty-Mx hoar& "Whet in one da 1" she asked. VOL. XIII.-NO. 40. For The Mr:grist:law. Hints to Young Ladies. As I was - glancing over the columns of the "Mariettian" of the 20th ult., my attention was directed to an article entitled "A LADY'S ADVICE TO YOUNG MEN." I will not attempt to palliate or deny the statements made by the "Martyr to Late Hours ;" but in retaliation, I (a presumptuous youth) would like to give certain young ladies a few general hints. "We (the young ladies), want to rise early these pleasant mornings, and im prove the shining hours.' " Rather shining, I should say, for '• Old Sol " is gsnerally pretty high in the heavens when yon leave your couch ? And hav ing descended to the dining room, you are greeted by "Ma," with a pleasant ' good morning, and ' my dear, will you have your dinner now ?'" "Thank you, but I prefer taking a lunch first.' The hopeful young daughter ()scorning her self in a large and comfortable lounge, exclaims as her " Ma" disappears to prepare her meal, "a little more sleep, a little more slumber, a little more folding of the bands to sleep 1" 0, how my heart aches for 'poor ma,' as I think that she must act the slave, while her daughter is acting the lady ; that she must do the work while the daughter is afraid of soiling her lily white hands, by placing them in the greasy water of a dish-pan. Now may I inquire how these young ladies improve 'the shining hours P Yes yes,' methinks I hear some one exclaim, and since asking the question, I will an swer myself. Having partaken of the morning meal, she arranges her toilet, proceeds to the street, and, meeting a gaily-dressed companion, they saunter along the sidewalk like idle butterflies. Not walking for any other purpose than to see and be seen. And they are fre quently starched up so stiff, that they would . scarcely condescend to notice their own mother. I agree perfectly with "the martyr" about keeping late hours, and sometimes staying to the ema' hours" of morning. Yet it is as frequently the fault of the fair damsel as of the beaux. For will) can resist that most plaintive appeal, "Do not be in a hurry, 'tis not late yet." And to add strength to her words, she turns her beaming eyes upon him, which speaks so mach louder thin words, his heart goes pit-erpat, and he is lost, he stays another hour. Oen you blame him l' ONE WHO KNOWS. =MI ir,Tle subject of impression at first eight was , being talked over at the sup per table, when the lady whose dnty it was to preside "over the tea cups and tea" said shel always formed an idea of a person at Hest eight, and generally found it to be correct. "Mamma," said the youngest son, in a shrill voice that ittracted . the attention of all present. "Well, my dear, what is it ?" re - plied the fond mother. "I want to know what was your opin ion of me when you first saw me r This question gave , a sudden turn to he conversation. far A loving wife once waited on a physician - to request• him to prescribe for her husband's eyes, which were very tore. "Let him wash them," said the doctor "every morning with a small glass of brandy." • • A few weeks after the doctor chanced to meet the wife. "Well, has your busband followed my advice V' "He has done eveything In his power to do it, doctor," said the sponse, "but be never could get the glass higher than his month, I am sorry to asy." sir Hope writes the poetry of the_boy, memory.but that of the man. Man I,ooke forward with smile!, but backwirds with signs. Such is thel wise providence of heaven. The cup of life is sweeter at the brim, the flavor is impared as we drink deeper, and the dregs are made bitter that we may not struggle when it is,taken from our lips. A gentleman, upon being asked what was the-reason.of the present fashion of loading young ladies' necks with huge chains, replied that it was to keep the dear angels earthward, lest they should soar away—se they were made to "'carry weight. ' Kisses like the faces of Philosophers vary. SooTie are hot as a coal of fire, some as sweet as honey, some as milk, some as tasteless as long drawn soda. Stolen kisses are said to have more nut d meg an cream than any attar sort. Whelk is-a storm like a fah after hook ? Whoa it le going to Alitit bolt.)