BY FREIYK L. BAKER. BRITTON & MUSSER'S i f FAMILY DRUG!" 1:E, .11Iarket Street, - 4 ,1 11 ,- a, Pa. BRITTOT: & MUSSER, successors to Dr. F. will continue the butlinees at the old .fiend, where they are daily receiving additions ,„ their stock, which are received from the Dioat reliable importers and manufacturers. T h e y would respectfully ask Q liberal share public patronage. they are now prepared to supply the du of the public with everything in their [ale of trade. Their stock of DRUGS AND MEDICINTAS FRT,SII AND NYRE, lump JUST ARRIVED. I'ol ernes` o g.iquoN . FOIL MEDICINAL USES ONLY, - All THE POPULAR PATENT MEDICINES. Dye Stalls of all kinds, Fancy and Toilet Ar ticlei of every kind, Alcoholic and Fluid Sixtrati, Alcaloid and Resinoids, all the beat Trusses, Abdominal Sup po rtera, Shou bier Braces, Breast Pumps, Nipple Shells and Shields, Nursing Bottles, A large supply of HAT, HAIR, TOOTH, NAIL AND CLOTHES BRUSHES. , Toth powder and Pastes, Oils, Perfumery, ,atps, Combs, Hair Dyes, Invigorators, Sze.; Old Oil, Lumps, Shades, Chimneys, Wick, &c, Physicians supplied at reasonable rates . Nlitlivines and Prescriptions carefully and ac curately c ompounded all hours of the day and bight, by Charles 11. Britton, Pharmaceutist, who will pay especial attention to this branch d the business. Having had over ten years parties' experience in tke drug buainess ena qcs him to g uarantee entire satisfaction to all eh„ way puts/Diu the new firm. ItAssou's Compound Syrup of Tar, on Died and for sale. A huge suppl of School Books, StationarY, &c y .. always on hand. SUNDAY HOURS: From Sto 10, a. in.,-12 to 2, and 6to6p. m. ChtirVl 11. Britton. A. Musser Marietta, October 20, 1866. Iltf gin A. LINDSAY, .408 MANUFACTURER & DEALER IN BOOTS & SHOES, MARKET STREET, MARIETTA, PENN. %Vonl4 most respecttully inform the citizens of this Borough and neighborhood that he has ut Ibis lone the largest assortment of City made work ever offered in this Borough, amongst which may be mimed the new-style ;Foot, Globe,—V AANOI.qiS FOIL THE LAME& A. L. being a practical BOOT AND SHOE MARIO, enables him to select with more ;elginent than those who are not. He contin ;:es to manufacture in thd very beat manner everything in the BOOT AND SHOE line, .Aluch he win warrant for neatness and fit. Call and examine the new stack before og elsewhere. W ILLCO.K wo R , L isE GLIII ss I3S a.V%iwt..a _/ILadzirie The most simple, complete end easily man wed Sewing Machine now in use. It does (eery ,!Pieription of work—never stops, at or 1.4A:1 to be helped over scams, but does all is work rapidly and well. The needle re ylires no adjustment —you cannot get it in wrong—it makes any width of hem you wish -,(1,,es braiding beautifully: The Braider tif a the foot of every machine and part of it. lind is always adjusted, never gets out of place, Call and examine them before purchasing itrq other, at H. L. & E. J. Z ARM'S, C , ,riler North Queen ,street and Centre Square, Solo Agents for Lancaster County. Lancaster, February 17, 1865.-tf. 1-11.rnE-le, IVI. Physician and Surgeon. If AVI NG removod to Columbia, would em -I.l_ brace this opportunity of informing hie I ,, treer patients and tamilies in Marietta and •ieittity, that he can still be consulted daily, Lit wren 2 and 3 o'clock in the afternoon, at the residence of Mr. Thomas Stence. Any word left there will be promptly attended to. Marietta, April 1,1867,4 f. DR. J. Z. HOFFER, DENTIST, Or TILE BALTIMORE': COLLEGE I lium' OF DENTAL SURGERY, LATE OF HARRISBURG. 11FFICE:—Front street, next door to It Willifitus' Drug Store, between Locust 'lll,l Walnut streets, Columbia. DA.NIEL G. BAKER, ATTORNEY AT LAW, LANCASTER, PA OFFICE :—No. 24< NORTH DUNE STREET opposite the Court House, where he will at tend to the practice of his profession in all its various branches. - "VAT_ - C7Nrc•rrall, Sul icon Dentist, 4 %/ MET STREET, ADJOINING="II4.4 rn j r & Itatlt's ,Store, second floor, MARIETTA, PA. H. B. TROUT, X. D., Offer s his professional services to the citizens of Marietta and vicinity. Ot vac I::—III the Rooms formerly occupied by Dr. V. Hinkle, Market-et., Marietta. Arr KNTION SPORTSMEN!! A Eley's Gun cape, Eters Gun Wadds, Dupont's Sporting and Glazed Duck Powder Baltimore Shot; Shot Pouches, Powder Flasks old at JOHN SPANGLER'S. THE SEASON! Amuther amval.of those incomparable Gas Ilurrung Parlor - Stoves. Also, THE IMPROVED VULCAN HEATER. Cull unesee them at J. SPANGLER'S. CHOICE Lot of Books for children called IX in iltstructable Pleasure Books ; School and l'alwr Books, Stationary, Pens, Pen holdeis at DR. LA NDIS'. SomwritiNG NEW Patent clasp pock et books, no Bunt bands to renew, adapte 1 .0 say condition of the finance, at JOHN SPANGLER'S. li "). " El OF .431E121CA, for beautifying n t hr complexion, softening the skin, re -'.n mil, freckles told pimples. nt Dr. Luntliz' "Golden Mortar." T4,tcm ariett an. 2ld.Ys'✓7i~4. The Mariettian, is published weekly, at 1 11:0 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,tenlines or less, 75 cents for the first insertion, or three times for $1:50. Profession al or Business Cards; of six lines or less, ow 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 cents. A liberal deduc tion made to yearly advert4sers. Having put up a 71610: Jobber press and added a large addition of job type, etas border, etc., will enable the estab- liihment to execute every description of Plain and Pane?'Printing, from the smallest card to the largest poster, at short notice and reasonable rates. A Snake in tho Grass, BY JOHN G. AXE CoMe, listen to me, my lad, Came, listen to me a spell Let that terrible drum Fora moment be dumb, For your unele.is going to tell What befell A youth who loved liquor well. A clever young man was he, my lad, And with beauty uncommonly blessed, Ero with brandy and wine He began to decline, And behaved like a person possessed. I protest The temperance plan is the best. One evening he went to the tavern, my lad, He went to the tavern one night, And drinking too much Rum, brandy and such, The chap got exceediugly "tight," And was quite What Vier aunt would entitle a "fright." The fellow fell into a snooze, my lad, 'Tie a horrible slumber he takes-L. He trembles with fear, And acts very queer ; My eves! how he shivers and shakes When he wakes, And raves about great horrid snakes ! 'Tis a warning to you, and to meouy lad, A particular caution to all— Though no one can see The viper but he— To hear the poor lunatic howl, "How they crawl All over the floor and the wall:, The next morning he took to his bed, my lad, Next morning he took to his bed; And he never got up To dine or to sup, Though properly physicked and bled ; And I read, Next day the poor fellow was dead. You have heard of the snake in the grass, my d, Of the viper concealed in the grass; But now you must know Man's deadliest foe Is a snake of a different class ! Alas ! 'Tis the viper that lurks in the glass. THE LAST TlME.—There will be, dear! reader, a last time to us with all things; earthly—a list time to speak of the goodness of God, and urging sinners to come to this fountain of life. A last time we shall have of speaking to a beloved brother or sister, or kind father or mother, it may be, who knows novas yet the blessedness of religion. A last time the Sabbath school teach- I er will have of appearing before his clue. A last prayer the Christian will offer, a last hymn of praise he will sing. There will be, to, to the sinner a last time—.n last tithe of attending the pray ermeeting, a - last prayer he will hear of fered for his salvation. A last sermon, a-last Sabbath that will ever dawn upon him. There is to be, there mast be a last time to all these privileges which we now enjoy. Do we rightly consider these blessings ? The present is ours ; it may be our last. Let us wisely improve each day-and mo ment, as though indeed it were our last, then shbil we be prepared for the un known future: or The following purports to be a model medical puff: "Dear Doctor, I shall be one hundred and seventy-five years old next October. For over eighty four years I have beeu an invalid, un. able to step except when moved by, a laver. But a year ago, I heard of the Gyanicular syrup. I bought a bottle, smelt the cork, and found myself a new man. I can now run twelve miles and a half in an hour, and throw thirteen sem. ersaults without stopping." dar Almost every young lady is pub- g6tptilkut thnitsebania goltrnat for itt ffiontt Gait. MARIETTA, PA., SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1867. Remembrance of the Dead, They tell us--don't they ?--that one .. . of the mercifullest dispensations of Providence is our facility for forgetting —the ease and quickness with which we get over things. To me it seems that what points out the sting of every grief, is the thought that a time will come when we shall grieve no more. It is terrible enough, God wot„ for a person to drop out of our lives ; but to drop out of our hearts tool Ah, poor dead ones I is not that hard ? As long as their memory is with us fresh and green—as long as h lives with us, as ' they themselves lived with us, coming in and going out, in the house and in the street, in talk and in silence, on Sun days and on week-days—so long as we do seem to keep a little portion of them with-us, they do not seem quite gone away from us. But the - same thing hap pens to na all. Strive and resolve as we may to keep our sorrow fresh, and new, and glossy, it is all to no purpose ; it grows insensibly old, and stale, and shab by, like the crape around our hats. Have not you, oh friends, before now, seeing some aquaintance who had just issued out of a great tribulation, laughing and talking, apparently unchanged—have not you said within yourselves, how unfeel ing he is i how different I should be ! And lo ! the apple of your eye is taken away from you, and in a week or two you also are laughing and talking—the river of your life flows on smooth, • un ruffled, as if that new made grave were razed out of creation. ' . Ont of sight, out of mind," is true to a certain extent of all of us. We can not be always thinking of what we never see ; that it is the very thing that makes it so difficult for us to rest our minds on heaven, and heaven's high King. We cannot see them, and so we but feebly, tranciently realize them. The people we see, who talk to us, and we to them, whom we can hear, and, touch, and feel, gradually fill more and more of that va• cant space ; the overpowering force of time saps our woes, as a little wave, splashing through long ages, wears and hollows at last the great granite rock. But oh ! we don't forget. really ! I don't mean you to think that. The wound heals over slightly ; we cored not walk about with great gaping gashes. The world's work could not get done if we did ; but beneath the surface that looks all fair and even, there is a great dull ache going on always—an ache that takes the taste of our life's savory meats, and makes us tall short day all too long. Troy, N. Y. MARRIAGE AND CELIIIAbY.—An essay o warning and instruction for young men : also; Diseases and Abuses Which prematurely pros, trate the Vital Powers, with sure means of releif. Sent free of charge, in sealed letter envelopes. Address, DR. J. Smilax Houorr-' TON, Howard Association, No. 2 South Ninth, Street, Philadelphia, Pa. [ july I , . S. S. RATHVON, Merchant Tailor, and Clothier, At P. I. Kramples Old Stand, on the Coyl ner of North Queen and Orange Streets, Lancaster, Penn'a. GR ATEF U L to the Citizens of Marietta{ and vicinity, for the liberal patronage heretofore extended, the undersigned respect-. fully solicits a continuance of the same; as suring them, that under all circumstances, no. efforts will be spared in rendering a satisfactory{ equivalent for every act of confidence reposed.{ CLOTHS, CASS/MERES A N VESTINGS, and such other seasonable material as fashion and the market fain/Mee, constantly kept on hand and manufactured to order, promptly, and rea l sonably, as taste or style may suggest. A L50,-READ Y , DI ADE CLOTHING, Gentlemen's Furnishing Goonds and such articles as usually belong to a Mer chant Tailoring and Clothing establishment. Bishop, who was fond of shoaling, UNIVERSITY JOURNAL OF in one of his excursions, met with a MEDICINE AND SURGERY. friend's gamekeeper, whom he sharply A Semi -Monthly Yournare Medicine, Surgery, Ireproved for inattention to his religious • Physiology, Hygiene, and General Litera-1 tune, devoted to the Profrsnind_thenpr../.. duties, exhorting him strenuously to go to church and read his Bible." The keeper, in an angry mood, responded, Why - I do read my Bible, sir, but I don't find in it any mention of the apos tles going a-shooting." " No, ray, good man, you are right," said the bishop ; "the shooting was very bad in Palestine so they went fishing instead." unta: ?OFDUNES AT A SINGLE BLOW.—"I. find," said a shrewd merchant, "I make most money when I am least anxious about, it." There is practical philosophy in this remark. Caution, prudence, sagac ity, and deliberation are all necessary to business success. Some men, it is true, get rich suddenly, but the great majority do not, and cannot. Bonaparte once said, "I have no idea of a merchant acquiring a fortune as a general wins a battle—at a single blow." Such for tunes too often vanish.suddenly. To make a whitewash ibat will not rub o'l, mix up half a pailful of lime and water ready for whitewashing ; make a starch of half a pint of flour and pour it into the whitewash while hot ; stir it well and it is ready for use. If yu trade with a Yankoe, steal hiz . fast • for if he _et6 to .whit• The Power of Woman, Whateveri may be the customs and laws of a country, the women of it decide the morals. They reign because, they hold possession of our affections. put, their influence is more or less salutary ? according to the degree of esteem which is granted them. Whether they are our idols or companions, the reaction is complete, and _they make us as they are themselves. It seems as if nature con nected our intelligence with their dignitYl as we connect our morality with their virtue. This, therefore, is a law of eter nal justice ; man cannot degrade, women without himself falling into degradation ; he cannot raise them without himself becoming better. Let us cast our eyes over the globe and observe two great divisions of the h - uman race, the east and the west. One half of the ancient world remain without progress or thought and under the load of a barbarous cultivation, women are serfs. The other half advance toward, freedom and light, the women aro loved and honored. A PonaNn JOKE.-A good story is old of a Mr. Sayre, of Lexington, Ken neky , Mr. Sayre lisps &little, and a good joke is told of him, the better for its truth. Some years since an overseer of one his farms told him he needed some hogs an his place. Said Mr. Sayre : "Very well, go and buy four or five thouth and pigs right away, and put them on the farm." The man, accustomed to obey, and hat without questioning, asked : "Shall I take the money with me to purchase with ?" "No thir I They all know me. Them] thein here—l'll pay them, or give you the money to pay when you get them." The overseer went his way, and in two weeks returned, when the following conversation took place: "Well, Mr, Sayre, I _ can't get that many pigs—l have ridden all over the country, all about, and can buy but be- t ween eight and nine hundred." . "Eight or Pine hundred what?" "Eight or nine hundred, pigs." "Eight or nine hundred pigth ! Who told you . to buy that many pigth? Are you a fool ?" "Yon told me to buy them two weeks since. I have tried to do it." "Eight or nine hundred pigth I I ne ver told you any such a thing." "But you did—you told me to go out and buy four or five thousand pigs I" "I• didn't do no thutch . thing I rtold you to go and buy fon!. or five thouth and their little pigs, and you have done it I thould say." J/fMr. Sayre had pork to Bell next , 11. TRUE RELIGION Is PLEASANT.=OIIO of the great avenues to success in religion consists in making it pleasant, and being pleasant yourself, and acting in such a way as to explode the old notion that a thing is dull in proportion as it is good, and that a thing is good in proportion as it is stiff, and hard, and narrowing, and that a man with a lugubrious face, bringing midnight to children, was a great deal more apt to produce deep emotions than anybody else. Gaiety and humor, and genial ways, tend also to deep affections and moral earnestness. It is the spirit not only, but the express declaration of sacred writ, that we are` not only to do men good, but that we are to see to it that, in doing good, it is not done harshly, or at the expense of suffering. We are to do them good, if possible, in the pleasantest way. We are to make religion pleasant to them. ----__ cr They have a patriarch in Taunton, I Mass., who says that he once raised a floc k of wild ducks from a pond, when he took aim at them with his gun and fired. They flew away with mach clam or, and, surprised to find that none of them dropped, he examined the field of battle. He picked up four bushels of legs. There is a touch of pathos in the old man's voice as he added I flied too low." A philosopher being asked what was the first thing necessary toward winning the love of a woman, answered, "An op- "Too Mum" Drmo."-,-in a small vill age in New England, lived an old chap, who,,though very wealthy, did not pos sees a goad education, as also - did not hie Fife. He yurchased much of his household goods at a dry-goods and gro cery store in the,village and at, the end of the year the bill was presented for payment. On one occasion in ladling it, over, he,observed that the worcl to" occurred frequeooy. On reaching home le said to his wife " What have f yom,been doing with so much ditto this year ?" sho,wingherbew it stood onthe bill. " I haven't bought any' and what have you been doing with so much ?" " I haven't bad a bit," oho replied. "You must have, had it," he . returnsd, "for M. alwaYs deals honestly by me, and here it is on the bill. Yon can see for yourself." " I donq care if it is . ; I haven't had any, and M. has cheated yon; I always said he wonld." • ".Well, then, I.mnet see about it," he replied. So he trudged back to the store. ' " "Look here M., what do yon mean charging me with so much ditto ? haven't had any, and my wife says she hasn't." M. bit his lip and politely explained. When 'the old - gentleman returned home, his, wife inquired if he had found out about the 'ditto. "Yes," slSid he "I have found out = hat I was a great fool, and you was, a ditto. SPlCy.—Therb was a knot of sea cap tains in a store at Honolulu, the- keeper of which had just bought a barrel of black pepper. Old Captain --, of Salem, came in, and seeing the pepper, took- up a handful of it, "What do you buy each stuff as tha for Y It halt peas," said he to the store keeper. "Peas there isn't a pea in it," re plied the storekeeper. Taking up a handful as he spoke, he appealed to the , company. They all . looked at it, and plungedtheir heads into the barrel, and , bit a kernel or so, sand , then gave it as their universal opiniOn that there wasn't a pea in it , "I tell you there le, ".said the captain, again scooping up a handful ; "and I'll bet a do - liar on it." • • The Old Boston argument all over the• world. They took him up. "Well," said he, "spell . that," pointing to the word 'P-e-p-p-er,' painted on, the side of the barrel; "if it isn'4 half p's, then I'm no judge, that's all." ' he bet was paid. MASTER AND SCROLAR.—" When I was a boy," said an old man, "we had a :choolmaster who had an odd way of catching idle boys. One day he called out to lat 3 : "Boys, I must have closer attention_ to your books. The first one of you-that_ sees another boy idle I want you to in form me, and I will attend to-the case. "Ah, thought I to myself, "there is Joe SimpsoEc - that I don't like. I'll watch him, and if I see him look off his book, I'll tell. It was not long, before I saw Joe look off his book, and I imme diately informed the master. "Indeed," said he, "how did you know he was idle 1" "I saw him, said I. "You did ; and were your eyes on.your book when you saw him ?" I was caught, and never weached for idle boys again. If we are sufficiently watchful over our own conduct, we shall have no time to nd fault with -the conduct of others. FOR SUNDAY.—The following is to be read every Sabbath morning, just before starting to church : "Diary do you remember the text this morning V "No papa, I never can re member the text ; I've such a bad mem ory." "Mary," said her mother, "did you notice Susan Brown?" "Oh, yes. What .a fright! She had on her last years bonnet, done up ; a pea green silk, a black lace mantilla, brown.gaiters, an, imitation of a lioniton collar, a lava bracelet, her old ear drops, and such a fan ! Qh my 1" Mother—" Well my dear, your memory is improving." A lady was examining an applicant for the office of "maid of all work," 'hen she asked her if she could scour tinware with alacrity. Ma'am," replied Mary, "I atlas scour 'em with sand." sgr Refusing to pay your printer's bills and robbing a hen roost are the same thing in Dutch, only a little differ; ently expressed. sir The last case of jealousy. is that of a lady who discarded her lover, a sea VOL. XIII.--NO. 43. Stuff for Smiles. Why is a woman mending her stock ings deformed ? Because her hands are where her feet ought to' be. A wicked paragraphist thinks " stuffi ing" in this country developes the fair as well as the fowl. "Of she goes," said Mr. Smith to his spouse, as they started .by the railway. "Yon are wrong," said Mrs. Smith, 'for this is thernail train." "Sam, why am members -of de Con gress like de fishes 2" " I don't meddle with the Bailee' Pomp." "Why, don't you see, dey'e so fond of debate." Carlyle, in hie advice to young men, Gaye : "If you doubt whether to, kiss a pretty girl, give her the benefit of the doubt." "One might have heard a pin fall." is a proverbial expression of silence ; but it has been eclipsed by the French phrase; "Yon might have heard the unfolding of a lady's cambric handker chief." It is stated that a sexton of a fashion able church in New York, has sold two bpshelS of "bugle trimming," found in the pewa'and aisles, during the last season. It is to be sorted and used again. "The eastest way to get a living," says a vagabond poet, "is to sit on a gate and wait for good luck. In case goodjuck don't come along, you are no worse off than you ware before." We have heard of the witty reply of a slave who had stolen and eaten one —of his master's turkeys, when he was accus ed of the crime. He replied, saying that "massa's property only changed form ; he has less turkey, but more nigger." There is an old story that a Jaw while indulging in a morsel of forbidden food, (pork) was overtaken by a terrific thunder storm, and that, as the thunder roared, and the lightning flashed around, he exclaimed : "Plesh my soul, vet a pother apout a leetle pit of pork !" "How is your son to-day ?" asked a friond of a stock broker. "Very ill," replied the old gentleman, struggling to maintain- composure, tears coursing down his cheehs ; "very ill—l would not give ten per cent, for his chance for life." "Pa, didn't you whip me for biting Tommy'?" "Yee; my child, you hurt him very mach." "Well, then, pa, you ought to whip mamma's music teacher, too, for he bit mamma right in the mouth, and I know it hurt her for she put her arms around his neck and tried to choke him." "As I was going," said an Irishman ; N. "over Westminster bridge the other day, I met Pat Hewins, says I 'how are you ?' 'Pretty well, I thank you, Donley,' says he. Says I, 'that's not my name.' Faith and no more is my name Hewins,' says he. So we looked at each other, and faith it turned out to be neither of us." A young lawyer, who had long paid court to a lady without much advancing his suit, accused her one day of being insensible to the power of love. "It does not follow," she archly replied, "that I am so because I atm not to be won by the power of attorney.""F4r give me," replied the suitor, "but yon should remember that all the votaries of Oupid are solicitors," Apolitical convention in. New Eng- land several years ago nominated a quiet well-to do farmer for the office of Lieu- tenant-Governor. The nominee gra ciously received the committee appointed I wait upon him at his residence, and after expressing his thanks for the honor conferred upon him, informed the com mittee that he had peculiar qualifications for Lieutenant Governor, "For gentle men," said he, "that is just the office I have held in my house for the last twen ty.five years." lir I serenaded Sophia once when she was but a tender lass, and the greeting which I received for my traveling musi cal convention has never been fully appreciated by me. It was the witching hour of 1 a. m., when church-yards yawn. Everything was hushed and stillness reigned profound. I commenced to sing, "I bring a little flower to Thee." Sophia's A tjrannical pap stuck his head out of 't' window, and in a voice of thunder roared : "Well, just set it on the door-step, and don't make so much fuss about a cussed little flower." Cr "Sir, I'd have you to know that I keep one of the best tables in the city, sir !" exclaimed an indignant landlady to-a boarder who had beeafiuding fault with his fare. "'That may be true, ma'am,' quietly started the boarder, "11 f• t ver (Z IL