TERMS OF PUBLICATION. The REPORTER is published every Thursday Morn ing, bv E. O. Goodrich, at s'2 per annum, in ad vance. VPVERTISEMENTH are inserted at TEN CENTS per liue for first insertion, and FIVE CENTS per line f,>r subsequent insertions. A liberal discount is made to persons advertising by the quarter, half war or year. Special notices charged one-half more than regular advertisements. All resolutions ~f Vssociations : communications of limited or in dividual interest, and notices of Marriages and Deaths exceeding five lines, are charged TEN CENTS p.-r line. 1 Year, fi mo. 3 mo. One Column SSO $35 S2O k " 30, 25 15 One Square, 10 7J 5 Administrator's and Executor's Notices.. $2 (X) Auditor's Notices 2 50 business Cards, five lines, (per year) 5 00 Merchants and others, advertising their business, will be charged sls. They will be entitled to 4 column, confined exclusively to their business, with privilege of change. •'"—Advertising in all cases exclusive of sub scription to the paper. JOB PRINTING of every kind in Plain and Fan cy colors, done with neatness and dispatch. Hand bills, Blanks, Cards, Pamphlets, Ac., of every va riety and style, printed at the shortest notice. The Reroutes Office has just been re-fitted with Power Presses, and every thing in the Printing line can b, executed in the most artistic manner and at the lowest rates. TERMS INVARIABLY CASH. V.r.uUonl fJUjwrter. PETROLEUM. For many years Cotton has been called King. But there are abundant indications at the present that his majesty has been de throned, and that another power has usurped his place. It is but a few years since that Petroleum became known to the American public, or to the world, and it is astonishing how great an interest is already concurred in its production. Four years ago, you might after much search, procure a few ounces of a druggist to rub upon a rheumatic joint, but whether it ever relieved a single rheu matic twinge or stitch, is still problemati cal. Now. it is found that hundreds of thousands of barrels a year will not supply tin-demand. Every American ship as sac touches a foreign port is- searched for the precious product, and the foreign trader di vides Ids interest in the price of Petroleum in the New York market, with the price of gold. It is rapidly taking the place of every article known to men as a light-giv ing, lubricating agent; in fact we knowuot, vet, to how many uses it may be applied. As great as may have been our ignor ance of Petroleum, it was known to the ancients, and some wiseacres maintained that the slime which hardened and rendered compact the tower of Babel and the v ails j , f Babylon, was composed of coal oil, and further, that when the judgment of the ; Almighty descended upon the cities of the! plain, the rocks opened and the burning springs of petroleum wrapped them in Humes. There is a section of tl e United States, the eastern boundary of which may be sup- | posed to be the Alleghany ridge, extending ! south to the Georgia line, and west across ] the Mississippi and Ohio, including large portimis of .Missouri, Illinois, Indiana and : Ohio, and on its m rtliern verge a dozen j counties of north-western Pennsylvania, ! which is underlaid with the Bituminous ! U d fields. This section is also the field! which at different depths below the surface j yields Petroleum, rock oil, coal oil, or by ! whatever other name it maybe known. It is in north-western Pennsylvania upon ; the Alleghany river and its tributaries that Petroleum is found in the greatest abun dance, although many wells have been sunk in Western Virginia, and a large capital is at this early day embarked in its search, even there, notwithstanding the war. Oil city, in the county of Venango Pa., has be come a thriving village, and five years ago it was but a wilderness. Franklin, another I center of the oil business is fast growing ; into importance, and all along, up and down | the river, oil, oil, is the universal cry— j thousands of wells are sunk, thousands and j tens of thousands of barrels are filled, lain- ; dreds of companies are forming, farms and nil lots are bringing fabulous prices, rail- j roads are building to afford egress to the ' odorous treasure, and hurry scurry, hustle j bustle, are the order of the day. The oil is found at various depths—some • wells are less than a hundred feet deep, but those which penetrate from three to six hundred feet or even eight hundred feet, ! yield the most, and yield the longest. Toe supply is frequently abundant and over- : flowing at first, taxing every effort to se- j cure it, and rising in a jet sixty feet into ! tin' air. I lie flow often ceases altogether, ! but is restored by sinking the wells deeper, ; or by rimming them as it Is termed, which consists in enlarging the bore an inch or I so. equally, all around its circumference. In one instance this was done in a well of four hundred feet depth, which as yet, had given no sign of oil. When this process had been completed to within fifty feet of tiie bottom, oil suddenly rose to the top in J large stream, and the supply has been steadily continued. The simple enlarge ment ol the well an inch or an inch and a half on each side, fortunately opened a ; urge vein, which the drill had passed, proving that the oil flows in veins, in-! tead of being contained in reservoirs.— lwo or more wells may be near each other yielding oil, and another in the vicinity field none. The well has the true Artesian character. a spot is selected upon which to commence 'lterations —the tall pyramidal derrick in elosing it rises in the air—a large reser oiir is constructed of plank, perhaps, to re weive the oil, the steam engine to furn'sli : he power is conveniently placed, and the first bhiw is struck: then through days, weeks and perhaps months of unremitting labor, the work goes on ; inch by Inch, foot 1 y foot, fathom by fathom, the drill enters the bowels of mother earth to be followed at last, or to meet the clear, shining, liquid b ensure, that looks upon the sun for the 'list time after a being in total darkness for a million of years. * 13. O. GOODRICH, Publisher. VOLUME XXV. This liquid substance, or product, thus procured, is Petroleum, rock oil, or coal oil as it is often termed. Chemically, it is a hvdro-carbon—a compound of hydrogen and carbon —and belongs to a family of agents which in decomposition or combus tion, gives off a most brilliant light. It exists abundantly in nature, and is des tined to occupy the same position as a source of light, that coal does as a source of heat. We have in these two agents an exemplification*of the goodness of Provi dence in supplying our race, fr >m the vast store houses of nature, products of such prime necessity to domestic life—products elaborated by natural laws in a period long antecedent to the existence of man, and now to be appropriated to his benefit. A writer in the Philadelphia Press, has made an estimate of the cost of an oil well six hundred feet in depth. The whole sum is nearly seven thousand dollars, but there are scores and hundreds of them that yield daily, from three to five hundred barrels of oil. Think, reader, of the income of the proprietors of such a well ! Think again of the present and prospective wealth of the owner of fifty or a hundred acres of oil producing land. And those are not imagin ary cases for just such proprietorshp has really occurred in a hundred instances.— Think of the poor boy with little or no ed ucation, toiling early and lute upon his lit tle homestead of fifty acres, suddenly and as if by magic, at a single stride, stepping into a real, palpable, tangible income of from three to five thousand dollars a day ! Read the history of Johnny Jones as given in the Press of Dec. sth : Johnny Jones (this name is as good as another), was a simple country boy in the service of a farmer whose acres were very hard to till, and therefore twenty years of Johnny's life were given to meagre crops and bjid roads. He toiled among the wheat and corn until he grew up to manhood, with no other accomplishments beyond those necessary for a good hostler or stage-driver. Johnny Jones, good hearted in his way. probably attended the vil lage church with all the devotion of a young man who had a good suit of clothes and was in love with a country girl. He married this country girl, and it is possible with her knowledge of plain cooking and the mysteries of apple butter, and Johnny Jones' hard sinews and constant toil, they might have lived and died very respectable old people, leaving the farm to their children, and made no more impression upon the world than any of their useful and necessary class. But the rain falls upon the just as well as the unjust, and it came to pass that Johnny Jones found the poor bar ren acres that were left to him by his foster mother to he mines of more wealth than were ever discov ered in the El Dorado of the far west. He had enough rude sense to keep him from parting with them for a frock or a string of beads, like some of his mere ignorant brethren in West Virginia, and simply sold enough to have them developed, and to retain an interest, which, for the last year, has paid him an income estimated at from three to five thousand dollars a day. I would not like to be re sponsible for the effect of an income of this kind upon any of my friends, nor should I care to have my own conduct criticised were" I to be in receipt of so many glorious greenbacks. Johnny Jones become insane with his new wealth, not in that sense which implies a straight jacket, or close con finement ill an infirmary, but with a far more ter rible meaning. Johnny's sudden wealth carried him up into the clouds, and, as the heaven of his early dreams had been sense-gratifying wealth, he hurried out into the world with his gains, and be gan to be a great man. Such a fish could not long be in the sea of American life without having around him a shoal of sharks, and so Johnny had not proceeded very far in his new ocean of prosper ity before a shoal of well dressed sharks—sharks with diamond rings and astonishing vests—sharks who knew the mysteries of the gambling-houses and the bagnio—took possession of him, and be gan to feed upon his substance. Oft' they went in their wild career. The poor country wife was left at home to do her plain cooking, make her apple lmtter, and astonish ihe neighbors by the display of several gaudy new dresses. Johnny went to Philadelphia, showering his favors upon hack-dri vers who took his fancy, pleasant-spoken gambling men, and ladies of miscellaneous and cosmopol itan attachments, and upon all that was wicked and vile and seducing in the great metropolis. His ca reer extended to Western and Eastern cities ; and what with diamond rings and losses, and gsrnb ling saloons, and presents to all who asked them, in three months he managed to spend ninety thous and dollars. lam told that Johnny's new life wore deeply into his muscles and his sinews, and quite soddened his poor, feeble brain, and that, as a se quel to his career, some considerate friends who thought that his money might he more advantage ously applied, obtained the interference of the law : and so Johnny's affairs are now in the hands of a receiver, and his money is paid to careful, prudent men, and his great gains are husbanded by others, while he is only permitted to spend a limited in come, something, perhaps, like fifty or one hnn dred dollars per day, which with care and prudence may enable him to passthrongh this period of his great calamity, and become a respectable and worthy old gentleman. However abundant may be the supply of the oil in future time, it can never lose its importance as a valuable product. It may, and probably will, be cheaper in the mar ket as more of the country is given up to its production, but the need it answers will ever be great. Hold fluctuates in value be cause it only measures value, but Kerosene oil supplies a want which must ever exist. As long as earth casts her shadow, so long ifinst darkness be made day. But will the supply of Petroleum con tinue ? If our view of its origin is correct, it will flow while the everlasting hills of coal shall stand, unless, indeed, Bituminous coal becomes Anthracite—a metamorphosis which only the ages can effect. Were the coal fields removed to-day, the earth and shales in this neighborhood are so plente ously imbued with Petroleum, as to yield it lor a lung time to Come, v Is, then, Petroleum a product of the bi tuminous coal fields? We have several facts which favor, though they do not pos itively prove that belief. Ist. As far as these fields extend, from the north to the TOW AND A, 111 south, from the east to the west, through their whole length and breadth, Petroleum is found or is contiguous. 2d. Petroleum from the rocks, and bitumen from the coal, are identical in all their sensible properties and in their chemical composition and relations. 3d. All the coal found east of a certain point or place in the Alleghany inounta ns, where the stratified rocks show evidence of violent displacement or upheaval, isAnthra. cite coal, or coal which has parted with its Petroleum by the action of excessive heat. In the vicinity of the Anthracite coal measures, no Petroleum is found. If the views here glanced at are correct, then, through ages back Petroleum has been dis tilled from Bituminous coal in nature's great alembic, and gathering in clifts and fissures of rock has finally been conducted to the surface in seams made by the strata which often crop out at great distances from the coal itself. But there are other views in respect to the origin and source of Petroleum. One, very plausible,, may be seen in a late number of Harper's Magazine, which is founded upon the assumption that the localities where the oil is now met with, were once the shores of a vast inland sea which were covered for long, long ages, with a rank gigantic growth of sea grass, and that these shores by some great natural convulsion, were submerged—and buried beneath a superin cumbent mass of sand and rock, and that the vegetable growth, subjected to a natur al ferment, and distillation, became the or igin of the oil. There are even other opinions—upon this point naturalists are not agreed, and it is quite probable that the truth is yet to be made known. But however we may reason upon this matter, Petroleum is an undisputed fact. It is now adding much to the comfort, wealth, and prosperity of the age—it is coining money, engaging the attention of business men and the hopes of specula tors, and enlisting as much effort as iron, coal, cotton, or gold. "Whatever adds to the comfort of the masses., is a step in their advancement, and the humble, simple, in significant match, and the more pretentious Kerosene lamp, mark their own period, and shed their own light upon the civilization of our race. Has it ever entered the brains of our wise ones that Petroleum may be found in our own neighborhood ? There are two facts which it were wise to study. One is that we are in the vicinity of Bituminous coal, and another is that our geological formation resembles, if it is not precisely that, of oil producing sections. It is just possible that we are too far east, and yet we are not in the Anthracite region, and we shall do ourselves no harm to look about us. We have no great faith in witch-hazel, but we have an undoubted one in OBSERVA TION. IMPERISHABLE. The pure, the bright, the beautiful, That stirred our hearts in youth. The impulse to a wordless prayer, The dreams of love and truth. The longings after something lost, The spirit's yearning cry, The strivings after better hopes, These things can never die. The timid hand stretched forth to aid A brother in his need. The kindly word in griefs dark hour. That proves the friend indeed. The plea for mercy, softly breathed. When justice threatens high ; The sorrow of a contrite heart, These things shall never die. The memory of a clasping hand. The pressure of a kiss, And all the trifles, sweet and frail, That make up love's first bliss. It was a firm unchanging faith, And holy trust and high. Those hands have clasped; those lips have met. These things shall never die. The cruel and the bitter word. That wounded as it fell: The chilling want of sympathy, We feel but never tell. The hard repulse that chills the heart. Whose hopes are bounding high, In an unfading record kept. These things shall never die. Let nothing pass, for every hand Must find some work to do ; Lose not a chance to waken love— Be firm, and just and true, So shall a light that cannot fade, Beam oil thee from on high, And angel voices say to thee, These things shall never die. ttesT" Josh Billings has recently had bis life insured. These are a few of the ques tions which he answered '"like a man," in the " coufirmatif 1 Are yu mail or femail! If so, state how long yu hav been so. 2. Are yu subject tu fits, and if so, du yu hav more than one at a time. 3. \\ hat is yure precise fiteing weight ? 4. Did yu ever hav enny ancestors, and if so, how much ? 5. W hat iz yure legal opinion ov the constitusliiojiality ov the 10 command ments ? G. Did yu ever hav enny nite mares, if so, what is their best time ? 1. Are yu married and single, or are yu a Bachelor? 8. Do yu beleav in a futur state, if yu du, state it? 0. What are yure private, centiments about a rush ov rats tu the head, can it be diil suceessfuly? 10. Hav yu ever committed suiside, and if so, how did it seem to affect yu ? CtaT What is the difference between a young lady and a soldier ? One powders the face and the other faces the powder. IEGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER. AD FOR I) COUNTY, PA., JANUARY 12, 1865. gtUtitik jfodnj. [From the Atlantic Monthly for Jiuiuary.] MY AITfJI.V WALK. BY WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT. On woodland ruddy with autumn The amber sunshine lies : I look on the befiuty round nie, Aiul tears come into my eyes. For the wind that swept the meadows Blows out of the far Southwest. Where our gallant men are fighting, And the gallant dead are at rest. The golden rod is leaning, And the purple aster waves In a breeze from the land of battles, A breath from the land of graves. Full fast the leaves are drooping Before the wandering breath : As fast, on the field of battle, Our brethren fell iu death. Beautiful over my pathway The forest spoils are shed ; They are spotting the grassy hillocks With purple and gold and red. Beautiful is the death-sleep Of those who bravely fight, In their country's holy quarrel, And perish for the Bight. But who shall comfort the living, The light of whose home is gone ; The bride that, early widowed, Lives broken-hearted on ; The matron whose sons are lying In graves on a distant shore ; The maiden, whose promised husband Comes back from the war no more V 1 look 011 the peaceful dwellings Whose windows glimmer in sight, With crop and garden and orchard That bask in the mellow light : And I know that, when our couriers With news of victory come, They will bring a bitter message Of hopeless grief to some. Again I turn to the woodlands, And shudder as I see The mock-grape's blood red banner Hung out ou the cedar tree ; And I think of days of slaughter, And the night-sky red with flames. On the Chattahooehee's meadows, And the wasted hanks of the James. Oh, for the fresh spring-season, When the groves are in their prime ; And far away in the future Is the frosty autumn time! Oh, for that better season, When the pride of tin foe shall yield. And the hosts of Ood and Freedom March back from the well-won field : And the matron shall clasp her first born With tears of joy and pride : And the scarred and war-worn lover Shall claim his promised bride! The leaves are swept from the branches ; But tlie living buds are there, With folded flowers and foliage, To sprout in a kinder air. October, 18G1. THE FEDERAL CHAMELEON.™ One evening' about an hour after the suit had gone down,a couple of stout men dress ed in soiled rebel uniforms,and each holding' iu his hand a good Austrian rifle, rapped at the door of a small frame building near the 0 road in Virginia. The knock was answered by an old wo men whose face was almost concealed by the tangled masses of her grey, uncombed hair. "And what may ye want heah ?" she ex claimed, as her deep-set eyes Hashed upon the two men. " I haven't the smallest bit of Johnny-cake to offer ye, for it was all—" " No, no," interrupted one of the soldiers, " we don't want anything to eat ; lmt we want you to tell us, and that in quick time, too, whether or not you've seen a slight, but strong looking slip of a man go by here of late ?" "Dressed in blue and carrying a double barrelled rifle," added the other. "Iley! hey!" cried the hag, lifting her hands, and speaking in a sharp, angry voice, " If ye hadn't interrupted me I reck on you'd a heard me speak of him before now, as that was the very man who came here and bought all my cakes. It was about two hours ago, and—" " Which way did lie go after he left you?" inquired both men, eagerly. " Before I answer that question you must tell me who he is," said the old woman, with the curiosity natural to her sex. " ITe's a celebrated T'nion scout whom we call the 'Federal Chameleon,' because he. changes his uniform so often. Sometimes it is blue, at other times gray, and he has even been seen wearing the disguise of an old farmer, lie has snot more of our men than is at all pleasant, and we have a rov ing commission from our colonel to go 011 a hunt after him and capture him, if we can, | either dead or alive. And now as we have | replied to you," continued the speaker a 1 little impatiently, "we demand that you answer o ir question, and—" "Demand !" interrupted the hag in shrill, piercing tones. "Tsthat the proper way to speak to a woman, and an old woman at that ?" "Come, come, answer us if you please," cried the soldier in a milder tone. " I meant 110 harm—it is my way of speaking." " Well, perhaps T may forgive you and perhaps not," said the old woman, shaking her head. " How far is your camp front here?" " What is that to you ? What has that to do—" " There you go again with your accursed incivility !" shrieked the hag, fiercely; "but you shall answer my question before you you get a single word ouU of me. Now, then, bow far is your camp from here, and how many men have you in and around it ? 1 intend to carry your fellows some corn cakes, d'ye see, and I want to know the number of mouths that I will have to cook for.'' " ()'i, in that case," said the .rebel, " I do not see any reason why 1 shouldn't satisfy you. Our camps, then, are about five miles from here, near Cross roads, and our number may be about five thousand." "That will do," cried the old woman with a grin of satisfaction, "yes that will do. And now you are sure that the man xvlio came here to buy a supper is the one you are after?" "We are sure of it, for although we have never seen the man's face, we'd know him by his double-barrelled rifle, as nobody else in the Yankee army carries a weapon of that kind." " Ay, ay, it's the right one, then," said the hag. " After he had finished and paid for his meal, he says to me, 'Friend, T should like to put up here for the night, if you have no objection.' But as I did not like the idea of accommodating a Yankee any more than I could help, I told him there was no room for him, as I expected visitors before many hours. ' Well, then,' says he, ' can you tell me of any place where I can pass the night a little comfortably. You see,' lie added, looking toward his big double-barrelled rifle. ' I don't like to camp out, as it looks like rain, and this piece might be hurt by it.' ' 1 know of no place,' 1 answered,' short of four miles from here—an old barn which is tight enough, I think, to keep off the rain.' ' Fmir miles is a pretty long distance,' said lie, ' and as I have been tramping about considerably to day, 1 don't feel much like carrying this heavy load so far,' pointing to liis knap sack as he spoke. 'Will you be kind enough to let it remain till morning?' 'Well yes,' said 1, hesitating a little, and throw ing a significant glance at the well-filled pocket iiook in his hand. He understood the look and gave me a greenback dollar. ' All right,' said I, and he then departed, saying he'd call for his luggage in the morn ing, after he should waken from his sleep in the barn. ' Now then,' continued the speaker, ' which- will ye do—go after him at once, or wait in ambush for him until morning ?" The two soldiers drew back a few paces and held a short consultation, after which they again advanced to the side of the old woman. " We will go now," said the one who had spoken first, " that is if you can describe to us the exact position of the barn.'' " 1 don't think I could describe it so that you could find it in the dark," replied the hag, "but us I am willin' to do everything in my power fur the confederacy, 1 will go with you to show you the place." "That is right, the rebel, "and we'll see that you are rewarded for your zeal." " I don't want any reward for helping my countrymen, replied the other, "I am always ready to help alon? the cause." With these words she disappeared into an inner room, but came forth in a few minutes with a grey blanket thrown over her shoulders. " I took this out of the Yank's knapsack," said she, with a short, dry laugh ; " don't you think it becomes me ?" " Aye, aye, my good woman, very much. But lead on, if you please, for we have no time to lose." The hag then closed the door of the house. " Forward march !" she exclaimed, imita ting the voice of a man with strong lungs. " Forward march ! Close up ! close up !" And she moved along the road at a slow tottering pace natural to a person of her age. The night by this time had become very dark. The sky was obscured with thick driving clouds, and the wind screamed and roared among the tall pines that towered upon each side of the road. Occasionally a heavy branch wrenched from its native trunk, would fall into the road with a ter rific crash, and more than once the rebels started back and cocked their pieces in the belief that the din xvas caused by the dis charge of some Yankee rifle. " 11 a ! ha ! ha !" laughed the old hag up on one of these occasions, "it seems to me that you are easily startled. Don't you think your commander might have picked out a pair of bolder hearts than yours for this expedition ?" " You'd better keep a silent tongue in your head, my good woman, until you have had an opportunity to witness as many battles as we have," answered one of the men; "a good soldier is always on his guard." "Aye, aye!" replied the old woman; " but be should know how to distinguish between the crashing of a dry branch and the ring of a rifled musket." The rebel did not relish the noise made by the loud, sharp tones of the female guide, and, in order to put an end to the conver sation, he controlled himself sufficiently not to reply to her last remark. The party then continued tlieir way in silence —which was not broken by either of tliem until they lied gone about three miles, and a loud, clear challenge suddenly startled the rebels, " Halt! Who comes there ?" " Friend," answered the old woman, in a ringing voice ; "friend with prisoners !" "We are betrayed !" yelled her compan ions, and, even as the words passed tlieir lips, they were surrounded by a dozen Federal soldiers, one of whom carried a lantern. As the rays of the light flashed upon the hag, the rebels saw the grey hair, the blan ket, and the female apparel drop to the ground, revealing the sl'glit but iron-like frame of a Union soldier in the prime of life ! "It is ho, by !" exclaimed the prison ers, simultaneously, as their glance wan dered to the long double barrelled rifle, which he now held in hand ; " it is he-- the scout—the Federal Chameleon !" " Aye, aye !" answered the latter, as he leaned upon his weapon, with aquiet smile. " You are trapped, sure enough, thanks to my disguise, which is only one of the many that I carry in my knapsack. Allow me to express my thanks to you for the informa tion you gave.me regarding the position of your camp and the number of your men. 1 have already sent a message to my colonel in relation to the matter, and 1 perceive he has commenced to act upon it." And as he spoke he pointed down the road where the dark outline ol troops forming into line might be faintly distin guished. They were soon in motion, and in the course of half an hour the booming of can non, the rattling of musketry, and the cheerß of the Federal troops proclaimed siiti pei* Annum, in Auvance. that tin* combat had commenced. Tin* din continued for about an hour, when the pris oners learned from others who were brought to share the'r quarters, that the Southern troops had been surprised and totally rou ted. BARON MUNCHAUSEN IN INDIA A BUF FALO STOKY. A paper published in India tells this re markable exciting story about an adventure there of an enthusiastic entomologist : " One very hot day, shouldering his en tomological net, and with his bottle of cyanide of potassium in bis pocket for the purpose of killing his specimens, he had succeeded in taking several species of moths and beetles, when suddenly emerging on an open spaee, a gigantic female buffalo charged right down upon him. Quick as lightning the narrator spyang up a tree which fortunately happened to be near, and almost before he had comfortably settled down upon one of the branches, a buffalo calf appeared upon the scene, and botli mother and offspring sat down at the foot of the tree, directly under his position. In order to attract the attention of his friends, who were in the neighborhood, or any na tive who might happen to be near, he shouted until lie was hoarse. Ever and anon, byway of variation, with the vain hope of frightening away the buffalo, he awakend the extremest echoes of the jungle with his yells, and perpetrated the most hideous noises ever produced by the human voice. All was of 110 avail ; no friendly hand came to aid him, and the brute still lay placidly licking and caressing its calf. He was about to assume a standing attitude in the tree, when suddenly his left hand, with which he had seized a branch above his head, was severely stung or bitten by some insect or animal. Starting with the acute pain, as the fear of whip or tree snakes flashed through his mind, he involuntary loosed his hold of the bough, and thus de prived of support, he lost his balance and fell from his place of refuge. He dropped on the buffalo's back, and in another in stant was carried away at a tremendous pace through the long thick grass of the jungle It was a difficult matter to keep his seat, when all at once the buffalo sprang into a large " tank," and he was immersed up to his neck in water. Unable to swim, he was obliged to cling to the brute, which for a time swam round and round the pool at her pleasure. He only hoped his legs would not be seized by one of the alliga tors, of which lie had seen several in the water during the day. Then, to his infinite horror, a stinging sensation in his leg made him feel sure he had again been bitten by another kind of serpent. And still the buf falo showed no signs of returning towards the land, when just as he thought lie was preparing to He down, he dug his heels in to her side and delivered random blows with his fist on her head and neck. Then, striking out for land, the brute speedily reached the shore, on gaining which she commenced her mad gallop. A few min utes brought them to the spot from which the animal had started, where the calf was still standing. The buffalo was preparing to lie down, when seizing tiie branches of the tree from which lie had fallen on the brute's neck, he swuug himself up in his old position. He had not, however, been very long there when the smarting in his hand and legs caused him to remember that lie had beer, bitten by snakes. The very idea of this, and the knowledge that one of these veno mous reptiles was in the tree on which he was perched, caused a deadly faiutness, from which it was some time before lie ral lied. Alternately fainting and reviving, hour after hour passed away, night darkened down upon the jungle, and the buffalo still kept watch and ward at the foot of the tree. At length, at an advanced hour of the night, be suddenly became conscious that a strug gle was going on between the buffalo and some large wild animal, which lie judged to be a tiger. ' The growling of the latter,' he continues, ' the groans of the buffalo, the noise of their struggle, and the inces sant bleating of the calf, combined in pro ducing a series of sounds, which, in the darkness of night appeared worthy of the inhabitants of Pandemonium. For full live minutes, which appeared hours to me, the dreadful struggle continued, until at length groans of the buffalo subsided into a series of convulsive gasps and snorts, and the sounds of struggling on the ground almost ceased. I could, however, hear the tiger growling, snarling, and spitting like an im mense cat. Of course descent was now quite out of the question. 1 therefore de termined to remain where I was until day light, if I did not die from the effects of the snake bites before morning appeared. So strong was the interest with which I list ened and strained my eyes for the purpose of learning what was going on below, that I never ceased to think of this contingency, and forgot the death-like swoons 1 had pre viously experienced. " After some time spent in listening to the noise made by the animal while enjoying his feast of buffalo flesh, the sounds ceased suddenly. 1 felt sure, however, that the beast had not departed, for 1 had kept my eyes fixed on the dark outlines un der the shadow of the tree, and the mass remained of the same appearance. I fan cied I could trace the form of a tiger lying alongside the dead buffalo, and this was the shape the dark object had assumed and retained since the termination of the con flict." At length, however, succor was at hand. Seeing a light in the distance, lie shouted as loudly as he could, and this attracted the notice of a party who had set out in search of him. On coming up to the spot, both tiger and buffalo were found to be dead. On tolling his friends he had been bitten by snakes they first examined his hand, and pronounced the wound he received while in flic tree to have been caused by the sting of a hornet. On turning down his stock ings they discovered several leeches gorged with blood, for numbers of these voracious anjnials had bitten him during Ins ride through the water on the buffalo's back. The faintings he had experienced were at tributed to loss of blood from the leech bites. They then turned their attention to the dead tiger. Not a wound was discovered about the carcase, but on slightly moving he body of the buffalo, they discovered the bottle of cyanide of potassium, which had beeu intended for entomological purposes, broken, and partially introduced into the wound in the neck from which the tiger had sucked the blood of his victim. While im bibing the life blood of the buffalo the ti ger had also received one of the most deadly poisons known, which in the course of a very short time had produced its usual fatal result. The position of the tw > ani mals and of the deadly bottle left no room for doubting that such had been the case. On ascending the tree in such hot haste the poison bottle and other little matters won* dropped, and during the struggle between the animals the former was broken, and perhaps even cut its way into the jugular of the buffalo ; thus probably assisting in the death of the latter, as well as proving so fatally destructive to the tiger. On the ap pearance of dawn they discovered a small wasp's nest hanging in the tree. Later in the day they had the satisfaction of super intending the skinning of the tiger, and distributing the meat to the villagers, sonic of whom regarded it as particularly strengthening food. The absence of bullet holes rendered th j skin a valuable one. NUMBER 33. OLD MAIDS. —Should a girl be modest, quiet, unobtrusive, adding neatness and or der to a long line of heme virtues : the ac tive auxiliary of her mother, and the guar dian angel of her younger brothers and sisters ; the stinted praise is allowed her of being " a good girl, but old maidish." Beau ty she may possess and a mind whose rare endowments render her alike the ornament and honor of her race ; a heart whose un selfish love takes in the interest of others before her own ; yet as her more thought less sisters grow up around her, commit ting their children to her kind and prudent management, the whispers grow louder on every side that she is fast becoming an old maid. While thoughtless folly dances, she may reflect, while others' beauty is par aded in gaslight and ball-room before an admiring multitude, hers may deepen in a solitude made radiant by noble deeds; while others lean for support on those around them, she may rest on the strength of her own mighty spirit, made such perhaps by the reflex wave of the world's selfishness, which has left her lonely on the cold sands of its own forgetfuluess. Nay, the very virtues of her character are turned against her ; and the meek patience, the self for getfullness, the reasonableness of her lite, have singled her out for censure, and by this time she is quite an old maid. Now turn the tapestry. Let sweet eighteen be selfish, fickle, foolish ; let her fattier, brother, home, be all forgotten in the world ; let household duties lie neglec ted for works as trifling as to weave tin spider's web ; let common sense and words of wisdom be exchanged for fashionable nonsense, and bright bloom of early beauty be worn out by late hours and broken spirits—why, she is a charming girl, a splendid creature ! aud will soon, doubt less, be placed in the situation which her education so prominently fits her to main tain—the head of a household, when sin may send for her sister, the old maid, to put the practical part into execution, while she frets, reads novels, and dresses still, the fortunate belle of last season. TREASURES IN HEAVEN*. —We read of a philosopher who, passing through a mart filled with articles of taste and luxury, made himself quite happy with this simple yet sage reflection :—" How many things there are here that Ido not want !" Now this is just the reflection with which the earnest believer passes happily through the world It is richly furnished with what is called good thing s. It has spots of honor and power to tempt the restless aspirings of ambition of every grade. It has gold and gems, houses and lands, for the eon vetous and ostentatious. It has innumer able bowers of taste and luxury, where self-indulgence may revel. But the Chris tian, whose piety is deep-toned, and whose spiritual perceptions are clear, looks over the world and exclaims, " How much there is hero that I do not want ! I have what is far better. My treasure is in heaven."— Dr. Tyng. THE REFORMERS. —The principle that man is directly accountable to Oon, and to Him only, for his personal religious belief, lies at the foundation of all the acts of the Re formers. They felt that in spiritual things Christ is entitled to paramount obedience. They sacrificed reputation, comfort, proper ty, and even life itself, in support of then convictions. They denied the authority of the Government to impose on them a creed at variance with their conscientious inter pretation of Scripture. But they never saw the corrective truth, that whatever is not within the jurisdiction of Government with any responsibility. If there is no du ty on the one hand, there can be no objec tion on the other. DON'T LIKE HIS LOOKS.—A Sheriff was ouce sent to execute a writ against a Quaker. On arriving at his house, he saw the Qua ker's wife, who in reply to the inquiry whether her husband was at home, said lit 1 was ; at the same time she requested him to be seated, and her husband would speed ily see him. The officer waited patiently for some time, when the fair Quakeress coining into the room, lie reminded her of . her promise that he might see her husband. "Nay, friend, 1 promised that lie would ! see thee. He lias seen thee ! lie did liol j like thy looks, therefore he avoided thee, and hath departed from the house by an other path." ! JOHN* RANDOLPH AND THE DANDY. —John i Randolph, of Roanoke, was in a tavern, ly j ing on a sofa, waiting for a stage to come Ito the door. A dandified chap came into j the room with a whip iu his hand, just come ! from a drive, and standing at a mirror, ar j ranged his hair and collar, quite urieons j eions of the presence of the gentleman on I the sofa. After attitudinizing a while, lie ! turned to go out, when Mr. Randolph asked | him : j " Has the stage come ?" " Stage, sir ! stage, I've nothing to do j with it sir," said the fop. j "Oh! I beg your pardon, I thought you were the driver," said Randolph. A WINDY POEM.—A fellow, who we couldn't be prevailed upon to name, medi tating upon the surroundings of the present season, perpetrated and enclosed to us the I following : The wind it blew, The snow it flew. And raised particular thunder. With skirts and hoops, And chicken coops, And all such kinds ot plunder. to?-The occasions for sublime virtues are rare : to most men they never occur at I all. Christian principles will languish or die, if they are not habitually exercised in i those quiet little duties which are always j at home. THE three most difficult tilings are to i keep a secret, to forget an injury, and to ! make good use of leisure.