TERMS OF PUBLICATION. ■FLU' REPORTER is published every Thursday Morn bv E. O. GOODRICH, at S'2 per anunni, in ad Mills'. U>VKKTIREMENTB me inserted at TEN CENTS line for first insertion, and FIVE CENTS per line " ' sll Wqm?iit insertions. A liberal discount is to persons advertising by the quarter, lialf t„ or vear. Special notices charged one-half ,ji rtn regular advertisements. All resolutions Vssociations : communications of limited or in aivithud interest, and notices of Marriages and Deaths exceeding five Hues, are charged TEN CENTS tier hie 1 Year. 6 mo. 3 mo. One Column *;*> *2O On,- Square, 10 . ® Viliniiiistrator's and Executor s Notices.. S2 00 tmhtor's Notices 2 50 ibisiness Cards, five lines, (per year) 5 00 \I, ivhants and others, advertising their business, ,111„ . barged Sis. They will be entitled to 4 ,I'imn. confined exclusively to tlieir business, with privilege of change. •c- Advertising in all cases exclusive of snb ..■ription to the paper. tOH PRINTING of every kind in Plain and Fa n•, .It us, done with neatness and dispatch. Hiuul i ,D, Blanks, Cards, Pamphlets, Ac., of every va tv and style, printed at the shortest notice. The J, : ~, , 11T KB OFFICE lias just been re-fitted with Power I'l. -SOS. and every thing in the Printing line can 1, . xt-cuted in the most artistic manner and at the st rat. s. TERMS INVARIABLY CASH. §oetrg. GROWING OLD. I'hev sat together at the door, Through which, long years ago, fliey passed, a newly-wedded pair, Tn youth's first rosy glow. Then her round cheek was red and warm. Her hair was rippling gold : Her form was stately as the oak— But now they both are old. The blooming cheek is wrinkled now, The sweet bine eyes are dim ; But, full of love and holy trust, They ever turn to him, With the calm faith, and hope she felt Upon her bridal day, AVlien the long future, flower-clad, Stretched out before her lay. New. in the eventide of life, They watch the purple haze Grow on the hills, and hang above The land-locked chain of bays ; i'hev see the sun sink slowly down T,' gladden other lands ; Tie v feel night coming, and they sit Selene, with dose-clasped hands. They know that though the dusk is here There is a place of light. Invaded not by gloom or shade, i >r the drear, weeping night. They wait with patience for the end. I'o tread the darksome vale, Unto the height, before whose glow Hie morning sun would pale. fflert Sal?. The Station-Master's Daughter. 1 hail lost sight of my old college chum, I-'red Pepper, for several years,till I accept ed an invitation from him last summer to stay a week with him at his home in one of the midland counties. According to ar rangement, he met me at Wallington Junc tion, a station about twenty miles from his house, the remainder of the journey having j to be performed on a branch of railway. " Voti will have to take a fresh ticket j in-re," said Fred, after I had alighted from the train, and we had greeted each other with a hearty shake of the hand. " You will tind the booking-office tit the upper end of the platform." ♦ 1 went to the window indicated by my friend, and obtained the needful ticket; noticing at the same time that I was wait ed upon by a young women—rather an un usual ease in England, I believe,though not -1 nnlVeijiient in Scotland ; quite a mite of ,i young women, so slenderly proportioned was she, so light of figure ; with large, shy, brown eyes, and brown hair ; with small, pale, clearly-cut features; hardly to be call • d pretty, hut with an expression of candor ; uid good temper that was infinitely pleas ( ag. Whatever touches of adornment the otherwise dingy office had received were due to her busy little fingers ; to her evi deiitly belonged the three pots of scarlet Lvianiums, and the box of mignonette in the window ; the canary, lively and ioud- I voiced, in its circular wire cage ; the ela borate piece of embroidery on the desk ; L on! a green-hacked volume of poems. " Are all your booking-clerks in this part "t the country as charming as the one who has just waited on me ?" inquired I of Fred. "Ah, you have seen little Madge Carlis t a. 1 suppose," said he ; " but you must hot expert to finch another like her. Have , [you never heard of her before? Well,then, I must relate to you a little circumstance .which happened three or four years ago, land which made Madge quite a heroine in hlicse parts. Let us secure a compartment h i ourselves, and then you shall have it." My friend was well known on the line, and the guard civilly locked the door at his and secured us from intrusion.— j Having fixed ourselves, therefore, comfort ably in opposite corners, Fred proceeded to favor me with the following narrative : Iwo years ago," commenced he, " old David Carliston, the father of Madge, was j station-master at Birkwood, a little road side place about fifteen miles from Wallinc- 1 ton Junction. David had been a soldier in ids younger days, could show two or three medals, and had probably obtained his pdst n the line through the interest of some [friendly director, rather than from any par ticular aptitude he himself displayed. He had been a widower for many years, and ■ small household was managed by his : laughter Margaret, or Madge, as she was. j generally called by her father and every : I me else. " i'heie was very little traffic, either in j - ads or passengers at Birkwood ; so that ! ' 'tie led by David and his daughter was j 1 very lonely one ; the village of Birkwood | gelt, which contained only about a couple | : hundred inhabitants, lying a mile and a ; i away down the main road. |t thus fell out that Madge, having | -' i leisure time on her hands, gradually , | ! ti ; it'd herself into the duties of a clerk at | ' mn.il] station ; being, indeed, very nimble | w "ii her i>on. and in that respect the re | " !>><■ of David. His duties were over by | - ill "'clock in the evening, there being no [ which stopped at Birkwood between ! :I ' hour and seven in the morning ; and seen that his night-signals were all t : - ] 't. the old soldier would, if the weather is i ne, generally trudge down into the •"'■tge, to srnoke his pipe and drink an glass -at the Farriers' Arms, at .' 1 place, by virtue of his military ex- j • ■"s and his two medals, he was look "P"" as a hero whose dictum was in no , ' t. ti V l V s P utl ''l- These nightly visits j | .f ~ "new' Anns were a source of no ' 1 'squietude to Madge, for it not un-' E. O. GOODRICH, Publisher. VOLUME XXV. frequently happened that David, rendered forgetful by the excitement of congenial company, and by the rude but genuine ap plause which always greeted his stories of warlike adventure; would imbibe more of the Farriers' heady home-brewed than he could conveniently carry, and would reach home at a late hour in a state which per mitted no recollection next morning of how he got there. " It was hardly likely that such a girl as Madge Carliston could have reached the age of seventeen, even in a remote place like Birkwood, without having suitors for her hand. Of the unfortunate rejected ones who had been sent about their busi ness. with no measure of hard words, but with a gentle refusal, uttered half reluctant ly, as though she were unwilling to inflict so much pain, the only one known to me by name was young Will Fergurson, a guard on the line. Will had tried his for tune, and had been rejected, like others be fore him ; but whether there was something in Madge's soft refusal which would not permit him to despair of success, or wheth er it was owing to the consistency and true nature of iiis affection, he still went on lov ing as before, and would by no means take his rejection as final. ' It's a women's priv ilege to change her mind,' he would say ; ' and who knows but that Madge may change hers !' " Will's most formidable rival was hand some black-eyed Dick Carradus, son of Lord Alfretou's bailiff—a village scape grace, who had been turned out of doors by his father some years before ; bad then gone to Australia, and had come hack,after being five years away, quite as poor as he went, and was now living at home on suf ferance, till something should turn up like- It' to suit his lazy abilities. " Dick had not been back long before he singled out little Madge Carliston as the object of his attentions. He began by pay ing court to her father, and would lounge up to the station of a morning, having no work of his own to engage him, and smoke and chat with the old man between trains, listen with respectful attention to his long winded stories, retail the latest village news, and give him now and then a help ing-hand with his garden ; so that, after a time, the morning seemed long and dull which was not enlivened by a visit from laughing, good-tempered Dick. To Madge he had made no open confession of his love, being quick enough to perceive that she was one of those who are not to be won in a day ; but he let her see in twenty differ ent ways how constantly she dwelt in his thoughts. To what extent he succeeded in winning her affections no one ever knew, but that she was inclined to favor his suit seems certain ; indeed it would have been strange if a girl of her limited experience and slight knowledge of the world, without any previous liking for another, had remain ed insensible to the manifold attractions of Dick. '■ Matters had progressed thus for some months without seeming to progress at all, when, one autumn forenoon, Dick lounged up to the station accompanied by a strang er, whom he presented to David as his friend Mr. Kulp, from Australia. Madge, who was looking on unseen from behind the blind that shaded the open window, thought she had never seen a more sinister and ill looking visage than that of Mr. Kulp He was dressed in a new, shiny suit of black, in which he looked very awk ward and ill at ease, his*"great horny hands being especially difficult to dispose of, and wandering incessantly into his pockets and out of them again ; he would evidently have felt more at home in the red shirt and highlows of a digger. His face and neck were the color of a brick, and his shaggy red hair and long red beard, rudely trimmed by some country barber, did not add to the attractiveness of his appearance. His feat ures were bold and sufficiently well-shaped; but the expression of his eyes was so thor oughly bad, that it was impossible to be mistaken as to the nature of the soul'that gazed loweringly out of their treacherous depths. Madge could not help wondering to herself how it happened that laughing, careless Dick had come to choose such a man as this Kulp for his companion. " David went into the house, and present ly returned with a jug of ale and some glasses ; and Mr. Kulp having produced some cigars, the three sat down on one of the benches outside the station, and pro ceeded to enjoy themselves after their own fashion. •' 'We had Lord Alfreton's family here yesterday afternoon,' said David, after a while. ' There was thjee truck-load of lug gage and things, besides eight horses, and lot of dogs ; and a rare lot of money it came to. Fact continued the old sold ier, ' I never was so busy since I came here as I've been this morning ; for Baylis, the cattle-drover, sent me word a week ago to get him twenty wagons ready by tin's morning ; and sure enough by five o'clock he was here with a lot of staring, half-mad bullocks and rare and cold it was too at that hour ; but we got them all safe into the trucks, and the engine fetched them at eight o'clock—quite a little train of them selves. And then Baylis came into the house, and had a bit of breakfast with me, and paid me for the carriage of the cattle. \\ hy, lads, I*shall have over a hundred and fifty pounds to send to the bank in the morning. I'll warrant such a thing never happened before since Birkwood was a sta tion ;' and the old man chuckled to him self as he emptied his glass, and seemed to look upon the whole matter as an excellent joke. " Shortly afterward Dick and Mr. Kulp took their leave, the foi nier depositing on the window sill a little bunch of flowers for Madge, who still kept resolutely within doors. The two walked slowly down the road, conversing earnestly together, Mr. Kulp apparently endeavoring to impress some important point on the attention of the half reluctant Dick ; and in a few mo ment the latter came hastily back, and go ing up to David, who was busy digging in his garden hy this time, he said : "' You'll be down to the Farriers' to-night, won't you, governor ? There's to be a bit of a dahlia-show among the villagers, and they'll be sure to want you to act as one of the judges.' " • I'll drop down, lad, after the eight o'- clock train has gone, and that's as soon as 1 can leave ; not that I know much about dahlias, but I can give my opinion, I dare say as well as another man.' " So, with a renewed good-morning, Dick TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., FEBRUARY 2, 1865. finally departed, and having rejoined Mr. Kulp, who was lounging over a gate wait ing the return of his friend, the two went on their way together, and were quickly lost to view. " All these proceedings had been witness ed by Madge from her eyrie, but she had been too far away to hear the conversation between Dick and her father in the garden. When she was certain that the two were finally gone she stole down stars, and tak ing possession of the flowers, kissed them and put them carefully in water. Then she went about her work, humming an oid song to herself; but she could not'got rid of the idea that the malignant eyes of Mr. Kulp were furtively watching her wherever she went. " When David had attended to the eight o'clock train he went into the house and changed his hat and coat, telling Madge that he was going down into the village, but that he would not be late home. Madge was to much accustomed to her father's evening absences to think any tiling of this, and had learned from experience that when he announced his intention of being home at an early hour he was pretty sure to be later than common. Having arranged his neck-tie to her satisfaction, and given him a parting kiss, she made up the lire, light ed the candle, and sat down to her sewing, quite content to pass the long evening all alone in the solitary station-house. " Having sewn till- she was tired, she put her work away, and then got out her hymn-book, and marked one or two hymns to be sung by her scholars at school on the following Sunday ; then she read a while ; and then, all unconsciously to herself, her eyes softly closed, and she knew nothing more. " She was roused by the clock close above her head striking eleven,and at the moment she opened her eyes she was startled by seeing, or believing that she saw, the hand le of the door on the opposite side of the room slowly and noiselessly turned, as though someone was trying to open it from the outside. The floor in question led on to the platform, but fortunately she had shot the holt into its place after seeing her fath er down the road. The blood thrilled through her heart as she gazed with a sort of hor rible fascination on the revolving handle, and in a moment she was as thoroughly awake as ever she had been in her life. She listened, with all her senses on the alert, but the silence remained unbroken save by the ticking of the clock and the faint sing ing of the telegraph wires in the breeze out side. She kept her eyes fixed intently on the door for what seemed to her an intoler ably long time, but there was no movement, nor any sign of than her own beating heart ; so, with a sigh of relief, she at length wrenched her eyes away, and per suaded herself that, in the confusion of that first waking moment, her senses must have misled her. The hour was late, and her fa ther could not be long now ; so she would just make every thing secure below stairs, and then go and lie down on her bed with out undressing, in readiness to rundown at his first knock. " It was hardly pleasant going about the house after seeing that strange movement of the door-handle ; hut she nerved herself to the effort, although the eyes of Mr. Kulp seemed to stare out at her with baleful in tensity from every dusky corner, and to lie in wait for her behind every door. But the task, after all, was only a short one ; and when she had seen that all the doors and windows were properly secured, and that there was nothing to be feared from the fire, she took up her candle, and walked slowly and steadily up the short flight of stairs which led to her own and her father's bedrooms on the upper floor. After glanc ing into the latter room, and seeing that the cash-box was there as usual on the chest of drawers, she passed forward into her own chamber, the window of which looked out at the back of the station, and down the road that led to the village. "It was David's custom, as an extra measure of precaution, to place the cash box in his bedroom overnight. After the departure of the last train lie made up his receipts for the day, and put the account nto the box which traveled backward and forward between the bank and the station, ready for conveyance to headquarters ; so that when Madge saw the box where it al ways stood overnight she felt quite satisfied as to its safety, and never once thought whether the amount it contained might be great or small. " Perfectly assured bv this time that the movement of the door-handle was a pure piece of imagination on her part, and hav ing quite recovered the steadiness of her nerves, now that she was safe in her own little bower, she sat down in front of the glass, and leisurely proceeded to brush out her long brown hair, pausing now and then to smell at the boquet left by Dick, and humming a familiar tune to herself,wonder ing how much later her father would be, and becoming more anxious, as the time verged on toward midnight, as to the con diti >n in which he would reach home. She had sat thus for some time, when she was startled by the noise of something striking against the window. She got up, put the candle in the furthest corner of the room, drew aside the blind, and looked out. The moon was nearly at the full, but thick mas ses of cloud overshadowed the sky, leaving only a sort of dull half-light, in which noth ing could be clearly discerned. There was, however, sufficient light for Madge to make out the familiar figure of Dick Carradus beckoning to her with one hand, as though he wished to speak to her. Her fears took alarm at once ; something had happened to her father, and Dick had conic to break the bad news to her. She drew up the blind and flung open the window with hands that trembled so much that they could scarcely do her bidding, dreading, yet longing, to know the worst. " 'Your father has been taken with a tit at the Farriers' Arms,' said Dick, ' and I am come to fetch you. Make haste, and put on your things, and let us be off.' " Dick was standing in an open space of ground about a dozen yards from the house, where Lis figure could be plainly made out; a little to his left, and a few yards further from the house, was an out-buiiding beluiig ing to the station ; and Madge, while Dick was speaking to her, distinctly saw the head and shoulders of a man protruded for a moment from behind the gable of the building, as though in the act of listening, and then withdrawn ; the man, whoever he might be, evidently thinking that, as the REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER. ; night was so much overcast, it would be impossible for any one to see liim from the house. With a women's intuition Madge at once felt that the head and shoulders could belong to no one but Mr. Kulp. " ' I will be down in minute or two,' she called out in Dick in a hard, shrill voice which she hardly recognized as her own. "She came in, shut down the window,and rc-placed the blind, and stood for a moment with the fingers of both hands pressed against her eyes, thinking intently. Then taking up the candle, she carried it into her father's bedroom, the window of which looked in the direction opposite to her own; but instead of proceeding to put on her bonnet and shawl, she stole back into her own dark room, and drew the blind about an inch on one side, and looked out. It was as she had thought ; there were two of them ; and at the moment she looked out they were talking earnestly "together, as they stood close to the gable of the out building ; but next minute Dick seemed to push the stranger back out of sight, and came forward himself, and took up his first position, close to the house, waiting for Madge to come out. " Madge stood up in a maze of doubt and fear. Why had not Dick coine alone? And who was that other man hidden away be hind the gable with Dick's connivance ? \\ by, in fact if Dick's story were true,need there be any concealment at all ? " ' Are you ready V called Dick ; and then there came a sharp imperious summons with his knuckles on the door below ; and then the door itself was tried ; hut it was lock ed. " Madge started out of her reverie, open ed her bedroom window, and looked out for the second time. ' Do make haste !'exclaim ed Dick the -rnent her head was protrud ed from the window. ' How long are, you going to he ?' •"' Answer me one question,' said Madge. ' Did you come up from the village alone? Is there any one here besides yourself? X'ou know, Dick, that I am easily frightened— and—the hour is late, and—and—' "Before Dick could reply the hidden man burst out into the moonlight, revealing Mr. Kulp to Madge's straining eyes. " ' Come, stop all that jabber !' exclaim ed K ulp, brutally. 'lf yon had been guided by me'—this to Dick—' we should have had what we came for before now ; but you must needs go to work in your own idiotic way ; and sec the result—all this precious time wasted, and nothing done ! Look you here young women !' turning to Madge ; 'you need not expect your father home just at present; he's disposed of where he'll trouble nobody for some time to come.— There's not a soul within a mile of you, ex cept us two—two fellows who don't stick at trifles, against a wisp of a girl who gives tongue if she sees a mouse suddenly. Now we've nothing against you yourself ; we don't wish to do you any harm. What we've come for is the money we know there's in the house—not the old man's own money, but Hie money belonging to the railway.— You can drop it quietly out of the window, if you like—we know within a quid or two how much there is—and we'll take our leave at once ; and you'll be none the poor er—it will only be the railway that will suffer, and they can afford it. But offer any resistance, or try on any ofyour tricks, and we'll not only have the money,but your life into the bargain.' " The idea of any one thinking it worth while to rob the. station had never entered the head of Madge ; but as Kulp spoke,she remembered that there was that night a much larger sum of money in the house than had ever been there before. Dick, from his frequent visits to the station, was doubtless well aware that old David was in the habit of keeping the cash in his bed room, as a security against thieves. All these thoughts passed through her brain while Kulp was speaking. When lie had done, she gave one great despairing sob, wrung from her by the thought of her lov er's treachery,and her heart for the moment seemed to wither up within her. But the necessity for immediate action was passing —she would have time enough in the dark future before her to brood over her sweet heart's baseness. What must she do? If her father was not ill, as these men had first averred, then why had he not come home? He had never, even when most : overcome, staid out till this hour. Was j it not possible—nay, probable—that they j had murdered him first, to get him out of the way, and had then come on to the sta tion to complete their work by robbery, and perhaps murder, there? " A rude summons from Kulp cut short her brief reverie. ' Now, young women, what are J T OU about ? Do you expect us to wait here all night?' "' Oh, Dick, for pity's sake, tell me what has become of my father?' she said, still speaking through the window, and heedless for the moment of Kulp. " Dick rose from his seat as if he were gojpg to reply, but Kulp waved him back 'Your father's disposed of where he'll trouble nobody, as I told you before. And now let us have your answer at once. Do you mean to give us that money quietly or not?' " ' No— a thousand times no !' exclaimed Madge, passionately. 'Cowards that you are, come and take it, if you dare !' and she shut down the window with a bang, as though disdaining further parley. " The thought of her father lying wound ed, perhaps dead, in some lonely spot, lent her a courage, a reckless audacity, that made her for the time almost indifferent to any thing that could happen to herself.— What means of defense had she ? was her first question. Scarcely any The doors and windows indeed, dov/n stairs were fas tened ; but she knew well that they would not stand long against the assaults of two men determined on effecting an entrance. There was no arms of any kind in the house. There was the door at the bottom of the stairs opening into the kitchen—she might, perhaps, do a little toward securing that. The candle was still burning where she had left it ; and as she went into the room, the cash-box containing the cause of all these misfortunes stared her in the face.— Hei-father's keys lay beside it, together with a bag containing the silver and copper retained by David as change. A flash of inspiration came to her as she looked at these things. She opened the cash-box, and took out the bag containing the day's receipts, in notes, checks, and gold, and concealed it in the bosom of her dress. She then put the bag containing the silver and copper into the box, locked it, and threw j the keys under the bed. Hey next proceed i ing was to secure the frail door at the foot I of the staircase as well as she was able, by inserting a small wooden peg above the latch, so as to hinder any one from opening it in the ordinary way; and then by piling against it several chairs and other light ar ticles of bedroom furniture, such as her limited strength permitted her to lift. She was well aware that even then it was a protection which a few minutes would suf fice to demolish ; but every minute was a gain in her desperate strait ; her only hope lay in prolonging the struggle as much as possible—help might come, she knew not how or whence, when least expected. " Outside, everything remained quiet.— Could it be possible that they, would, after all, go away without attacking the house ? With this blessed hope beating warmly in her heart, Madge ran back to the window of her own room,and peeped through. Alas! no—both of them were still there. They w r ere stooping over a heap of sleepers deposited close at hand for the purpose of relaying the line; and having selected one, they lifted it on to their shoulders, and brought it thus to the door of the house. At the first stroke of this novel but powerful bat tering-ram Madge gave a little shriek, and sank, white and trembling, to the Hour : all her little stock of courage had vanished, and she seemed, for the first time, to real ize the dangers of her postion. Like the blows of a pavior's rammer came the shocks against the door down stairs, and to each of them Madge's heartbeat with a respons ive throb. Suddenly, with a great crash, the door gave way, and with a yell of tri umph Kulp burst into the house, followed by his silent companion. Madge started up, and double-locked her bedroom door; and then rushed to the window, determined to leap out at any cost, and forgetting for the moment that the window,small in itself, was still further secured by a bar of iron running across its centre, sufficient to pre vent even her little body from squeezing through. " With a cry of despair she turned away from the window, and then, a moment after, almost laughed at herself—so sudden are the alternations of feeling at such a time— to think that she had forgotten all about the little loft over the bedrooms. Surely there, of all places in the house, since it was evident that from the house itself there was no escape, she would be most secure It was a mere cock-loft, open to the sloping rafters of the roof, and lighted by a sky light composed of a single pane of glass ; it was used by David as for a storehouse for his onions, seeds, and various kinds of rubbish put away at odd times by the old man, as never likely to be wanted again ; but to Madge, in that hour of her extremity, it seemed a very harbor of refuge. The short broken ladder by which David gained access to it was always kept behind his bedroom door. She unlocked the door of her own room, got the ladder, and placed it against the wall under the opening into the loft,which showed black and grim above her head, there being no door to it or fas tening of any kind. '• Madge paused for a minute before go ing up the ladder. After feeling that the money was still safe in the bosom of her dress, she went lightly into her father's room, and blew out the caudle, which had been burned there since first taken out of her own room ; she next locked the doors of both rooms, put the keys in her pocket, and then stood to listen, with one foot on the ladder, ready to ascend. From the mo ment the front door was burst in to that in which Madge stood thus not more than two minutes had elapsed, sufficient, however,for the two men down stairs to ransack every corner, and so make sure, befiire proceeding further, that Madge was hidden nowhere below. The door at the foot of the stairs was tried next : and the moment Madge heard this she mounted the ladder noiseles sly, and creeping through the opening into the loft with the agility of a cat, reached down with one hand, drew up the ladder after her, and then sat down by the edge of the opening to await, with a heart that beat almost to bursting, whatever might j happen next The door not yielding easily, the battering-ram was applied to it, and j half a dozen blows were sufficient to break j it off its hinges. The lurniture piled up | behind it was quickly dragged down by I lie indefatigable Kulp, and the way to the j bedrooms was then clear. Madge, listen-1 ing intently, heard Kulp inciting Dick to I drink out of bis brandy-flask ; after which j lie went in search of matches and a candle, j for all their work hitherto had been done by the light ol the clouded moon Having procured a light, after a delay of some ! minutes, during which he relieved his mind by a large amount of swearing, Mr. Kulp; advanced cautiously up stairs. Having reached the bedroom doors in safety, and 1 finding both of them to be locked, Dick j and lie held a brief consultation. Dick ■ was inclined to break into the old man's room first, being well aware jhat the money was always put there overnight ; but Mr. Kulp, whose quick, restless eyes had caught sight of the opening into the loft, ; gave it as his opinion, emphasized with nu- J mcrous oaths, that both bird and money I would b<> found snugly hid away in that i little nest at the top of iho iioii.se ; so it was agreed that he should explore die loft : while Irfiek effected an entrance into David's ; room. Mr. Kulp's first task was to fetch a ; couple of chairs up stairs, and having j fixed one of them upon the other, he pro ceeded to climb carefully to the top, just as j Dick succeeded in breaking open the be' - j room door. "Madge, in .her half-hiding*place, sat quite motionless, with straining eyes fixed on the opening in the door, through which she momently expected to see Mr. Kulp's ugly head protrude. Tbe clouds had partly cleared away by this time and sufficient of the moon's light came through the little skylight to enable her to distinguish the objects about her with tolerable clearness. Hhe heard Mr. Kulp climbing laboriously on j the chairs, and thought to herself that a ! few seconds now would surely end all, for she never doubted that he would murder ; her when once he got her into his power. 1 The first part of Mr. Kulp's person that j matje its appearance Through the trap was , an immense bony hand, with which he seized the ledge, as a help in pulling hipj self up. Close to the feet of Madge lay an ! old wooden mallet ; on the instinct of the J moment, and without pausing to think, she i grasped it, and brought it down with all | her force on the hideous claw beside her. ' per Annum, in Advance. Mr. Kulp gave a yell of mingled rage and pain, and being obliged to let go his hold, came to the floor with a terrific crash. He was on his feet in an instant, swearing hor ribly that be would have Madge's blood ; but just as lie was preparing to mount the stairs again, Dick, with a joyful cry, burst out of David's room, exclaiming that he had found the cash-box. Even then, Mr. Kulp was half inclined to stay at all risk, and have his revenge, for his hand hurt him terribly ; but Dick hurried down stairs with tbe box under his arm, and Mr. Kulp's cu pidity rendering him fearful that unless he quickly followed he might perhaps never see Dick or the box again, he postponed tbe consideration of his revenge till a future period, and hurried after his friend, threat ening Madge with what he would do to her if she stirred out of the loft, or made any alarm, for a full hour at least. " Madge's ruse had succeeded. Deceived by the weight of the box, they had hurried away without opening it, thinking that it contained the money of which they were in search, whereas it held only the bag of sil ver and copper placed there purposely by Madge. But Madge knew that the respite was only a short one ; they would not go far before breaking open the box, and on discovering the deception they would hur ry back, and woe be to her if they found her there when they returned ! " She would go out of the house at any I risk, and try to make her escape across the ; fields. She lowered the ladder, and after ! feeling that the money was still safe in the ; bosom of her dress, got down as quickly jas possible, and so groped her way down j stairs, and through tbe house to the plat i form. In a few minutes more the night ! mail would be due ; but alas ! it did not | stop at Birk wood, nor even slackened speed, j but rushed past in complete indifference to j tbe existence of any such insignificant spot. "An excellent thought! She would turn ; on the red light at the signal, and stop the | train. Under the circumstances she felt i herself justified in doing this. Perhaps the ! train with its living freight would come up in time to save her from the two miscreants, who would certainly be back in a few min utes more. The hope was a faint one, but she could not afford to throw it'away. To reach the semaphore, it was necessary that she should traverse the platform to that end of jt nearest the road taken by the two men on leaving the station, although her first intention had been to try to make her es cape by hurrying away in the opposite di rection. There was, however, no time to hesitate ; the risk must be run at once, if at all. So she sped as fast as she could to the end of the platform, and seizing the iron handle of the immense signal-post, gave it the necessary turn, which changed the glass in front of the lantern at its summit, and displayed the red light in place of the white one. She had just turned to hasten back along tbe platform, when Kulp and Carra dus, leaping over a hedge about twenty yards away, came suddenly upon her, and a loud cry from one of them proclaimed that she was seen. "In their hurry to get back to the sta tion, after discovering the trick that had been played them, they had cut off the an gle of the road by coming across a field, and were consequently unseen # by Madge till they were close upon her. Madge was like a wounded animal brought to bay ; to flee was useless, she would have been caught before she had run twenty yards ; resistance was equally out of the question; what resistance, in fact, could a girl like her offer to the will of two desperate ruf fians ? There seemed nothing left for her but to lie down in dumb despair, and pray that her misery might be as short as pos sib'e. As she stood thus, her fine and prac ticed ear caught the first faint sound of the approaching train—only five minutes more, and she would have been saved ! " She was still standing close to the sem aphore. On the instant she turned, and despite the impediment of her dress, ran quickly up the iron ladder—up, up to tbe very top, till she sank exhausted on the little grating fixed close under the lamps fur the convenience of lighting and clean ing' them. Mr. Kulp laughed loud and long. 'What*a precious fool the wench must be,' lie said with an oath, 'to go and fix herself in a trap like that! Sow I shall have her as safe as a possum in a gum-tree —have her money and her life both, or my name is not Jarod Kulp !' " ' Perhaps, after all, she hasn't got the money about her,' said Dick, 'it may be hidden in the old man's room—under the bed, or in the chimney, or somewhere.' " ' Ay, ay, lad—do you think so V said Kulp, eagerly. "Then you just go, and have a hunt about, and I'll wait here atthc bottom of the ladder till you come back to see that my lady doesn't escape. Only don't be a month away.' " ' Never fear,' answered Dick, and hur ried off into the house.- " Neither of tiie men had yet heard the noise of the advancing* train, for the wind was in the opposite direction ; but Madge heard it coming nearer and nearer, but so slowly, as it seemed to her hungering ears, that her heart within her grew sick with fear that it would not arrive in time to save her. No sooner had Dick disappeared than Mr. Kulp drew a formidable bowie knife from some hidden pocket, and having unsheathed it, seized the black haft between his teeth, and prepared to ascend the lad dor ; he had evidently determined not to await the return of Pick, but to accom plish his revenge while his companion was away. He had made but two steps up ward when till at once his ear- caught the shrill whistle of the approaching train, and he knew that his work must be done quick ly, or else left undone forever. " The red signal had been seen, Madge, crouching 011 the little iron gra ting under the lamps, and kept from falling by the rail running round it, had not been idle all this time. " A day or two previously the semaphore ladder had been removed fur repairs, and an old one tenipoialy substituted in its place, fastened with a stout rope at the top to keep it firm. Madge's nimble {lingers were busy with the knots before Kulp be gan to ascend ; but the rope was thick,and the knots difficult to unfasten, and she shuddered to think that Kulp would reach the top before her purpose could be effected. She had contrived to undo one of the knots, and was busy with fingers and teeth at the second, while Kulp was coming slowly up the ladder toward her. Step by step be drew nearer. She tried to call to him, to warn him of the fate Before him, But Be yond a dry husky whisper she iiad lost all power of speech. The light from the lamp above her shone obliquely on his shaggy head, his cruel wolfish eyes staring feroci onsly up at her, and the bare knife held Be tween his teeth. Half a minute more he would have seized her, when, yielding to her last desperate effort, the knot gave way ; the rope fell to the ground ; and the ladder, no longer held in its place, and al ready trembling under the weight of Kulp, shook for an instant ; then its top glided slowly along the smooth edge of the gra ting, till it slipped over the end, and fell swiftly through the air, with the terrified wretch clinging to it; and coming down with a terrible crash 011 the coping-stone at the edge of the platform, rolled over with its burden 011 to the line, just as the wildly shrieking train forged into the station, and came to a dead stand a few feet from the j lifeless body lying across its path, j "I, who tell you this, happened to be ! traveling by the mail that night, and was i quickly out of the train, followed by sever al of the passsengers, to ascertain the rea j sou of a stoppage so unusual. "It was Will Ferguson who picked up the body of Kulp from before the engine. A I medical man, one of the passengers, pro j nounced him to be dead. " Some time elapsed before Madge, lying : insensible so far above our heads, was dis ; covered ; and then it was a task of con ; siderable difficulty to get her down, but it J was managed after a time, and the poor ! girl was laid 011 her bed unconscious of all that was being done for her; and when she did awake from her state of insensibility, it was only to lapse into a brain-fever,from which she did not thoroughly recover for several months. " Old David turned up in the morning haggard and penitent. He had been lying dead-drunk under a hedge all night, where Kulp and Carradus had purposely left him. Carradus himself got clear away, and has never been heard of front that day to this. The railway company made Madge a hand some present as soon as she got well again; : but they removed her father from a situa tion for which BP was evidently incompe tent, and made him ticket-collector at AVal ! lington Junction : at which station Madge i was, at her own request, installed as book ing-clerk ; but I hear that she and Will Ferguson are about to Be married ; so that next time you come this way, perhaps, there will be no Madge Carlistou to serve you with a ticket." SURVIVING REVOLUTIONARY PENSIONERS.- - On the first day of January 1863 there were bat twelve Revolutionary Pensioners sur viving. On the 4th of March, 1804, Fun gross unanimously adopted a resolution tendering thanks to these surviving patri ots of the Revolution for their services in that struggle whereby our independence was achieved, rejoicing that their lives had been prolonged beyond the time usually allotted by man, and also resolved that a j sum be voted them that would 'smooth the rugged path of life duriug-their remaining days. An act of April 1864, provided an , additional hundred dollars to be paid to each of these pensioners. Since that time seven of these men haw died. The following are the names and res idences of the five now remaining : LEMUEL COOK, enlisted in Litchfield, Ct. lie now lives iu Clarendon, Orleans Co., X Y. Mr. Cook says he was born in Plymouth, Litchfield county, Ct.. but cannot give the year of his birth, ile also states that he enlisted in that town ; that he marched the same year with the army to Yorktown and was present at the surrender of Cornwallis, Oct. 19,1181. According to his reoolleet tion he was seventeen years of age at that time, which would make the year of his birth 1164. He lias in his possession a copy of his discharge papers, signed By Geo. Washington, which state that he was a private in the Second Light Dragoons Connecticut ; field offiicers, Col. Sheldon Lieut. Col. Jemison and Major Tallmadge His discharge concludes with the following certificate:—"The above named Lemuel Cook has been honored with the badge of merit for three years faithful service. " Mr. Cook rides out occasionally, and still writes his name quite legibly. He thinks it a little singular, however, tlmt he should be obliged to take an oath of allegiance swear that he has not given aid and com fort to rebels—whenever he makes applica tion for his pension. May he and his compatriots live to see the end of this rebellion ard the re estab lishment of the Union upon a linn and en during basis. SAMUEL DOWNING, enlisted in Carroll coun ty,. N. 11. ; is about ninety-eight years of age, and lives in Edinburg, Saratoga coun ty, N. Y. ILLIAM HUTCHINGS, enlisted at Newcastle, Me. (then Massacousetts ) is now one iiun dred years old, and resides in Penobscot Hancock county, Me. ALEXANDER MARONF.Y, enlisted at Lake George, N. Y., as a drummer boy ; is now about ninety-four years of age. His resi dence is Yates, Origans county, X. Y. JAMES BARHAM, substitute for a drafted man in Southampton county, Ya. ; lives in the State of Missouri, and is in the one hundred and first year of his age. " PAPA," said a little urchin to his father the other day, " I saw a printer go down street just now." " Did you, sonny ? How did you know that t'ae person was a printer ?" " Cause I do, papa." " But he might have been a carpenter, blacksmith or a shoemaker " " Oh no, papa, he was a printer ; for he was gnawing a bone, he had no stockings on, the crown, was out of his hat, and his coat was all torn. I'm certain that he was a printer, papa." IN a town in Connecticut, a loafer WAS brought before a justice for being drunk in the street—the fine being one dollar for each offence. He paid the fine, and was then arraigned the next day. " No, you don't, judge," said he, "1 knows the law—one dollar for each offence—and this is the same old drunk." A SOLDIER in one of the late battles, was sitting very coolly behind one of his guns, where the shot were falling fast ; Being asked by the chaplain whether he was sup ported by Divine Providence, he replied : "No, Sir, I am supported by the Ninth New Jersey." A YOUNG gentleman from the " rooral dis tricts, " who advertised for a wife through the newspapers, received answers from eighteen husbands, informing him that he could have theirs. A NEGLECTED wife declares that she and her husband are like two mile-stoues, be cause she may say that he and she are nev er seen together. AN eminent divine preached one Sunday morning from the text, " Ye are the chil dren of the devil," and in the afternoon, by funny coincidence, from the words, " Chil dren, obey your parents." " It's all stuff," as the lady said to her husband, who was complaining of dyspep sia after a public dinner. NUMBER .%.