TERMS OF PUBLICATION. The REPORTER is published every Thursday Morn 1V ~ by E. 0. GOODRICH, at $2 per annum, in ad vance. VDYERTISEMENTS are inserted at TEN CENTS line for first insertion, and FTVE CENTS per line j. r subsequent insertions. A liberal discount is made to persons advertising by the quarter, half vt ar or year. Special notices charged one-half " m( ,re than regular advertisements. All resolutions ~f Associations ; communications of limited or in dividual interest, and notices of Marriages and Deaths exceeding five lines, are charged TEN CENTS l„>r line. 1 Year. 6 mo. 3 mo. One Column, SSO $35 S2O " 30 25 15 One Square 10 7£ 5 Administrator's and Executor's Notices.. $2 00 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 ( column, confined exclusively to their business, with privilege of change. rJB" Advertising in all cases exclusive of sub neriptiou to the paper. ,101! PRINTING of every kind in Plain andFan ev colors, done with neatness and dispatch. Hanil liills, Blanks, Cards, Pamphlets, tc., of every va rietv and style, printed at the shortest notice. The lIi.poHTER OFFICE has just been re-fitted with Power Pivsses, and- every thing in the Printing line can (>.• executed in the most artistic manner and at the l„w. >t rates. TERMS INVARIABLY CASH. gjeprto. THE REBELLION EXDED. The long agony is over, the Union is re stored. We may now count the cost of our late unparalleled struggle for the end draweth nigh, yea it is already attained. The sur render of Lee necessitates that of Johnston, and also of all other bodies of rebels now i arms against the lawful authority of the Government. We have conquered. Our na tion is. today, the most powerful nation upon the face of the earth. Ist. Because we have now a better disci |i!ined army than any other power, and the broad ocean bears not upon its bosom a j more gallant navy than ours. Whether upon land r sea our stars and stripes are h une upward by a power, invincible and j irresistible. 21. Because we have the means to pay , very dollar of the debt we have made. It , is, too lay, but little more than one-half as j ! u-o-e as that of the first powers of Europe, ! an 1 it.- entire extinguishment is only a ques tion of time. With northern energy and j enterprise, with our industry in the various departments of business, our commerce whitening the sea, our broad acres the Sa vannas of the west, inviting cultivation and capable of supplying the world with food, the increased emigration which the peace we have now will bring to our shores —with all these facilities of paving off our | national debt, it must soon cease to exist, j 3d. Because the moral courage we have j gained in the strife will go far to prove us invincible in comparison with every other j na ion. Northern courage has conquered in a contest in which every other interest in the world was arrayed against us. In the darkest hour it has stood firm, yielding its blood and treasure at the call of patriotism and duty. Defeat has but rendered it more :> termined and disaster more willing for tie• sacrifice. In a just cause we may defy tiie world. 4th. Because slavery is abolished. Slave ry that dark blot upon our fair fame is dead, dead. We stand a free people, re- i deemed, regenerated, disenthralled. We j are men, all of us, not things. In the shape ! of men with hearts, souls, thoughts, pas- j sit>ns, and affections, we are no longer i ehattles subject to the caprice of tyrants, i \\ e may no longer blush that our land is j disgraced by a system that outrages rea- j > >n and common sense, which strips a man j if his manhood and thrusts him without [ the pale of humanity, and we may rejoice i that no longer need our countrymen bow their heads in shame that they are Ameri- j can citizens. Here, then, are so many reasons why we j may consider ourselves so powerful a peo- j pie, and in arriving at such conclusions we i ■lo not draw upon the imagination. Let; the most sober and moderate among us [ -'-T.ously cmsider the circumstances under J which we take this new lease of national 1 and in the light of what is, and is most j pr<>hable and likely to be, decide the qnes-! ti''ii- W bile slavery lasted it would always ! ' a drag upon our progress. The good j '" ! could never bestow his most beneficent j Mimes where his law was so openly trans gressed. But now, imagination can but ! feebly express the high destiny which awaits us. Politically, commercially, and no doubt financially, we shall hold the bal ance <>l power. Gold, cotton, petroleum, iron, bread, aie the great staples witli which American labor is to supply the wants of the world. New York is our me- Wopolis. Look north and south, look east and west, and where do you see an empo- j nmn commanding such facilities for growth, ; -'many interests all centering there.— I W here the city absorbing the trade of so ' "> >-t an interior, and reaching that interior l y >uch a system of communication, sit-' iuted upon a coast line of tens of thous- j ""L of miles in extent, each mile paying tribute, and receiving from it the produc n of every other mile on the globe? 1 sec no where else such a world's cen- Eurupe can furnish no rival in natural j Mintages. Her great emporiums are but! ' ' xpressions of national interests, for j "-li commerce has her general law of j itutioii, yet that same law loses much 'ts force by the rivalry of distinct na '"•fl'ties. London diverts trade from ir 'N Amsterdam, and Hamburg; and they 1 Ulr " irom London. But New York has ' "mpetitor on the western continent. •'1 Hie rebellion succeeded, Charleston have assumed a certain commercial ! ' Unce —as it is, it will ever be but a of \ L . W York. Award the star of empire takes its wav "iii. "muiied years will not pass be -' w Yrk has a greater population 1 ,l "\ other city upon the globe, and ; E. O. GOODRICH, Publisher. VOLUME XXV. our political importance will keep pace with our population. The rebellion has swept from our path the only obstacle to our progress there was in it. Slavery not only finds in it its quietus, but the pernic ious doctrine of State rights is also explo ded, and the pre-eminence of the Union es tablished. No demagogue in search of po litical power and impelled by personal ambition, will ever again dare to talk of State rights as a stepping stone to the pop ular consideration. That heresy is dead beyond the power of a thousand Calhouns and Davis' to galvanize into spasmodic life. We are free from all southern heresies, we are free in heart and life, in soul and body. ! By the blessing of God we are free. "Sound the loud timbrel, &c." And what shall we say of those men who ; have taken their lives in their hands and gone forth to stem this torrent of anarchy i and rebellion, that others no better than | they might live and die in peace? Oh, j here all language fails to express what should be our gratitude to those noble pat riots who bared their bosoms to the shafts of battle, and said to an insolent foe, j " strike here." They have conquered in a ; mightier warfare than, till now, the world has ever known. History has no paralell j to their deeds, lor history has no page on which is presented so vast a theatre for the red legions of war to occupy. Such great armies, such bloody battles, such impor tant interests suspended on the issue, have not in modern times awakened the hopes and fears of men. And not only the rank and file of our armies, but the leaders in this sanguniary , strife, should, through all time, be endeared j to our hearts by the liveliest emotions of i gratitude and love. Grant, Sherman, Sher- j idan, Thomas, anil Meade, are names that henceforth will take rank with the proudest and most renowned of ancient and modern war. During the last and closing year, each have enacted parts of a general plan, the consummate wisdom of which is now seen in the result. No part of the great circle which, in its slowly contracting pro gress was intended to crush the enemy in its centre, was left unclosed. The end came—the great rebellion strangled and smothered in the folds of the Anaconda, gave up the ghost. But what shall we do with Jefferson Da vis if we catch him ? Some magnanimous souls are already advocating his release from all the pains and penalties of his trea son. Here is a man whose single will has occasioned the death of a round half million of innocent men ; some by battle, some by fell disease, aud a great man}' by absolute starvation in southern prisons. In the long list of those who have cursed the earth by their crimes and atrocities, who have cast a reproach upon humanity and exhibited the ferocity of demons, Jefferson Davis is chief. The slow murder of prisoners by starvation was a part of his cruel policy to deplete our armies, and a thousand, yea, ten thousand northern wives and mothers will execrate bis name and memory for ever. Treason is a more reprehensible crime than murder,.because it reduces society to chaos and anarchy, it overturns all law and government, it lifts the hand of each man against the throat of his fellow, and the strongest bears sway over the weak. Into this black gulf the personal ambition of Jefferson Davis plunged this nation, and although it has extracted itself from the horrible pit, yet it was his early, and late, and persistent effort, to confine it there. Ah, save such a dark spirit from the scaf fold, whose hands are reeking in the blood drawn from hearts that once beat with good will to all men, with patriotism aud love to their race, a love his sordid selfish soul never felt, and could never know. Save Jefferson Davis from the gallows ! " angels and ministers of grace defend us." MR. REPORTER —The following statement was made in a prayer meeting in Camp Distribution, by Mr. J. WOOD, who is a soldier in our army. It may interest at least some of your readers. The young soldier stepped out into the aisle and said : " The prayer meeting is a most interest ing place to me, and especially so since I have been delivered in such a remarkable manner from the power of my enemies, for I think that none but God could have granted me such a deliverance. " hen the war first commenced, ( my father had warm friends in the South, and being offered a Generalship, he accepted it, and wished me to accompany him, which I refused to do. He threatened to disinherit me, and I told him I loved my country bet ter than gold,and 1 could not desert her in her hour of peril, and 1 left a home of opulence a pennyless wanderer, and joined the army and went into the secret service of the United States. "My mother taught me when a child to say, " Our Father," and I learned to love my Mother's God, and I was willing to trust myself in his hands. I intend to be an honeßt man, but I did wear a disguise that I might render more efficient and val uable service to my country. I went be yond our lines. Yes ! I went into their lines, and although I had some hairbreadth escapes, I was not detected until one even ing as 1 was passing through the streets of St. Louis, J met several young persons, and you ma}' judge of my surprise when one of them called me by name. I told TO WANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., APRIL 27, 1865. I them probably they were mistaken in the person. They said no we are not. We know who you are. And they did know who I was, for they were my former asso ciates, and 1 could not deceive them. They Btepped into the house near by, and soon I was surrounded by Confederate soldiers, who ordered me to surrender, and 1 did not do anything else ; and they seemed well pleased that they had ayankeespy in their power. " I was very soon locked in prison, and in a cell feet long, high, and 2J wide, where I remained three months, and saw no light during the time. I was fed with bread and water twice a day, and being quite tall, as you see, I could not straight en my limbs during the time. " At the same time 130 Union men were brought out and one of their number was to be burned alive. They cast lots, and the lot fell on an old man whose locks had been whitened by the frosts of more than seventy winters, and were as white as the driven snow, and fell gracefully down over his collar. " Before being taken to the slake, pray er was offered, and oh ! what a prayer j meeting that was. Such earnest, sincere, i heartfelt, agonizing prayer, very seldom ! ascends from mortals. " Prayer over, the old man was led out, j and a black man with him. Then they ; were bound back to back to the stake, j their hands stretched out and a small chain | was wound around them from their feet to ; their hands. Then brush was piled around j them, oil poured on the brush, and then the j fatal, infernal match was applied, with ( worse than infernal hands, and the flames j ; instantly ascend in awfully majestic col- : | umns, and their fierce and lurid contortions j I they seized the victims, and oh ! what hor- ' rid shrieks rent the air. A few moments more and all was over with them. To the remaining 129 was given the chance to take the oath of allegiance or die, and the instantaneous, unanimous re ply was, we can never own allegiance to a government which will tolerate such hor rid crimes as that. We love the Union, and dear old flag, and then one by one they ' marched out and were shot. " I was then placed on the scaffold, the | rope adjusted about my neck, and the cap drawn over my eyes, and that was the j happiest moment of my life. 1 thought in ' a few minutes 1 shall see mother, whom I ■ loved as I did myself, and I shall see my j Saviour, too, whom 1 love a great deal bet- j tor than I do my mother or myself, and then all sin and sorrow, pain and anguish, will never mar the happiness which 1 felt confident 1 should forever enjoy. But hark ! Who are those riding in such haste ? List en ! Says one of them : " I believe that is Joshua." They came a little nearer and Gen. Joe Johnson ordered the cap removed and I confronted my father face to face.— It was an interesting moment. I was then sent back to the prison, but soon was put in an iron cage and exhibited as the Yan kee spy who escaped hanging. " But the officers who expected to hang me were not pleased with the idea of be ing deprived of tie* privilege of seeing a Yankee dance on nothing. " After being exhibited till they were satisfied, I was allowed to go out of the i prison, and was sent to the outskirts of the I city, on some pretended errand, which 1 j always faithfully performed and immodi- ■ ately returned. One evening I came in j and my keeper said to me : " Wood, why j don't you go away from here ?" Said I, | "That would be forfeiting my word, and 1 i consider my word when given, worth more than my neck." Said he, "If you will leave to-morrow we will not consider it any violation of plighted faith." The morrow came, and I left the prison forever. 1 wan dered through the country and escaped de- i tection until 1 was safely within our lines, j and under the Stars and Stripes. " I have told you this incident, my com- , rade soldiers, to show you how God can i protect those who put their trust in Him. [ Come, put your trust in Him and you are safe." Yours truly, April 8, 18(55. E. P. COBURN. WHY JEWS ARK BKAI TIFUI,. —Chateaubriand gives a fanciful but agreeable reason for the fact that the Jewish women are so much handsomer than the men of their nation.— He says Jewesses have escaped the curse which alighted upon their fathers, husbands and sons. Not a Jewess was to be seen among the crowd of priests and rabble who insulted the Son of God, scourged him, crowned him with thorns, and subjected him to infamy and the agony of the cross. The woman of Judea believed in the Saviour, and assisted in soothing him under affliction. A woman of Bethany poured on his head precious ointment which she kept in a vessel of alabaster. The sinner anoint ed his feet with perfumed oil, and wiped them with her hair. Christ, on bis part, extended mercy to the Jewess. lie raised from the dead the son of the widow of Nain, and Martha's brother Lazarus. lie cured Simon's mother-in-law, and the woman wlto touched the hem of his garment. To the Samaritan woman he was a spring of living waters, and a compassionate judge of the woman in adultery. The daughters of Je rusalem wept over him ; the holy woman accompanied him to Calvary, brought him balm and spices, and weeping, sought him in the sepulchre. "Woman, why weepest thou ?" His first appearance aftei the res urrection was to Mary Magdalene. He said to her, "Mary !" At the sound of his voice, Mary Magdalene's eyes were opened, and she answered, ' Master." The reflec tion of some ray must rested upon the brow of the Jewess. REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER. OUR BOYS ARE COMING HOME. Thank God, the sky is clearing! The clouds are hurrying past; Thank God, the day is Hearing! The dawn is coming fast. And when glad glad herald voices Shall tell us peace has come. This thought shall most rejoice ns : " Our boys are coming home!" Soon shall the voice of singing Drown war's tremendous din : Soon shall the joy-bells ringing Bring peace and freedom in. The jubilee bonfires burning, Shall soon light up the dome. And soon, to soothe our yearning. Our boys are coining home. The vacant fireside places Have waited for them long ; The love-light lacks their faces, The chorus waits their song ; A shadowy fear has haunted The long deserted room : But now our prayers are granted, Our boys are coming home! i O mother, calmly waiting For that belove 1 son! O sister proudly dating The victories he has won! O maiden softly humming The love song while you roam— Joy, joy, the boys are coming— Our boys are coming home. And yet—oh! keenest sorrow ! They're coming, but not all ; Full many a dark to-morrow Shall wear its sable pall For thousands who are sleeping Beneath the empurpled loam ; Woe! woe! for those we're weeping, Wlio never will come home! O sad heart, hush thy grieving : Wait but a little while! With hoping and believing Thy woe and fear beguile. Wait for the joyous meeting Beyond the starry dome, Fov there our boys are waiting To bid ns welcome home. A RUNAWAY MATCH. BY MRS MARY C. VAUGHAN. " I would not condemn them sosweeping ly, Robert, my boy. " Robert looked up in surprise, and the old father gave a meaning glance at his old wife, sitting opposite him, and chuckled au dibly. " What ! do you mean to say, father,that you are in favor of runaway marriages?" asked Robert, breathless from the shock he had received. He had been declaiming with that intense satisfaction one feels in the consciousness of being able to talk well, and the certainty of carrying his audience with him, against all clandestine matches. The mild check of his father's words was like a peal of thunder in his ears. " Why, no, my son, " the old gentleman answered. " I object to sweeping asser tions of all kinds. As a rule, perhaps, the fact of a clandestine arrangement of this kind argues the existence of something wrong ; but there may exist circumstances perfectly and fully justifying a runaway marriage—eh, mother ? " Robert looked from one to the other.— On the wan, faded cheek of his mother a faint flush was glowing, and a soft light was in her dimmed eye. The big, portly figure of his father was shaking with sup pressed laughter, and his eyes twinkled with mirth. Robert had just graduated at College, and was now about to enter the Theological Seminary. He was a good scholar, and an earnest, practical young man. He had a exalted opinion of his vo cation and of himself, lie was accustom ed to being listened to with much defe rence, and he by no means relished being laughed at. He got up and stalked out of the room with a most impressive tread and head considerably elevated. He was about equally puzzled and angry. The joyous ha ! ha ! of his dear old father's voice fol lowed him as he strode away and made him somehow angrier. But angry at his parents! Surely that was wrong. He must go back ; he must humble himself to ask their forgiveness ; he must not indulge in such sinfull feelings a minute longer. So, without going into the garden,as he intend ed, he turned about and entered the room again. His father and mother had never been ashamed to seem to love each other in the presence of their childred. And now he found his mother, where he had often seen her before, sitting by his father's side, and listening with a well pleased smile to some very lover-like talk. And she neither look ed nor felt ashamed, though she had been a wife almost fifty years, and it was already planned to celebrate the golden wedding the following spring. "Never mind, Bob," the father said, when his son, in a few hesitating but manly words had signified the penitence for the anger he had displayed. "It is not strange for young people to believe their theories better than old people's experience. Your mother and I can readily forgive you for differing from us in opinion, especially as ours has the most substantial foundation, and has already withstood the tempests of well-nigh fifty years. Look my boy ! Here are we a hale and happy old pair, and a liv ing exemplification of my doctrine that peo ple who run away to get married are not always either wickod or miserable. " Robert looked from the father's smiling face to the serious and tender one of the mother. Far down the valley of life they had passed, serene and loving undismayed by the storms of life, untouched by its temptations, beloved, liouored, respected. Their life had been rich alike in household joys and in worldly honor. Squire Thorn was the arbiter of all the country round, and his opinion was respected almost more than the law. Mrs. Thorn was a " mother in Israel ;"a gentle minister in all things that concerned the material as well as the spiritual welfare of her vast circle of ac quaintance. Wisdom and purity and kind ness had been the law of those gentle beau tiful lives now drawing to a close. It was hard to believe that this aged pair had sig nalized the outset of their joint existence by an act which he, their son had just de signated as " one of the insanest follies of which human beings are capable." He drew a long breath and sat down bewil dered. " I can hardly believe it yet, father, " he said feebly. " But it is true, nevertheless, my boy ; and lest you should be tempted to despise your parents—never mind depreciations- - I'll tell you all about it, Sit still, mother you need not be ashamed to hear your youth ful exploits spoken of. " " Oh, Mr. Thorn ! we never told any of our children. Do you think it best to tell Robert ? " This was the most violent expostulation that good, gentle Mrs. Thorn ever uttered and after that, if Mr. Thorn signified that he did "think it best," she acquiesced pla cidly, perfectly satisfied that he must be right. " How cruel you are, mother, to try to frighten father and prevent my hearing the story ! I would not have thought it of you.!" This was an ancient household jest, to pretend to fancy the wild little woman frightening somebody, aud putting the fam ily in mortal terror for daring to dispute her will. It put them all in good humor with themselves and each oth<-r. " Now, Bob, " the old gentleman com menced " I take it for granted that, not withstanding your objection to runaway matches, you are inclined to think well of your parents. " You've no idea that in his youth your father was a ravenous wretch, going about the world seeking whom he may devour, in the shape of richly-endowed damsels with more money than brains. Nor do you think your mother, who I can testify, was really a passable looking girl when in her teens, ever flirted and read novels after the fasli- I ion of those silly Miss Sedleys down at the mill village. Nor were we, either of us j persons of that class. 1 was the son of a j poor widow,who worked and strove to keep and educate me while I was a child, and I : worked and strove to lift this and all other | burdens from her shoulders as soon as I was | old enough. I really had no time to roam about in search of even such delicious food. And Patty there, though her father was a j wealthy farmer, she had to spin and bake, and brew ; and I remember the summer j she was sixteen she was engaged in weav ing a web of linen to be made into table ■ cloths for her own outfit. She had spun j and prepared the yarn, and after she had j woven it (was it the lemon-peel or bird's j eye, Patty ?) she bleached it, cut it into j lengths, and sewed it with her own hands. j That is the way girls did in those days,and ! they had not much time for novels or flirta- J tion either. " I was a great awkward lad of twenty ; that summer. For two winters I had taught j school in the little log school-house on the j hill, and all the summers I worked for one j or other of the rich farmers in the neigh- ; borhood. This year I had hired out to i Squire Evans for ten dollars a month. " I guess you don't remember your grand sire Evans do you Robert ? He must have j died before you were old enough to notice. Well he was Patty's father and counted a hard stern man, with gusty passions and given to harsh words if people or things displeased him. But Patty had been my scholar the two winters I had been teach ing and I made up my mind that I could get along with her father for the sake of being where I could see her every day. So I closed with his offer and went there to live, though Deacon Thompson had offered me a dollar more a month. " I should have been angry if any one held me a servant. I did not feel like one, nor was I treated as one. I sat at the same table and partook of the same food as my employers, and I was lodged as well as they. I retained my self respect and was respected by them. But still there was an intangible line of seperation. In one sensn I was acknowledged equal—labor did not degrade me ; but poverty placed me lower in the social scale than the rich farmer and his family. "Pretty Patty did not feel this.(You were pretty Patty then, you know,mother,) I think that in fact she really looked up to me. She had learned the trick of obedi ence as my pupil and she was as gentle and yielding then as 1 have always found her. It was not long before I found cour age to tell my love and had the delight of listening to her confession that it was reci procated. I felt a sort of indefinite fear of opposition but 1 did not imagine it would amount to more than a mandate of delay. That I thought myself prepared for. I must prepare a home and command the means of supporting a wife before 1 took one. We were both very young, and quite willing to wait till we could marry with comfortable prospects for the future. " I, of course, had no thought of doing anything mean or secret. I went to the Squire the very next morning after the de licious summer evening that had witnessed the plighting vows, and, as the phrase went in those days 'asked his consent'. I re member this scene so well that it seems to appear tangibly before me as I speak—the great barn, witli the fragrant hay piled high in the mows each side,and the Squire looking at this odorous wealth with a sort of grim exultation. Grain harvest was to commence next day, and I iancy he was wondering where to bestow the golden sheaves which,before the week's end,would be brought there. In truth,his barns were overflowing already. "I disliked the task I had to perform,now that the time of it had come ; but it must be done. And, after all, I reasoned, there could not be a more propititous time,for the Squire is in the best of humors. But there was the point of my mistake. The cause which put my employer in such a pleasant mood was the very one to prove most un favorable to my suit. II I had more word ly wise I should never have chosen that moment to propose my poor self as a son in-law. of that rich man, exulting in his wealth. But I was young, and had never been taught in the hard school which de grades tue honest man because of his pov erty. " So I cleared my throat, and went up to the squire. ' What is it John Vhe said quite pleasantly. ' Oh, directions "for the day I suppose.' How I answered him 1 hardly remember, but 1 made him under stand, at last, that it was his consent to per- Annum, in Ad vance. my marriage with his daughter that I ask ed for. And then what a change came over his face ! What a towering passion he fell into ! How he raved and scolded ! And, finally, how fiercely lie brandished the pitchfork as he drove me before its glittering points from the barn ! " I went to the house, hopeless and dis mayed Patty had been lingering near, and the tones of her father's voice, as well as some other words that had reached her ears left me nothing to tell. But she put her arms around my neck and kissed me on the cheek, which she baptized with her tears ; and then she tried to smile as she bade me good bye, and exhorted me to be of good courage. ' Father loves me better than anything in the world, and I think I can bring him round. Don't go home to i your mother ; to tell her would only be : distressing her, but go into the field and to : work. Father is short of hands I heard him say this morning, and he will be more angry with you if you leave him now."— ' But,' said I, ' he drove me out of the barn with the pitchfork, and ordered me never to show my face on the premises again.' — And then Patty smiled up in my face and said " Trust me, John, I know father better than you do, and I know that he don't real ly want you to leave. Can't you stay for my sake ?" " Very well the little minx knew that I would have done much more for her sake ; and much as I disliked to meet the Squire again I promised to stay, and immediately betook myself to the field. "The Squire never alluded to what hud occurred. He treated me much as lie had done before, but I felt myself watched. Tt was very seldom that 1 could get access to Patty, and though living in the same house I was as effectually separated from her as though miles of space had intervened. Matters went on this way all the summer. Occasionally we met for a few hurried words. But Patt.y's mother or her maiden aunt, were close upon her track at all times, and these hurried interviews only seemed to keep a faint ember of hope alive. Winter came, and I was again the teacher of the country school. But Patty was no longer my pupil. Her parents could not trust her so near me, and now we met more seldom than before. I began to feel sad and hopeless. What if she could be influ enced by her parents and cease to love me? The few hurried words exchanged in our chauce meetings hardly sufficed to keep the flame of hope burning. We both felt sad and disheartened. And so the months rolled on. " Then suddenly there came to me ru mors that old Dr. Tracy's sou and heir, from Hadfield was often seen at Squire Evan's. Everybody said lie was courting Patty, and some few professed to know that they would be married in the spring. I was in despair and I waylaid Patty on one of her visits to the village, and accused her of be ing false to me. The poor girl looked pale and worn, and cried bitterly. I felt myself a brute and I believe I cried too. I know 1 felt like it. " She said her lathe: was fully determ ined that she should marry John Tracy ; but she was equally determined that she would not, and there had been several con flicts of will. But no time was determined on as yet, and she decided to leave home and try to earn her >wn living in some way, if he persisted. We were interrupted at this point and parted. " I went straight home to my mother and told her all, and she advised interference to prevent this unhappy sacrifice. Tracy had nothing to recommend him but his riches. Patty did not love him, and did love me. Sin* promised to marry me, and in\ T mother said I had the right, and it was, in truth, my duty to save her from misery. After that, my mind was made up, and I found means to communicate with Patty, and to let her know that she had a friend who would not see her be driven to extrem ities. " Before long it was known in Brighton that l'attv E.vans was to be married to young Tracy on the 18th of April. Squire Evans had spread the report and prepara tions were making already for the wedding. Patty told her father that she would not marry Tracy, but would leave home rather than be forced into a union so hateful to her, and was immediately locked into her chamber in consequence of such a rebel lion. " It must be supposed that I was on the watch, and this circumstance soon came to my knowledge, and I prepared myself ac cordingly. We were not far from the State line and on the night of the 17th of April, I helped Patty to descend from her window, assisted her into my carriage, and before daylight was safely out of Massa chusetts. We breakfasted at a tawern in a little village near the line, in New York, and after the meal was over, preceded qui etly to the nearest clergyman, who speedi ly made us one. Before night we were safely ensconced beneath my mother's roof. " Patty's cousin Abby who had been locked up with her on the night of her es cape, and had in fact, been our accomplice, received her meals, and our escape was not known in Brighton till the following evening. Then, as may be supposed, the wedding did not take place for want ot the bride. There was much confusion on the discovery of her escape, and Squire Evans vowed that he would never forgive either of us. But he did before the evening was over ; and learning that Patty was at my mothers, he sent his carriage to bring us all to his house, and then, finding, I sup pose, that it was useless to attempt any further opposition, he gave us his blessing and forgiveness. "We had our wedding feast, after all, and Patty slipped up stairs, and put on the bridal dress in which she expected to be transformed into Mrs. Tracy. • Altogether we had a very pleasant and happy time of it. " Tracy behaved like a good fellow.— Finding he could not have Patty, whom he fully forgave, lie transferred his suit and his affections to Abby, who accepted them, and made him an excellent wife ; for she was a good girl, and loved him, which Pat ty did not. " Squire Evans never did things by halves. Ilis forgiveness was full and en tire, and from that hour until the day of his death he was a good friend and father to me, and in after years often avowed him sell glad that we had taken the matter out of his hands, and made ourselves happy in our own way, which at last came to be the way of his approval also. " And now, Robert, yon have the story of one runaway match, that proved a happy one and I trust it will be a lesson to you hereafter against all sweeping condemna tions. ON PETTICOATS.— EIihu Burritt has been making calculations about women's petti coats—queer business for the Learned Blacksmith—and says more than 10,000 tuns of steel are put into crinoline in Christendom annually. Upon this the Bos ton Traveller remarks ; —"Such is the inag " uitude of crinoline, considered from a busi : ness point of view, and no wonder that the article takes up so much room in the world. , Twenty million pounds of iron worked up yearly into petticoats and carried about by the delicate creatures ! It must be a far greater burden than their sins. But they get along very well with it, and thrive un der its weight. Iron, according to Solon,is the most potent of all things, conquering even gold's owners ; and ladies find it a very useful article in making tlier conquests. Just now it rules 'the court, the camp, the grove,' and is potential everywhere, from castle to cottage. In every sense, this is the age of iron, even women acknowledg ing the rule of the government of metals,a rule that literally encircles them. Those who would abolish the hoop must see that they have a great interest to contend against, and that all good conservatives are bound to oppose them." AN ABGCJCENTIVE YOCTH.— "That thou hast do, do it with all thy might said a cler gyman to his son one morning. "So I did this morning," replied Bill,with an enthusiastic gleam in his eyes. "Ah ! what was it my darling ?" and the father's hands ran through his offspring's curls. "Why, I walloped Jack Edwards till he yelled like blazes : you should have heard liim holler, dad." "Dad" looked unhappy while he explain ed the precept did not apply a case like that, and concluded mildy with — "You should not have done that my child." "Then he'd walloped me," retorted Bill. "Better," expostulated his sire, "to have fled from the wrath to come." "Yes," urged Bill, byway of a final clincher, "but Jack can run twice as fast as 1 can." The good man sighed, went to his study, took up a pen and endeavored to compose himself and a sermon reconciling practice and precept. A HEROIC POINTSMAN. —The Berlin Jour nals relate the following incident which has just taken place in Prussia : " A pointsman was at the junction of two lines of rail way. The engine was within a few sec onds of reaching the embankment, when the man, on turning his head, perceived his little boy playing on the rails of the line the train was to pass over. With air heroic devotedness to his duty, the unfortunate man adopted a sublime resolution. " Lie down !" he shouted out to the child, but as to himself, be remained at bis post. The train passed along on its way, and the lives of one hundred passengers were perhaps saved. But the poor child ! The father rushed forward expectiug to take up only a corpse, but what was his joy on finding that the boy had at once obeyed his order. He laid down, and the whole train passed over him without injury. The next day the King sent for the man, and attached to his breast the medal for civil courage." THERE are some people always looking out for slights. They caunot pay a visit, they cainiot receive a friend ; they cannot j carry on the intercourse of the family, with out suspecting some offence is designed. They are as touchy as hair triggers.— If they meet an acquaintance in the street who happens to be preoccupied with busi ness, they attribute his abstraction to some motiove personal to themselves, and take umbrage accordingly. They lay on others the fault of their irritability. A fit of indi gestion makes them see impertinence in everybody they come in contact with.— Innocent persons, who never dreamed of giving offense, are astonished to find some unfortunate word, or some momentary taciturnity mistaken for insult. THE diamond, as found in nature, usually has a crystalized point on one side, and rough surface, like ground glass, on the other side, but sometimes the gem has the entire surface rough. The distinguishing feauture of the diamoud is its hardness ; and the most convenient test is a grind stone, which will not break the point or dim the lustre ef the diamond, though it will cut into all other crystals and paste. The gem can be distinguished from imita tions and quartz by its greater coolness when applied to the tongue. NUMBER 48. ABSENT MINDED.—A young man of this city, who was very fond of a clergyman's daughter, was taking tea at the house of his adored a short time since, and had some fruit cake offered him Being somewhat absent minded,he stammered out,"l pass !" The father hearing him, and he having played some in his younger days, was struck with the infatuation of the youth, and said bluntly, "You pass, do you? There's the door ; now, let's see you pass out I"— Cleveland Plain Dealer. NATURAL ACTION OF THE MlND. —When the mind acts up to nature, and is rightly dis posed, she takes things as they come, stands loose in her fancy, and tacks about with her circumstances ; as for fixing the condi tion of her fortune, she is not at all solicitous about that. 'Tis true, she is not perfectly indifferent, she moves forward with a pre ference in her ehoice ; but then 'tis always with a reserve of acquiescence, and being easy in the event.— Anloninons. A CERTAIN Judge was put to sleep with an Irishman in a crowded hotel, when the following conversation ensued : "Pat, you would have remained a long time in the old country before you could have slept with a Judge, would you not ?" "Yes, yer honor," said Pat; "and I think yer honor would have been a long time in the ould countliry befere they'd have made ye a Judge 1" Do all in your power to teach your chil dren selfgovernment. If a child is passion ate, teach him by patient and gentle means to curb his temper. If he is greedy, culti vate liberality in him. If he is selfish, pro mote generosity. GOOD men have the fewest fears. He has but oue who fears to do wrong. He has a thousand who has overcome that I one. IT behooves us to ever pay respect to old age, because we are all desirous of attain ing to it. THE Empress Eugenie figured at a late reception with diamonds worth three mil lions and a half in her hair.