TERMS OF PTTRMCATTON. The REPORTER is published every Thursday Mora ]„.,t by E. P- GOODRICH, at $2 per annum, iu ad vance. ADVERTISEMENTS are inserted at TEN - CENTS •r line for first insertion, and FIVE CENTS per line !•„. subsequent insertions. A liberal discount is made to persons advertising by the quarter, half ir or year. Special notices charged one-half in.>re than regular advertisements. All resolutions of Associations ; communications of limited or in dividual interest, and notices of Marriages and Deaths exceeding five lines, are charged TEN CENTS per line. 1 Year. 6 mo. 3 mo. i in.' Column, SSO $35 S2O • ' 30 25 15 One Square, 10 7i 5 V.lininistrator'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 ( oilman, confined exclusively to their business, with privilege of change. Advertising in all cases exclusive of sub scription to the paper. .1011 PRINTING of every kind in Plain and Fan , v colors, done with neatness and dispatch. Hand bills, blanks, Cards, Pamphlets, Ac., of every va riety and style, printed at the shortest notice. The ID: PORTER OFFICE has just been re-fitted with Power Posses, and even - thing in the Printing line can l,c executed in the most artistic manner and at the lowest rates. TERMS INVARIABLY CASH. g'lafcil §kfi®ttn. ASSASSINATIONS. I have seen, since the death of President Lincoln, in several publications, notices of the assassinations of crowned heads, and in one a list of those who have lived within the period of modern history, but this list .lid not include one whose life was quite as eventful, and whose death was as much mounted as any one it did mention —I mean William of Nassau, Prince of Orange, sur numed tlie Silent. This man, hereditary heir of the princely Louse of Orange in Holland, was in his life lovalto the interests of his race, a reformer, a hero and victim to the unbounded law lessness of those who through long years sought the destruction of the liberty and free institutions of his country. He died bv the hand of the assassin in July 1584, in the 54th year of his age. No country in Europe has sacrificed so much blood and treasure in the cause of national independence and of the Reformed l.Vligion, as Holland. At one period of her history, that is, during most of the lfith century, she was the great theatre of that struggle which ended in the emancipation of the intellect of Northern Europe from the dogmas of a corrupt ecclesiastic oppression in the South. During forty years of this infuriated con test, William was the recognized leader of the liberal party. Discouraged by no mis fortune, destroyed by no defeat, always popular, always vigilant, with an unwaver ing zeal and a steadfast reliance upon God A iid his country, lie fought the good fight; and his enemies, balded and despairing of conquering and enslaving his country while he lived, resorted at last to the hired assassin. Philip II of Spain offered a re ward o means the cake, and nation means the pe< >- pic ; and they carry the cake to the minis ter's, and the people go there and eat it." DR. Payson says, "If you put a bright shilling into a child's hand, he will be pleased with it ; but tell him of an estate in reserve for him, and he pays little atten tion to you. So men and women are often more delighted with present comforts than with the prospects of future glory." IT is a certain sign of an ill heart, to be inclined to defamation. They who are harmless and iuuocent, can have 110 gratifi cation that way: but it ever arises from a neglect of what is laudable in a man's self, and an impatience of seeing it in another A MAN OF ACTION. — General Grant is a man of action, and not a man of words or fussy preperation. When he was directed to visit Sherman in North Carolina, he re ceived the order, folded it up, took his leave of the President with a carpet bag in one hand and a full cigar case in his pocket, aud in a few days had the terms of the treaty revoked and Johnson laying down his arms, "Pa, why do they plant guns—do they grow and have leaves?" " No, my son, but like plants they shoot, and the others do the leaving."