TERMS OF FI unic YTiox. BBPOBTEB is published every Thursday Morn -1 i!y I'.. 0. GOODRICH, at $2 per annum, in ad i\ FKTISEMENTS are inserted at TEN CENTS I( , r first insertion, and FIVE CENTS per line ; ,|in nt insertions. A liberal discount is ' persons advertising by the quarter, half , vt-ar. Special notices charged one-half th iu regular advertisements. All resolutions " itial interest, and notices of Marriages and , exceeding five lines, are charged TEN CENTS r line. 1 Year. (5 mo. 3 mo. o u, Column, ••••- ••• • • $35 S2O , lee Square tO 7f 5 nistrator's and Executor s Notices.. S2 00 , fitor's X 'tices 250 iitisiuess Cards, live lines, (per year) 500 ,j vuts and others, advertising their business, !„ charged sls. They will he entitled to f -unfilled exclusively to their business, with vilt-ge of change. advertising in all eases exclusive of sub ,. , t ion to the paper. I, ig PRINTING of every kind in Plain and Fan \„s, done with neatness and dispatch. Hand . Blanks, Cards, Pamphlets, Ac., of every va ;ll style, printed at the shortest notice. The OFFICE has just been re-fitted with Power am ] every thing in the Printing line can '' entod in the most artistic manner and at the l . t rat , s. TERMS INVARIABLY CASH. For the Bradford Reporter. A VOICE FROM HEAVEN. I shine in the light of God, His liken -ss stamps my brow, Tliroue 1 ' 1' - shadow of death myfeethave trod, And I reign in glory now. X'o breaking heart is here, X' - keen and thrilling pain, \"o wasted cheek where the frequent tear, liath rolled and left its stain. Xo sin. no grief, no pain, Safe in my happy home, Mv bars all fled, my doubts all slain, Mv hour of triumph come. Oh. friends of my mortal years, The trusted, and .he true, VuU aie walking still in the vale of tears, liut I wait to welcome you. Do I forget! Oh, no ! Nor memory's golden chain, Shall bind my lieart to tlie hearts below, Till they meet and touch again. Each link is strong and bright, And love's electric flame. Flows fivelv down the river of light, To tlie world from whence I come. 1 have found the joy of heaven, am one of an angel band, To my head a crown is given, A harp is in my hand. Then why should your tears roll down, And your hearts he sorely riven, For anothi r gem's iu the Saviour's crown, And another soul in heaven. A. P. ptoliattflMiS. ACONITE. There arc not, 1 fancy, many scenes ; ... -re animated than the view commanded ; y the elevated recreation-ground adjoin-' ing Plymouth called the Hoe, on a line ! sunnier i veiling. Looking inland, the sub- i '.ii'h.ii. -enures and villas stretch far away till tl.ry Income lost or dotted among the' • hint foliage so pleasantly relieved by ; blue hills of Devon. Turn seawards, . 1 the picture is a bright and glorious ■-De. Immediately below us, and, as it under our very feet, lies the Sound, ' tii as an inland lake and glittering as j ■i .-i.eet of glass ; not a movement on the roc, except the almost imperceptible! : pie following the Hip of the oar, or the j tying brightness which marks the track j -I the sailing boat. Studded with vessels of all sizes, from a ::t.m of-war lying at anchor to a fishing lit, not a sound is heard except the sub !• 1 and melodious cry of the sailors as •hey toil at the capstan ; the expanse of i is broken only by Drake Island, and ..•■long break-water with which its refuge tiid lighthouse, is abruptly but delightfully crminated ;by the refreshing green and j leep, ricfi shadows of the woody part of j ho Mount Edgecumbe, where the syca mores and chestnuts bend over the water J •dge ; and then, with every graduation of j ...Rural color, the landscape molts away in-j ■ the faint blue of far-off Cornwall. It was on an evening like this, after the ' dors of the day, that I strolled across the he Hoc, and so down to the water side to uramon one of the watermen, always in > u'hness, for an hour's sail. Seated com brtahly and indolently in the stern, we ■ ek< r flow, Wandering ships shall never go, And rests the shining sea forever." GREAT EATERS. Great eaters never live long. A voraci ous appetite, so far from being a sign of health, is a certain indication of disease Some dyspeptics are always hungry ; feel best when they are eating, but as soon as they have eaten they endure torments so distressing in their nature as to make their unhappy victims wish for death. The appe tite of health is that which inclines to eat moderately, when eating time comes, and ; which when satisfied leaves no unpleasant reminders. Multitudes measure their health by the amount they can eat, and of any ten persons, nine are gratified at an increase of weight, as if mere bulk were an index of health ; when in reality, any excess of fat ness is, in proportion, decisive proof of ex isting disease, showing that the absorbants of the system are too weak to discharge their duty ; and the tendency to fatness, to obesity, increases until existence is a bur den, and sudden deatli closes the history. Particular inquiry will almost invariably elicit the fact that fat persons, however ru bicund and jolly, arc never well, and yet they arc envied. While great eaters never live to an old age, and are never for single day without some "symptom," some feelings sufficiently disagreeable to attract the small eaters, those who eat regularly of plain food, usually have no "spare flesh," are wiry and enduring, and live to an active old age.— Remarkable exemplifications of these state ments are found in the lives of the centen arians of a past age. Galen, one of the most distinguished physicians among the ancients, lived very sparingly after the age of twenty-eight, an died in his liuud dred and fortieth year. Kentigern, who never tasted spirits of wine, and had worked hard all his life, reached 185 years. Jenkins, a poor York shire fiishermao, who lived on the coarsest diet, was one hundred and sixty-nine years old when he died. Old Parr lived to a hun dred and fifty-three ; his diet being milk, cbcese, whey, shall beer and coarse bread. The favorite food of Henry Francisco, who lived to be one hundred and forty, was tea, bread and butter, and baked apples. Fph riatn Pratt, of Shutesburg, Mass., who died aged one hundred and seventeen, lived chiefly on milk,and even that in small quan tity ; his son Michael by the same means, lived to be 103 years old. Father Cull, a Methodist clergyman,died last year at the age of one hundred and | five, the main diet of his life having been salted swine's flesh (bacon) and bread made of Indian meal. From these state ments, nine general readers out of ten, will jump at the conclusion that milk is healthy, as are baked apples and bacon. These conclusions do not legitimately follow.— The only inference that can be safely drawn is from the only fact running through all those cases—that plain food and a life of steady labor tend to a great age. We must not expect to live long by do ing any one tiling which an old man did, and omit all others, but by doing all be did,, that is work steadily as well as eat mainly a particular dish.— Hall's Journal of Health. BITTOXS.— These were used in England, byway of ornament, so far back as the tenth century ; but it was not till the com mencement of the fourteenth that they were adopted as a necessary part of attire, rib ands or lace having been used in their stead. The manufacture of buttons is not mentioned as a separate trade till about the middle of the seventeenth century, when the importation of foreign buttons made with the needle was prohibited. Soon after this tlie invention of metal buttons took place, to encourage which, a penalty of 10s was imposed, 1 <>oo, on every dozen of buttons consisting merely of a mould, covered with some kind of cloth as the garment ; and the importation of metal buttons was pro hibited. DEMOCRATIC nominations, uow-a days, are laughable commentaries upon the party which, only a year ago, solemnly resolved in National Convention assembled, that "the war is a failure," and which in almost every State adopted planks opposing the war in every possible shape. Now these same men are on the continual hunt for Soldiers to accept nominations for the va rious State offices. In Pennsylvania they have just nominated a Colonel for State Auditor. By-and-by these partisans, who used to denounce "Lincoln's hirelings,"will begin to claim that they were original war men, and the only true friends of the sold -1 iers. per Annum, in Advance. A MOMENT J)F HOEBOE- For twenty-three years old Jake Willard has cultivated the soil in Baldwin Count}',and drawn therefrom a support for himself and wife. He is childless. Not long ago, Jake left the house in search of a missing cow. His route led hirn through an old, worn-out patch of clay land, of about six acres in extent, in the centre of which was a well, twenty-five or thirty feet deep, that, at some time, probably, had furnished the\ in mates of a dilapidated house near by with water. In passing by this spot an ill wind drifted Jake's "tile" from his head, and ma liciously wafted it to the edge of the well, and in it tumbled. Now Jake had always practiced the vir tue of economy, and lie immediately set about recovering the lost hat. lie ran to the well, and finding it was dry at the bot tom, he uncoiled the rope which he had brought for the purpose of capturing the truant cow, and after several attempts to catch the hat with a noose, he concluded to save time by going down into the well himself. To accomplish this, he made fast one end of the rope to a stump hard by,and was soon 011 his way down the well. It is a fact, of which Jake was no less ob livious than the reader hereof, that Ned Wells was in the dilapidated building aforesaid, and that an old blind horse, with a bell on his neck, who had been turned out to die, was lazily grazing within a short distance of the well. The devil himself, or some other wicked spirit, put it into Ned's cranium to have a | iittle fun ; so he quietly slipped up to the j horse, unbuckled the strap,and approached i with a slow and measured " ting-a-ling " to | the edge of the well. " Dang the old blind horse 1" said Jake— "he's a comin' this way, sure, and ain't got no more sense nor to fall in here. Woa,Ball!" But the continued approach of the "ting a-ling" said just as plainly as words,that old Ball wouldn't "whoa." Besides Jake was at the bottom, resting before trying to "shin" it up the rope. "Great Jerusalem!" said he,' the old cuss will be a-top o' me 'fore I can say Jack Robinson. Whoa ! dang you, whoa !" Just then Ned drew up to the edge of the well, and with his foot kicked a little dirt into it. " Oil ! Lord !" exclaimed Jake, failing 011 his knees at the bottom of the well ; "I'm gone now!—Whoa!—Now I lay me down to sleep—Whoa! Ball—l pray the Lord my soul to—Whoa! now—Oh,Lord have mercy on me !" Ned could hold in no longer, and fearful that Jake might suffer from his fright, he revealed himself. Probably Ned didn't make tracks with his heels toward that well. May be Jake wasn't up to the top of it in short order. May be not. I don't know. But Ido know that if Jake finds out who sent this, it will be the last squib you'll get from me. WHY MEN FAIL.— Mrs. Stowe says that people of small incomes, if they deny the palate to please the imagination, can adorn their homes with many gems of art. The following incident maj r be suggestive to many who find their incomes inadequate to their wants. A young merchant, who had just failed j business, having spent in four years a leg- i acy of ten thousand dollars, in addition to i any profits realized, was met by a thrifty young mechanic, who had formerly been on terms of intimacy with him. During the conversation which ensued, the merchant said to him—"How is it, Harry, that you have been able to live and save money 011 the small sum which you have received for your service, while 1 found it impossible to live in my business with a good round ten thousuud dollars to back me ?" " Oh, said the mechanic, " that is easily i understood. I have lived with reference, j mostly, for the comforts and tastes of my self and family, while you lived mostly with reference to opinions and tastes of others. It costs more to please the eye than to keep the back warm and stomach ! full." THE NEW YORK DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION.— The character and work of the Democrat- j ic Convention reminds us of a little illus- j trat ion in the form of a fable. A wolf 1 caught a skunk, and was about to slay him, j when the skunk said : " Don't kill me ; j I'm a wolf." " You a wolf ? Let me hear j you bark." " I can't bark right, because j I've got a bad cold." But your clothes don't look like a wolf's." " Oh! mine were stolen ; these are my little cousin's." " But you havn't a wolfs ears." "Because my ears were trimmed." The wolf, half ! convinced, was about to leave, when he suddenly stopped, snuffed the atmosphere a moment, and exclaimed: "You may bark like a wolf, and wear the clothes of a wolf, and show the ears of a wolf, but no wolf ever had such a bad smell about bim as you." And so the poor skunk died. —Albany Evening Journal. GIVE THE CHILDREN FRESH Alß.— Some par ents make the great mistake of keeping their children in doors during cold weather. Such a practice is pernicious in many re spects. It enfeebles the bodies of children, and renders them peculiarly liable to be attacked by colds and coughs. A child | should have its feet well shod with socks and boots, its body well wrapped iu warm clothing, its head and ears securely pro tected from the cold ; and then be let loose to play in the keen, bracing, winter air.— By this means its body will become robust, and its spirits be kept bright aud cheerful; whereas, if a child be shut up in the house, it will become fretful and feverish,and per haps wind up with a severe attack of ill ness. SOUTHERN POOR WHITE FOLKS.— About sev en miles from Richmond I saw a man lay ing under the shade of a tree, assiduously chewing tobacco. Aiter saluting biro, aud after several questions, to which 1 received lazy yeses and noes, I asked him to what churches the people of that neighborhood usually went. " Well, not much to any." "What are their religious views ?" "Well, uot much of any." "Well, my friend, what are your religious views ?" I asked. The man answered slowly and sheepily, " My own 'pinion is, that them as made me 'll take care of me." A BIRD that always faces the storm—The . weather-cock. A CONTENTED TABMEE- Once upon a time, Frederick, King of Prussia, surnamed "Old Fritz," took a ride, and espied an old farmer plowing his acre by the waj'side, cheerfully singing his mel ody. " You must be well off, old man," said the King. " Does this acre belong to you on which you so industriously labor?" " No, sir," replied the farmer, who knew not it was the King. "I am not so rich as that; I plow for wages." "How much do you get a day?" asked the King " Eight groschen," (about twenty cents), said the farmer. "This is not much," replied the King.— "Can you get along with this ?" " Get along and have something left." " llow is that ?" The farmer smiled and said : " Well, if I must tell you—two groschen are for my self and wife; with two i pay my old debts; two I lend away, and two 1 give away for the Lord's sake." "This is a mystery which I can not solve," said the King. " Then I will solve it for you," said the farmer. " I have two old parents at home who kept me when I was weak and needed help, and now that they are weak and need help 1 keep them. This is my debt toward which I pay twogrosheua day. The third pair of groschen which I lend away I spend for my children, that they may receive Christian instruction. This will come handy to me and my wife when we get old. With the last two groschen I maintain two sis ters whom I could not be compelled to keep. This it what I give for the Lord's sake." The King, apparently well pleased with the answer, said : " Bravely spoken, old man. Now I will also give you something to guess. Have you ever seen me before?" " Never," said the farmer. "Iu less than five minutes you shall see me fifty times, and carry in your pocket fifty of my likenesses." "This is a mystery which I can not un ravel," said the farmer. " Tuen I will solve it for you," said the King. Thrusting his hand in his pocket and counting him fifty bran-new gold pieces into his hand, stamped with his royal like ness, he said to the astonished farmer, who knew not what was coming : " The coin is geninue, for it also comes from our Lord God, and lam his paymaster. I bid you adieu." THE "SEVEN STARS."— EarIy iu the days of our childhood we learu one important fact —that there is a "man in the moon ;" and straightway we proceed to ask our mother a number of pointed questions about the matter. She satisfies our curios ity by telling us that he was placed there long ago, for stealing a head of cabbage, and that he has ever since been kept at hard labor, "piling brush," or collecting branches of trees as they are trimmed off by the axeman, preparatory to burning them out of the way. And when we look at the moon, and see a dark figure upon its disc, somewhat resembling, in outline, the shape of a man, and near it aa addition al dark spot which might or might not be •a pile of boughs, we go a great deal further than our mothers—we believe the story ; and having believed it, we scarcely resolve in our iniuds, never to commit a theft lest a similar fate should be ours. And thus the silh* fable at ouce becomes an impor tant engine in forging and forming the character of the man. The Indian mothers have a story some what like that of the "man in the moon," which they tell to their children as our mothers tell the story to us—with this diff erence, however: they believe the story themselves, while our mothers do not.— Here it is : NUMBER 18. "Very long ago seven little boys took it into their heads to have a feast after the manner of their fathers, and they went to their mothers praying for permission. Their mothers refused, after which they decided to rebel and have the feast anyhow. They procured a little white dog to sacrifice ; and, having placed it upon the fire, they commenced dancing around as they had seen their fathers do on momentous oc casions. While they were thus engaged they were suddenly caught up by some in visible power and carried off through the air. Their mothers heard their cries and came forth from their lodges, only to see them mount higher and higher, until they took their places among the stars in the sky, to dance on forever and ever." When the Indian mother tells this story, she points out the seven stars of the Plei ades ; and the embryo warrior trembles to think w r hat an awful fate might befall the youth who was so thoughtless as to disobey Lis mother. THE JUDGE AND HIS DEMIJOHN.— A good joke is told of a Judge iu New Hampshire. He always kept a demijohn of good Jamaica in his private office for his particular friends. The Judge had noticed for some time that on Monday morning his Jamaica was con siderable lighter than be left it on Saturday night. Another fact had established itself in his mind. His son Sam was missing from the parental pew in church on Sundays. One Sunday afternoon Sam came in and went up stairs very heavily when the Judge put the question pointedly to him!— "Sam, where have you been !" "To church, sir," was the prompt reply, "What church, Sam ?" "Second Methodist, sir." "Had a good sermon, Sam ?" "Very powerful, sir ; it quite staggered ine." The next Sunday the son came home rather earlier than usual, and apparently not so much "under the weather." His father hailed him with, "well, Sam, been to the "Second Methodist" again to day. "Yes, sir." "Good sermon, my boy ?" "Fact was, father, I coulden't get in ; the church was shut up, and a ticket on the door." "Sorry, Sam, keep going, you may get good by it yet." Sam says that going to the office for his usual refreshments, he found the "John" was empty and bearing the following label: "There will be no service here to-day ; the church is temporarily closed." A DESIRABLE MEMENTO. —In several of tlio Pyrenees the mountaineers are in the huhit of training' animals for the purpose of ex hibition. The Perfect of Pefpignan recently passed through one of them in company with an oflicer gendeartnes. The latter pointed out to the magistrate a women whose husband, a boar trainer, had been devoured by his pupil when instinct got the better of education. "I have nothing left," said the woman ; "I am absolutely without a roof to shelter nie and the poor animal." " Animal 1" exclaimed the astonished Prefect; "you don't mean to say that you keep the bear that devoured your hus band !" "Alas 1" she replied, "it is all that is left to me of the poor dead mail."