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They will be entitled to 4 ,;u:un. confined exclusively to their business, with i- iiCp'e of change. in all cases exclusive of snb . . jption to the ] taper. I, >1; PIUN'TINtx ot ex cry kind in Plain and Fan ins, done with neatness anil dispatch. Hand lilanks. Cards, Pamphlets, &e., of ever} - va c md style, printed at the shortest notice. The j J; E: ..BTEK OFFICE has just been re-fitted xxitli Power J ; ,>, and every thing in the Printing line can i . \ it din the most artistic manner and at the ! . t rates. TERMS INVARIABLY CASH. fjr For the Bradford Reporter. 1 EH ANNA'S POET, 3 U', 'tilth hi I'i' riiiilii.il J Irs. Si'i ifl's PorritS. * BY EMMA b. STII.WEIJ.. | 1 walk amid the scenes she loved '•¥ With eyes anointed new to sec J! fiie glory that c-nfoldi tli all— j| Eh towering mount, and rock, and tree : f And sec- in leafless branches east, ,|i Against the winter's boding sky, 3 The beanty that withstands the blast— I fair Nature's perfect tracery ; k Ami leafless stems in fancy bear ij s.iih marvellous blooms—such shapely leaves That shed their perfumes on the air fi in tangled meshes sweetness xvears. j- li-i. sun breaks thro' the leaden pall And greets the river of her love, 'J? Ih.it mocks the season's chilling thrall J Vml mirrors clear the rift above, I And softly sings about the base If (if stern grey stone, the bridge's piers, f I hat binds the near to farther land,. if As memory connects the year. Y s, 1 dim the paths our minds retrace, f' As looking back with longing eyes, A To hours illumined by her face— :!jf To music sweeter for her siglis : 8 And like the precious withered flowers, | That keep thro' years their odorous breath, !, if r sweet thoughts nourished in those hours | Survive the claims o!it. TOWAXDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., FEBRUARY I, 1866. said that it deserved a good position. He had himselt prepared a painting this year, 011 a more ambitious scale and a larger can vass than usual. It was a sacred subject, and represented the Conversion of St. Paul. His pupils admired it warmly, and none more than myself We all pronounced it to.be his master-piece, and the artist was evidently of our opinion. The day of exhibition came at last. I had scarcely slept tire previous night, and the early morning found me, with a number of other students, waiting impatiently be fore the yet unopened door. When I ar rived it wanted an hour to tiie time, but hall the day seemed to elapse before we heard the heavy bolts give way inside, and then forced our way through the narrow barriers. I had ilowu up the staircase,and found myselfin the first room before 1 re nlembered that I should have purchased a catalogue at tire door. I had not patience j however, to go back for it ; so 1 strode ! round the room, looking eagerly for my pic- j ture. It was nowhere to he seen, and I passed on to the next. Here my search was unsuccessful. "It must be in the third room," ["said to myself, " where ali the best works are placed ! Well, if it be hung ever so high, or in ever so dark a corner, it is, at all events an honor to have one's picture in the third room !" But, though I spoke so bravely, it was with a sinking heart 1 ventured in. 1 could not really hope for a good place among the magnates of the art ; while in either of the other rooms there had been a possibilitv that my picture might receive a tolerable position. The house had formerly been the man sion of a merchant of enormous wealth, who had left it with his valuable collection of paintings, to the state. The third room had been the reception-chamber and the space over the magnificent carved chimney was assigned, as the place of honor, to Ihe best painting. The painter ot tiiis picture always received a costly prize, for which he was likewise indebted to the munificence of the founder. To this spot my eyes were naturally turned as 1 entered the door. Was I dreaming? 1 stood still—l turned hot and cold by turns—l ran forward. It was 110 illusion. There was my picture, my own picture, in its little modest frame, in stalled in the chief place of the gallery ! And there, too, was the official card stuck in the corner, with the words" PRIZE PAINT ING," printed upon it in shining gold letters I ran down tiie staircase and bought a cat alogue, that my eyes might be gladened by the confirmation of this joy; and there, sure enough, was printed at tiie commencement, " ANNUAL PRIZE PAINTING-- View of Rotten dam, No. 127--FRANK LINDEN." I was never tired of looking at my. picture. 1 walked from one side to the other, 1 retreated, I ad vanced closer to it, I looked at it in every possible light, and forgot all but ray hap piness. "Avery charming little painting, sir," said a voice at my elbow. It was an elderly gentleman, with gold spectacles and an umbrella. I colored up and said falteringly : " Do you think so ?" " I do, sir," said the old gentleman. " I am an amateur —I am very fond of pictures. I presume that you are also an admirer of art ?•' I bowed. " Very nice little painting, indeed ; very nice," he continued, as he wiped his glasses and adjusted them with the air of a connois seur. " Water x'cry liquid, colors pure,sky transparent, perspective admirable. I'll buy it." " Will you ?" I exclaimed, joyfully. " Oh, thank you, sir !" " Oh," said the old gentleman, turning suddenly upon me and smiling kindly, " so you are the artist, are you? Happy to make your acquaintance, Messer Linden. You are a very young man to paint such a picture as that. 1 congratulate you, sir ; and —l'll buy l't." So we exchanged cards, shook hands, and became the best friends in the world. I was burning xvith impatience to see Ger trude, and tell her all my good fortune; hut my new patron took my arm, aud said that he must make the tour of the rooms in my company ; so I xx'as forced to comply. Wc stopped before a large painting that occupied the next best situation to mine ; it was my master's work, the Conversion of St. Paul. While I xvas telling him of my studies in the atelier of the painter, a man started from before us, and glided away ; but not before I bad recognized tbe pale countenance of Van Roos. There was something in the expression of his lace that shocked me—something that stopped my breath, and made me shudder. What was k ? I scarcely knew ; but the glare of his dark eyes and the quivering passion of his lip haunted me for the rest of the day, and came back again in my dreams. I said nothing of it to Gertrude that afternoon, but it had effectually sobered my exulta tion. I dreaded, next day, to return to the studio ; but to my surprise, my master re ceived me as he had never received me be fore. He advanced, and extended his hand to me. " Welcome, Franz Linden," he said smil ing. "I am proud to call you 013' pupil." The hand was cold, the voice xvas harsh, the smile was passionless. My compan ions crowded round, and congratulated me; and in the warm tones of their young,cheer ful voices, and the close pressure of their friendly hand, I forgot all that had troubled 1 me in the manner of Van Roos. Not long after this event, Gertrude's fa-! ther desired to have her portrait painted, to console him for her absence, he said, when I should be so wicked as to take her away from him. 1 recommended my old master, whose tutelage 1 had recently left; and Van Roos was summoned to fulfill a task that 1 would gladly have performed had it been in my power to do so. But portrait ure was not 1113- line 1 could paint a sleek, spotted milch cow, or a drove of sheep, far better than the fair skin and golden curls of 1113' darling Gertrude. She could not endure the artist from the first. In vain I reasoned with her—all was of no use ; and she used to say, at the end of cveiy -uch conversation, that she wished the portrait xvere finished, and that she could 110 more help disliking him then, than she could help loving me. So our argu ments alxvlys ended with a kiss. But this portrait took a long time. Van Roos was in general a rapid painter ; 3'et Gertrude's likeness progressed at a ver3 T REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER stow pace, and, like Penelope's web, seemed never to be completed. One morning I happened to be in the room—a rare event at that time, for I was hard at work upon my new landscape ; and I was struck by the change that had come over my late master. He was 110 longer the same man. There was a light in his eye, and a vibra tion in his voice, that I had never observed before; and when he rose to take leave there was a studied courtesy to his bow and manner that took me quite by surprise. Still, I never suspected the truth, and still the portrait was as far as ever from being finished. It all came out at last, and one morning Hans Nan Roos made a formal offer of his hand and heart. Of course he was refused. "But as kindly as was possible, dear Franz," she said, when she told me in the evening, "because he is your friend, and because he seemed to feel it so deeply. And —and you don't know how dreadfully white he turned, and how he tried to restrain his tears. I pitied him Franz, indeed, I was very sorry." Ami the gentle creature could scarcely keep from weeping herself as she told me of if. I did not see N an Roos for some months after this disclosure. At lust I met him accidentally in front of the stadhouse, and In my surprise, for the second time in his life lie held out his hand. " A good day to you, Messer Linden," said lie. " I hear that you are 011 the high road to fame and fortune." " I have been very prosperous, Messer \an Roos," I replied, taking the proffered hand. " But f never forget that I owe my present proficiency to flic hours spent in your atelier." A peculiar expression flitted over iiis face. "If I thought that," said he hastily, " I I should esteem myself particularly hap py" There was so odd a diflerenci in the way in which he uttered the beginning and end of his sentences—so much hurry and pas sion in the first half, such deliberate polite ness in the last, that I started and looked him full in the face. He was us smiling and impenetrable as a marble statue. " I, too, have been fortunate," he said, after a mement's pause. " Have you seen the new church lately built near the east end of the Ilaring-vilet ?" 1 replied that I had observed it in pass ing, but had not been inside. "I have been intrusted," he said, "with the superintendence of the interior decora tions. My 'Conversion of St. Paul' is pur chased for the altar-piece, and I am now en gaged in painting a series of frescoes upon the ceiling. Will you come in one day,and give me your opinion upon them ?" 1 professed myself much flattered, and appointed to visit him in the church on the following morning. He was waiting for me at the door when 1 arrived, with the heavy keys in hiis hand. We passed in, and he turned the key in the lock. " I always secure myself against intru ders," he said, smiling. " People will come into the church if I leave the doors unfast ened, and I do not choose to carry on my art, like a sign-painter, in the presence of every blockhead who chooses to stand and stare at me." It was surprising in what a disagreeable manner this man showed his teeth when he smiled. The church was a handsome building, in the Italian style which imitates the antique, and prefers grace and magnificence to the dignified sanctity of the Gothic order. Corinthian columns supported the roof at each side of the nave ; gilding and decora tive cornices were lavished in every direc tion : the gorgeous altar piece already oc cupied its appointed station ; and a little to the left of the railed space where the communion table was to be placed, a lofty scaffolding was erected, that seemed, from where I stood, almost to come in contact xvith the roof, and above which I observed the yet unfinished sketch of a masterly fres so. Three or four more, already completed were stationed at regular intervals, and some others were merely outlined in char coal upon their intended site. " Will you not come up with me ?" asked the painter, when I had expressed my ad miration sufficiently ; " or are you afraid of turning giddy ?" I felt somewhat disinclined to impose this trial upon my nerves, but still more disin clined to confess it ; so I followed him up from flight to flight of the frail structure, without once daring to look down. At last we reached the summit; as 1 had supposed, there was not even room enough lor the artist to assume a sitting posture, and he had to paint while lying on his back. 1 had 110 fancy to extend myself 011 this lofty couch ; so 1 oulj lilted my head above the level of his flooring, looking at the fresco, and descended immediately to the flight below, where 1 waited till he re joined me. " How dangerous it must be," said I, shuddering, " to let yourself down from that abominable perch." " 1 used to think so, at first," he replied, " but 1 am now quite accustomed to it. Fancy," said he, approaching close to the edge of the scaffolding, " fancy falling from here to the church below." " Horrible?" cried I. " 1 wonder how high it is from the level of the pavement," continued Van Roos, ; musingly, " a hundred and eighty feet, 1 dare sa3 r —perhaps txvo hundred." I drew back, giddx* at the thought. " No niau could survive sucl a fall," said the painter, stiii looking over. " The thick est skull would be dashed to atoms on the marble down there." "Pray, come axxuy," said 1, hastily. "My head sxx ims at the very idea." " Does it?" said he, turning suddenly up on mc, with the voice and e3 - e of a fiend— " Does it ? Fool 1" he cried, as he seized me round the body in his iron clasp—"fool, to trust yourself here xvitii me—nie whom 3'ou have wronged, whose life 3 T ou have blasted —me whom you have crossed in fame and in love. Down, wretch, down ! I've vowed to have 3~our blood, and my time has come." It sickens me even now to recall that desperate struggle. At the first word 1 i had sprung back and seized a beam above ;my head. He strove to tear nie from it. ; He foamed at the mouth ; the veins rose I like knots upon his forehead ; and still j though 1 felt my wrists strained and my I fingers cruell3 T larcerated—Htill I held on with the terrible energy of one who strug gles for dear life. It lasted a long time— at least it seemed long to me —and the scaf folding rocked beneath our feet. At length I salv his strength failing. Suddenly I loosed my hold, and threw my whole weight upon him. He staggered, he shrieked, he fell. I dropped upon my face in mute horror. An age of silence seemed to elapse, anil the cold dews stood upon my brow. Presently 1 heard a dull sound far below. 1 crawled to the brink of the scaffolding and looked over. A shapeless mass was lying on the marble pavement, and all around it was red with blood. I think an hour must have elapsed before I could summon courage to descend. When, at length I reach ed the level ground, I turned my face from what was so near my feet, and tottered to the door. With tremb ling hands and missy eyes, 1 unlocked it and rushed into the street. It was many months before I recovered from the brain fever brought 011 by that ter rible day. My raviugs, I have been 'old, were fearful; and had any doubt existed in the minds of men as to which of us two had been the guilty one, those ravings were alone sufficient to establish my innocence. A man in a delirious fever is pretty sure to speak the truth. By the time I was able to leave my chamber, Gertrude also bad grown pale and spiritless, and all unlike her for mer self. Rottcndam was insupportable to nie. I found myself a hero of romance—a lion—a thing to be stared at wherever I went; all of which only served to shatter jmy nerves still more. 111 short, change of j air and scene was recommended for us both; ;so we thought X\ T O could not do better than 1 marry, and take our wedding tour for the I sake of our healths. And I assure you, reader, it did us both a great deal of good. THE OLD STORY. My heart is chilled and my pulse is low, 1 But often and olten will memory go, Like a blind child lost in a xvastc of snow,— Back to the days when 1 loxed yon so.— The beautiful long ago. j I sit here, dreaming through and through, j The blissful moments I shared xvith you— The sweet, sxveel days when love xvus nex\, When I was trustful and you were true— The beautiful days, but few. : Blest or wretched, lettered or free. Why should 1 care how your life may fie, (•r whether you wander on land or sea? T only know you have been ruin to roc. Ever and hopelessly. i < >h! how often at day's decline, , 1 looked from my window upon thine, To see from your lattice the lamp light shine Type of message that, hall divine, — Flashed from your heart to mine. ; Once more the starlight is silveiiug all : The roses sleep by the old garden wall— The night-bird has ceased his madrigal. And hear again through the sweet air fall The evening vesper call. But summer will vanish and years will wane, And bring 110 light to your window pane, Nor gracious sunshine, or patient rain. Will bring other love to your life again— Nor eall up the past in vain. My heart is heavy, my heart is bold, And that proves dross which I counted gold : I watch 110 longer your curtain's fold. The window is dark and the night is cold.— Is the story forever told ? —- CHINAMEN AND THEIR WAYS- A California letter lias the following : Queer chaps these Chinamen are, aud queer customs they have. In one corner of the room sits my Chinese boy, reading a book upside down, and after the manner of iiis country, grinning like a chimpanzee over hieroglyphics that look like bunches of black radishes. He understands it all, though, and probably finds that style of lit erature very funny. I attended the Chinese dinner which was given to Colfax, ate with chop-sticks, swallowed a little of each ot j the hundred and eighty-nine courses that 1 that constituted the repast. We sat down ! at six sharp,aud got through at one prompt. ! Yes, 1 ate boiled bainho, and stewed whale- j hone—which perhaps may be styled the j spring vegetables of the Chinese—sharks' j iius, birds' nests, and other delicacies too ' recuperative to mention. Byway of des- ! Bert they have pickled cucumber and mel- j on seeds, and all manner of sweet things. | Taken as a whole, however, 1 don't think 1 should like a steady course of Chinese diet, j though the tea which they gave us was of j a most wonderful flavor. It was served up j without sugar or cream, and cost £SO a J pound, wich is perhaps the reason why they | did not ask us to take a second cup. You j would have been amused could you have j seen each guest making frantic attempts j to get something into his mouth with the { chop sticks. Try to eat with knitting nee- j dies, and you will have some idea of the j difficulty of the feat. If I were a board inghousc-keeper I think I'd ring them in up- j 011 my hoarders to use instead of knives i and forks. A little hash would go a won- j derfui great way with them. 1 flanked the j ( itfieulty by taking hold of anything with ' them by sharpening mine off at the end and I harpooning the meat and vegetables. ; HE WADED. — It was election day, and Grimes having assisted on the occasion hy ! the deposit of his vote and tiie absorption i of about as much old rye as ,ie could walk j under, started with two of his neighbors,! who were in the same state of elevation, to j make their way down to their homes. They had to cross Brandywine Creek by a foot bridge constructed of a single log thrown I across, and hewn fiat 011 the upper side,but without any hand rail to aid in the transit. There would have been no difficulty with a j clear head and steady legs in crossing; but with our party it was felt not to be devoid of difficulty "under existing circumstances." However the creek must be crossed. Grime's two friends took the lead and with much swinging of arms aud contortion of body reached the farther side. It was now Grimes' turn to face the music, and making a bold start he succeeded in getting about one-third of the way over, when a loud splash announced to his friends that he was overboard. Emerging from the water, it being about to his breast, he quickly said, as if this course was the result of mature deliberation, " I guess I'll wade." per- Annum, m Advance. ' FUN, FACTS AND FACETLE. I BIGOTRY murders religion, to frighten fools I with her ghost. I'OOR consolation to us survivors that "the j good die first." W HEX we think of good,angels are silent; j when we do it they rejoice. I A distinguished teacher defines genius to j be the power of making efforts. | THVXDER threatens but never strikes. The j bolt comes from a silent source. j IIOGS have an excellent ear for music— | but it takes a dog to pitch the tune. THE best government is that in which the law speaks instead of the lawyer. MOTHER. —\\ hat comfort there is in the | name which gives assurance of a love that can nei | ther change or fail. 1 HE remains of a bachelor who "burst in j to tears ' at reading a description of married life, | has been found. I HERE iz men ov so much learning impi dence that tha wouldn't hesitate to critisize the j song of a bird. . MOST of the shadows that cross the path way in life are caused by standing in our own light. No snow tails lighter than the snow of | age ; none heavier, for it never melts. DOMESTIC magazines—Wives who are al ways blowing up their husbands. AGE is venerable in man, and would be in woman—if she ever became old. WHEN a man passes a day without reflect ion, he might well exclaim at uiglit "I fear I have done something wrong." A Coquette uses her lover like a boquet —carries liini about a certain time for amuseni-nt, or show, and then quietly picks him to pieces. A contemplative life lias more the appear ance of a life of piety than any other but is the di vine plan to bring faith into activity and exercise. " WHAT a fool !" said Patty Prim, when she beard pf the capture of Jeff. Davis ; "of course the men would all run after him if he was dressed as a woman, and he was sure to be caught." "MY Herman friend, how long- have von been married' t " Vel, dis is a ting vot I seldom don't like to talk about, but vcn 1 does, it se ms so long as it never vas." " WHAT is colonizing, ma ?" queried a hopeful miss of seventeen. "Colonizing, my dear," replied her mother, "is having a home, and raising a family. - ' "Oli! ma, how 1 would like to colonize! ' exclaimed the expectant daughter. "MY dear Nicholas," said Lord Strang lord, "I am very stupid this morning ; my liraius are all going to the dogs." "Poor dogs!"' replied his friend. DR. JOHNSON said of a widower who was about to 'marry, that it was a remarkable case of the triumph of hope over experience. "TIME works wonders," as the lady said when she got married after an eight vears* court ship. Ir was the custom of an old lady who formerly entertained travelers, before her guests commenced a meal to ask a blessing, which she generally concluded in this wise : 'Make us truly thankful for the food before us. Nancy, hand around the corn bread first, and then the biscuit afterward. Amen." A physician, who is a truly pious man, was speaking in u prayer meeting lately of the duty of impressing the idea of salvation upon those near death, and of a physician's opportunities in this way, and made use of the following language; For my own part, I am never called to set- a patient without feeling delighted to learn that he is pre pared to die." FLATTERY is like a flail, which, if not adroitly used will box your own ears instead of tick ling those of she corn. No pains will be spared,'' as the quack said when sawing off* a poor fellow's legto cure him of the rheumatism. Daniel \\ ebster used to say that the word ; icotdtl, in liufus Cheat's hand writing, resembled a ! small gridiron Struck by lightuing. AN exchange paper begins a forcible ap-1 peal to its delinquents by this touching appeal : ! "We must dan or we must be done" A BOY entered a stationery store the oth- i er day and asked the proprietor what kind of pens 1 he sold. "All kinds,",was the reply. "Well then I'll take three cents' worth of pig-pens." \\ HY are the Southern negroes now like United States bonds?— Because they are non-tax- , able property; and because they are a burden upon the poor white men. HE who indulges his sense in any exces-I ses renders himself obnoxious to his own reason, and to gratify the brute in him displeases the man, \ and sets his two natures at variance. "How is it, my dear, that you have never ! kindled a flame in the bosom of any man said j an old lady to her pretty niece. To w'liich the young lady replied, "The reason, dear aunt, is as you well know, that I am not a good match." A coon story is told of a Methodist, at whose house an itinerant preacher was passing the night, who, when bed time came and family pray ers were suggested, in searching for a Bible, tiniil ly produced a couple of torn leaves of the good book, with the naive remark, "I didn't know I was so near out of Bibles." Theodore Hook once said to a man at whose table a publisher got very drunk : "Why, you appear to have emptied your wine cellar into a book-seller." "I WANT to buy a sewing machine," said an old lady, entering a shop. "Do yon wish for a machine with a feller?" inquired the clerk. "Sakes, no ; don't want any of your fellers about me." "JANE, has that surly fellow cleared off the snow from the pavement?" "Yes, sir." "Did he clear it oft' with alacrity?" "No, sir ; with a shovel." AN irisman was about to marry a South ern girl for her property. "Will you take this wo man for your wedded wife ?" said the minister.— 1 "Y'es, your reverence, and the nagers, too." A Yankee being asked by a Southerner why Yankees always say "1 guess," while the Southern people say "I reckon," gave the follow ing explanation : "That a Yonkee could guess as well r.s a Southerner conld reckon." (hit "devil "says, the reason why the i printers are so agreeable to nice young ladies, is because their words are always chaste (chased). \\ HO was the first jockey ?--Adani, lor he was the Father of the it ace. WHY is AU eruptive disease an advantage to a man in .tail ?—Because when he gets it he I breaks oof. THE man who " took a walk " the other ! day brought it back again ; but the next day he took a ride aud has not since been heard from. ONE ot our exchanges praises an egg, which it says was "laid on our table," by Rev. Mr. Smith. Mr. Smith seems to be a layman as well as a minister. WHAT is that process by which twenty woman, assembled in one room.canbemade equal ly handsome at the same moment ?—Putting out the light. No man can be witty when be wants to, any more than he can be hungry when lie wants to, —it comes to him, as love does, he can t tell how nor why. THE PLAGUE OF LOUUSTB—SISGULAB SOENE IS JAFFA- A letter dated at Jaffa, Palestine. June 20th, describes a visitation of locnsts as follows: In April last we twice observed large dark clouds, resembling smoke, moving to and fro as if swayed by the wind. One morning these clouds came down and proved to be locusts, so great in number that the whole land was covered with them. The grain at that time was full in ear and near ly ripe, but the locusts did not touch it, or auy other vegetation. Soon after, how ever, it was observed tnat they buried themselves in the soil and there deposited their innumerable eggs. The Arabs and peasants saw the approaching mischief,and went through the lands in thousands dig ging for these eggs ; they succeeded to a certain degree, and destroyed incredible numbers with water and lire, but all their efforts had very little effect. About the middle of May small black creatures, at a distance resembling large ants, were observed accummulating in large heaps throughout the country, and a few days after they had been thus seen they began to leap, and manifested the coming calamity and invasion of the fearful army, as described so emphatically in Joel ii. The people now began to sweep thern together and bury or burn them in ditches dug for the purpose. But all to little or no effect; and so they grew a little larger the effect of their multitude began to be seen, and the coming catastrophe could not be mis taken. The roads were covered with them, all marching in regular lines, like armies of soldiers, with their leaders in front, and all the opposition of man to arrest their progress was in vain. NUMBER 36. They first consumed the plantations ar ound Rainleh, Lydda and the smaller vil lages near them, and entering the towns and villages consumed the victuals, etc., in the market and streets, by degrees forcing themselves into the houses aud covering the walls outside as well as inside. It seems that everything which is moistened by their saliva is poisoned, for the cattle that feed on the remnants which are left all die. 1 myself saw fifty oxen dead in the village of Delta, Daggon and Zaffarish that had fed on the remnant of durah (Indian corn) left by the locusts, and the night be fore last twenty more died cause. About two weeks ago they were seen to a fearful extent all around Jaffa, but still without wings. The town for several days appeared forsaken ; ail shops were shut, all business suspended. Almost all the inhab itants had gone out to destroy and drive away the invading army ; they made tre mendous ditches and buried and burned countless myriads, but, as before, all in vain, for the more they destroyed the more seemed to arise from hiding places, and as they grew in size the more they seemed to grow in multitude, and toward the east from here they covered the ground for miles and miles to the height of several inches. As their wings are still too small to enable them to visit the several hundred gardens within the cultivated part of the district of Jaffa, they have hitherto confined their de structions to the outer gardens, of which about fifty have been completely laid waste, every green leaf, vegetable, tree and even the bark of young trees, devoured, and these beautiful gardens look like birch tree forests in winter. Our garden was one of the first attacked. For s iveral days we saw the destructive host advancing ; all our farm servants, as well as some hired laborers, were employed to keep them off, to drive them away, or bury them, but we found them as Joel de scribes them, chapter ii., verse 7, " They shall not break their ranks." Who can doubt the word of God when we have these evidences before our eyes ? True, our men broke their ranks for a moment, but no sooner had they passed the men than they closed again, and marched forward through hedges and ditches, us it united by some mysterious power, causing them to open before man and to close again as soon as they passed him. On the 14th instant they forced their way into the garden, defying all human efforts to prevent them, and in less than a day the whole garden, an extent of eight acres, was covered with them, and the trees, to the number of three thousand, as well as every other green leaf, with the exception of the palm trees and the prickly pear hedges, were stripped. Whether eating or drinking, reading or writing, or lying awake in bed (for it is im po sible to sleep) one hears the noise of armed hosts as of the running of many wa ters, and within they keep dropping on and about you. At meals lam kept busy driv ing them away ; while 1 drive half a dozen away from the bread as many will jump in to the sugar basin, or even into my tea, etc., and when undressing they leap out of our very clothes, without our having known they were there. News has just reached us from Nablous; the olive trees in these mountains have all been stripped, and near the river Oudge the soil is so thickly covered with these creatures that many of the animals led there to drink refuse to pass on. Another letter of a later date says that they are in no wise decreasing, rather the opposite. Every native inhabitant has been ordered by government to bring fif teen pound weight of locusts daily, and those who do not are fined fc.'l sterling each time. HCRIWJ !—The exclamation of "Hurrah!" which is so powerfully sounded through the air wherever bravery, courageous au dacity and energy are intended to be prais ed is a Slavonic term meaning in English "to the Paradise ?' The origin of Hie word is derived from the primeval idea that ev, ery man that dies as a lieio for his country will forthwith be transferred to Heaven. During the heat of fighting and the strug gle of a battle the combatants wiil sing out tliis call with the same religious feel ings as the Turks cry their "Allah" The Hurrah will fill every warrior with enthusi asm, inspiring him with the hope of instant ly receiving the heavenly reward for his bravery. A I.E.ADIN<; democrat with pretty strong opinions, who superintends a Sabbath School in Detroit, a few Sundays since, was discoursing to his classes of the Israelites, and the enemies they encountered in the na tion of Moabites, when, byway of illustra tion, he put the question : " Have we any great public enemy in this country ?" evidently intending to see how much his little auditors knew about the rebellion. " Yes, sir !" responded a bright little six year old. " Who, my sou ?" queired the gratified superintendent. "i'he Copperheads," responded the boy. The illustration was not any further pressed on that occasion. A WRITER beautifully remarks that a man's mother is the representative of his Maker. Mis fortune and mere crime set no barriers between her and her son. While his mother lives, a man has one friend on earth who will not desert him when I he is needy. Her affection flows from a purefount | ain, and ceases only at the ocean of eternity.