tbhms of publication. . liEr0 BTEB is published every Thursday Mora , v £ 0. Goodrich, at $2 per annum, in ad ;ng' • "V.VEKTISEMENTS exceeding fifteen lines are at TEN CENTS per line for first insertion, U ' F jve cents per line for subsequent insertions "l notices inserted before Marriages und will be charged fifteen cent, per line for 0 ion All resolutions of Associations ; ll *-'iiuicutions ol limited or individual interest, .. , uce s of Marriages and Deaths exceeding fivo •ire charged ten cents per line. 1 Year. 6 mo. 3 mo. ' Square, 10 7i 5 - , r .,v. I'AUtion, Lost and Found, and oth ;,ivcrtiscments, not exceeding 15 lines, agee weeks, or less, $1 50 iui-drator's and Executor's Notices... 200 (liter's Notices 2 50 'lj n ess Cards, five lines, (per year) 500 Vl chants and others, advertising their business j,. charged S2O. They will be entitled to 4 ■ confined exclusively to their business, with ;i t >ge of change. Advertising in all cases exclusive of sub ■j : iou to the paper. IB PRINTING of every kiud in Plain and Fa n done with neatness and dispatch. Hand llianks. Cards, Pamphlets, Ac., of every va .(l stvle, printed at the shortest notice. The . N Office has jnst been re-fitted with Power •jws. and every thing in the Printing line can w - ited in the most artistic manner and at the TERMS INVARIABLY CASH. iOnqmal |Mrg. For the Reporter. XIIK LITTLE BROWN SCHOOL IIOUSF.. BY CRETIAS. T1 re's a little school-house brown, •"Way up town ; ()n the road to Waverly— Do you see ? W hi-re the boys and girls are brought, v.. 1 their young ideas taught How to shoot, Aud take root! Many a locust hanging o'er. Shades the door, Which to keep the clothes unnrassed— From the dust, Shuns the gate that street-ward opes ; Turning to the grassy slopes Of the sward, River-ward. All day long the hall within, Is there din, Of the scholars conning o'er Heavy lore ; They are learning A. 15, C, Figures, Latin, II istory: — It's done brown, 'Way up town 1 In the teacher's easy chair, Seated there. Is an eye of smiling brown, No dark frown Ever direful terror throws, Where the gentle mistress goes It's done brown, ' Way up town! Planned, they say, this house so neat, Up the street, (hie who hopes to see it great In the state ; Odks from little acorns grow, Men from little babies ; so With "the Brown" ' Way up town 1 f aan da, Dec. 4, 1805. i RESOURCES AND PROSPECTS OF AMERICA. A nest valuable work on the Resources . ; I't snects of America has just appear ::i the pen of Sir Mortcu Peto. Iu a line of moderate size, he presents us f negroes are hard at work with the hoe for themselves .ill through the interior of the State. The most active industry of Old Virginia to-day wears a black skin. The dainty white hands of treason hold the ballot : the hon est black hands of loyalty hold the hoe. Is that the reconstruction that was purchased at Five Forks and Appomattox Court House ? In Richmond there is a surplus of ne groes, and no sm 11 antipathy toward them 011 the part of the most virulent rebels. The intelligent freedman who showed me the deserted capitol building, and Aleck Stephens's empty chair, remarked, "My old master at Bottom's Bridge would kick me off his premises, if 1 went there." He told uie that the great majority of the blacks in Richmond are, at present, worse off in material comforts than before the war. That is easily accounted for. Busi ness is dull ; the whites are poor ; and city servants are not skillful field-hands. In the rural regions, the negroes know how to work, are glad to work, and are bettering their condition every day. The crops along the Fi'edcricksburgh Railway generally look well. The road itself is in good order. Richmond contains some very suggestive scenes. Among them are Jell' Davis' "Ex ecutive Room" (in the custom house) now occupied by the clerk of the U. S. Court ; the execrable Libby prison, now guarded by blue-coats, once imprisoned there ; and the blackened ruins of the Rev. Charles Read's pro-slavery church. There must have been pitch enough in that* pulpit to have made it burn briskly. It is a sorrow ful fact that the soldiers of the disbandon ed Southern armies are at this moment more loyally disposed than the ministers of the dismantled Southern churches. Freed meu's Bureaus and Civil Rights bills are valuable expedients for the hour ; but tbe vital wants of the South are a new plough, a new pulpit, and a new school-house. The fortifications around Richmond are of little interest, except in the direction of Drury's Blufl". But those who wish to see the most remarkable field-works in the world must hasten to Petersburg before the storms have washed down those inter minable entrenchments of sand and filled up the rifle pits. We spent a memorable day there: our Yankee friend Bidwell, of "Jarratt's Hotel," supplying us the horses and the intelligent guide for the field. We had Swinton'sJ valuable volume ou "The Army of the Potomac," in the carriage. We sat down and read his account of the fright ful slaughter of the rebels on the bare saud, where the large hole was wheu the mine exploded. A couple of skulls were lying per Annum, in Advance. in the bottom of the horrible "crater." The farmer who owns the spot has enclosed it, and makes his living by exhibiting it for a dollar to every party of visitors, and by selling another sort of "crater" from a rude drinkiug-shop. On that farm fifteen thous and human beings were slaughtered ! It was the focus of the nine months' fight. Fort Steadrnau is in good preservation ; against its sharp abattis and earthen breast-works the rebellion made its last onset. When Lee fell back from this final assault, on the 25th of March, the doom of the Confederacy was sealed. For humani ty's sake he ought to have surrendered that day. The exposure of every life from that day onward was downwright murder. Lee's only excuse is that he hoped to make good his retreat on the Southside Railroad, and join his army to Gen. Joe. Johnston's. Fort Sedgwick (known during the war as Fort He/1) is a fine specimen of a work composed of sand-bankets, like those of Sum ter. One end of the huge bomb-proof is now used for a subterranean beer-shop. The rebel lines were but an hundred yards from ours at many points ; between the two rows of lion's teeth now lie the bleach ing bones of the dead, and the rotting re mains of boots,and clothes, and haversacks. We stood beside one trench in which over a thousand Union dead were in "one red burial blent !" Fort Fisher—so named after the gallant young Otis Fisher, who was once a Sunday school boy of mine—is a formidable work, well worth a visit. So is the Poplar Spring Church, built by our engineers of small saplings, a most unique specimen of ecclesiastical architecture. But I have no time or space to day to describe that wonderful fifteen miles of history,writ ten in huge lines of sand and timber, from its Alpha on Harrison's Creek to its Omega on Hatcher's Run. It is the American Aceldama, in which treason found its bloody grave. Let the Judases of all fu ture nations learn its lessons to the end of time. HOESE A LA MODE. A correspondent of the Pall Mall Gazette ; says : It is a popular delusion in England that there is no such thing as good beef in France ; but the truth is that one has to go to Paris to learn the true delicacy of the " biftek " and " filet." One has only to pay a visit to the great shop near the Mad eline to understand the absurdity of the assertion that it is because the French are ; destitute of good meat that they are forced j to compensate for the deficiency by ingeni ous cooking and scientific sauces. The j shop I speak of is one that for size, for ex ternal and internal decorations, for the dis- ( play of handsome joints on thousand of j feet of white marble slabs, amidst bou-: quets of beautiful flowers, and for its serv ing men, all dressed in spotless white, puts j your English Bannisters and Slaters to ! shaine. So large is the business done at ! this establishment that regular customers I are required to have their orders ready 1 over night for execution on the following moring. Standing yesterday before this | shop and admiring the huge sides of beef encircled with geraniums and fuschias, its joints of veal fringed with moss roses, its legs of mutton tied up with colored rib bons, its " coteiletes " reposing in beds of pinks, and its calves' heads looking out from a mass of flowering heaths, I be- ; thought me it was on this very day that a j " boucherie " for the exclusive sale of an other kind of " viande " was to be opened ! at the opposite extremity of Paris, on the ! Boulevard de l'ltalie. Unfortunately, al though prime beef and mutton are to be had in Paris, they are very dear, and the increasing rise of prices in Paris has re- j duced almost to the vanishing point the workman's allowance of flesh food for him- | self and family. And therefore was estab lished the shop for the sale of horse-flesh which 1 visited yesterday. The new shop, with " Bouchrie de la, Viande de Cheval " in big letters over the j doorway, could be detected at a glance, for j surrounding it was a crowd of some fifty or sixty people, the majority being women, and all being more or less engaged in dis cussing the merits of the new " viande." I On either side of the shop door huug two j large haunches of horse, looking anything but inviting, and wanting that positive j tone of color which a good joint of beef al ways presents. On marble slabs in front of the shop, with no flowers, however, to set them oft', some scraggy-looking ribs and purply red steaks were displayed. Inside were portions of the buttock, Ac., some shin-bones, and a heap of odds and ends, I for the trade had been brisk, and more than i an entire enimal had been already disposed j of. The master butcher was very atten tive to his customers, the majority of whom were of the poorest class. It was amus- I ing to see the way they were beset on leav ing the shop—how their purchases were overhauled and minutely examined, then turned over and over, squeezed, sniffed at, balanced in the hand, and then thrown back into the basket again by scores of people, many of whom had come with their own baskets, with an intention of buying, but could not quite make up their minds. One exceedingly brown old lady, with a j very showy cotton handkerchief tied round | her head, encouraged the hesitating ones, and showed them her own purchase. " Why in England," said she, " all the people eat it. What is their ' rosbif,' of which we . hear so much ? Horse llesh, to be sure." A fastidious dame in a purple jacket vowed that the very idea of the thing made her ill. This brought forward the mistress of the establishment, a buxom jolly dame, who : declared she had just made a hearty meal of it, and found it uncommonly good. On 1 my arrival I cejtainly observed madame j and two ar three others taking their mid- j day meal at the back of the shop, but it was omelette, and not horse, that I saw j them eating. l'he customers, as I have already remark ed, were chiefly women, and of the poorer class ; still, among those who went in for steaks were several well-dressed men above the rank of artisans ; also, a couple of old soldiers of the First Empire, with a cluster of war medals hanging to their blue blous es, a cjarcon or two from some of the neigh boring cheap restaurants, who came in for their " bifteks" by the dozen, and what pleased the crowd immensely, a butcher's boy from an adjacent legitimate establish ment, the master of which was anxious to taste the new "viande " and judge for him self. The price, so far as I could gather, i ranged from about sd. per demi-kilo (up- ward of a pound) for tbo prime parts to about 2d. for the inferior pieces. The num ber of persons served up to about two o'- clock was not far short of three hundred ; but a large proportion of these presented free tickets, the distribution of which had been entrusted to Sisters of Charity by the society organized to promote the introduc tion of horse flesh as an article of human food throughout France. To .accustom the people of the particular neighborhood where the firßt establishment was opened to the new class of animal food considerable quantities of it had been given away for some weeks previously under the auspices of the above mentioned society. It is proper to state that the horseflesh sold at the establishment of which I have been speaking is all subjected to strict govern mental inspection, and that the establish ment itself has the sanction of the author ities. NUMBER 12. r The event wes celebrated by a banquet in the evening at Lemardelay's i.< the Hue , de Richelieu, and at which ouc hundred and eighty-two persons sat down to the doubt ful delicacy. The bill of fare comprised horse soup, sausages of horse flesh, sirloiu of horse garnished with potato balls, horse a la mode, ragout of horse, roast flesh of horse, and salad dressed with horse oil— this last, I should mention, is almost white without smell, and sweet in flavor. The chair was taken by M. de Quatrefages, the distinguished French naturalist and mem ber of the Institute, who had for supporters M. Albert Geoffroy Saint Hilaire, director of the Garden of Acclimatization : Dr. Souberian, secretary of Acclimatization So ciety ; the Marquis de Bethisy ; the Abbe Dufour ; M. Bertram!, the mathematician and member, of the French Institute; and M. Ducroix, the energetic propagator of the merits of horse flesh as an drticle of food. Appropriate toasts were drank, and songs in praise of the horse, and more particular ly of its alimentary qualities, were sung during the evening. FINDING FAULT WITH CHILDREN. —It is at times necessary to censure and punish.— But much more may be done by encourag ing children when they do well. Be then fore more careful to express your approba tion of good conduct than your disapproba tion of bad. Nothing can more discourage a child than a spirit of incessant fault-find ing on the part of its parreuts. And hard ly anything can exert a in >re injurious in fluence upon the disposition of both parent and child. There are two great motives iu llueucing human actions—hope and fear. - Both of these are at times necessary. But who would not prefer to have her child in fluenced to good conduct by a desire of pleasing, rather than by fear of offending ? If a mother never expresses her gratifica tion when her children do well, and is al ways censuring them when she sees any ! thing amiss, they feel discouraged and un -1 happy. They feel that it is useless to try to please. Their dispositions become har dened and soured by this ceaseless fretting, and at last, finding that whether they do well or ill, they are equally found fault I with, they relinquish all efforts to please, and become heedless of repr inches. But I let a mother approve of her child's conduct | whenever she can. Let her reward him I r | his efforts to please,by smiles and affect i ! In tt.is way she will cherish in her child's | heart some of the noblest and most desirul! • | feelings of our nature. She will cultivate ' in hirn an amiable disposition and a cln fill spirit. Your child has been thr-ngh ;he j day very pleasant and obedi- nt. Jus' 1 - ! fore putting him to sleep for the night, y i ! take his hand say :—"My son y u have been j very good to-day. It makes me very hap* 'py to see you so kind and obedient. God loves children who are dutiful t their p u - i ents,and he promises to make them happy.' i This approbation to him, from his mother, is a great reward And when,with a m , • i than affectionate tone, you say, "use-wifery or husbandry, no matter what it is, the very moment you have done using it, return it to its proper place. Be sure to have a special place 1 i everything, and cverythirg in its place.— Order, order, perfect order, is the watch word. Heaven's first law. How ninci precious time is saved (aside fioin vexta ti >n) by observing order, systematic regu larity ! And little folks should begin ear ly to preserve order in everything. Form habits of order. These loose, slipshod,slat ternly habits are formed in childhood, 1 habits once formed are apt to cling f . life. Young friends,begin early to keep thing iu their proper places ; study neatues?, or der, economy, sobriety ; in cverytliiiw ! ■ just, honest, pure, lovely,and y >n will h.i\ a good report. EAT Your BROWN BREAD I —lt is a plain, but faithful saying, "Eat your brown bread first," nor is there a b,-tt i rule for a young man's outset in the world. While you continue single you may live within a-, narrow limits as you please ; and it is then you must begin to save,in order to provide for the more enlarged expenses of your fu ture family. Besides, a plain, frugal life is then supported niost cheer uliy ; it is y ur own choice, and it is to be justified on the best and most honest principles in the World, and you have nobody's pride to struggle with, or appetites to master, but your own. As you advance in life and success, it will be expected you should give yourself great er indulgence, and you may then be allow | ed to do it both reasonably and safely. THE man everybody likes is generally I ; fool. The man nobody likes is gene- rally ;i lor* -. .. the man who has friends who would die f >;• 1 | and foes who would love to see Liiu broiled us . , I is usually a man of some worth and force. \\ HEN Daniel Webster was a young n .an, I about commencing the study of law', he v - !- vised not to enter the legal profi ssion, for it was ! already crowded. His reply, was -'There i -1 enough at the top." WRITE your name by kindness, an 1 I * I and mercy, on the hearts of ihr people you e me ! in contact with, year by year, and. you will i wr j be forgotten. AN old lady who had insisted on LM uiin- I ister's praying for rain, bad her cabbage cut up l>y j a hail-storm, and on viewing the wreck, rem irked, • that she ' never knew him to undertake anything ! without overdoing the matter." WHEN you see a man on a moonlight • night trying to convince his shadow that it is im -1 proper to follow a gentleman, you may be sure it i is high time for him to join a temperance society AN exchange says, that "in the absence 1 of both editors, the publisher has succeeded in | securing the services of a gmth-n >to edit the pa- I per that week." A Drunkard, upon hearing that the earth was round, said that accounted for his rolling about so much.