.ttt/ctliii./citee VOL. LIX THE LANCASTER INTELLIGENCER PUBLINRED Y.VEIIY TUESDAY, AT NO. 8 NORTII MIKE EITIOIET, BY OEO. SANDERSON IMI SUNCIIIPTION.—Two Dollars por nnuuw, InIYIII`In In ail• No subscription tlnan.nllnuol until 41111Yronragus r are paid, unless it the opt ion of the ADVEILTIMEM Knvt,—Ad vorLlAolnoill C. lint nxt,...llnlt Ono square, (I:: limes,) will be Inserted three thin, ror dollar, and tiventy•live ccrits for each n4ditinmtl 111.. r• ttoo. Those of n gritlen.,:lll .1011 PRINTING—Such n.c llnll4l 11111 e, PnstorP., Pumphlntx, uh th ks, I,o,rim, kr., he., OXOCUin , i with eceurecy and at the ehartest notice. For tho Intelligencer. A WATCH BY THE DYING. CHARLES s'. EVANS. Let joy, let gladness fill our hearts, This festival of hope to spend ; Lot fond congratulation soothe The pangs of our departing friend What has he lost The giddy throng Of worldling,s seek his couch no more; The weak, low plaint, the anghish'd groan, Repel the gay from misery's door. What has he lost? An airy cup Of unsubstantial fleeting bliss : Still, still in vain--that outstretched hand, The joy is ever doom'd to miss. In dreams beneath the moonlight pale, In dreams beneath the noontide ray, That vision cup has oft been his, Yet still relentless dashed away. Yet he has plied its painted brim, Nor deemed his rainbow-tinted cloud Would vanish with his fading dream, And leave him crushed and spirit-bow'd 'Twos ever thus the witching spell, Had power to cheat and charm again— 'Twas Fancy, Genius, Honor, Fame, In one bright hour—but all were vain. What has he gained ? Immortal joy ! Jamie has promised—who would faint? And we this night rejoice to share, The joy of his departing saint. MORGANTOWN, May, '5B the Perils of the Border. While reading recently an account of the frightful massacre of several white families by the Black-foot Indians we were reminded of a thrilling event which oc curred in the " \Vild West," a short time subsequent to the Revolution, in which a highly accomplished young lady, the daugh ter of a distinguished officer of the Any,r lean Army, played an important part.— The story being of a most thrilling nature, and exhibiting in a striking manner the '' Perils of the 13ord: r," we have con- eluded to give an extract froni it, as orig inally published, as follows : The angle on the right bank of the Great Kanawha, formed by its junction with the Ohio, is called Point Pleasant, and is a place of historical note. Here, on'the 10th of October, 1774, during what is known as Lord Dunmore's War, was fought ono of fiercest and most desperate battles that over took place between the Virginians and their forest foes. After the battle in question, in which the Indians were defeated with great loss, a fort was hero erected by the victors, which became a post of great importance throughout the sanguinary scenes of strife which almost immediately followed, and which in this section of country \were con tinued for many years after that establish ment of peace which acknowledged the United Colonies of America a free and independent nation. At the landing of the fort, on the day our story opens, was fastened a flat, boat of the kind used by the early navigators of the Western rivers. Upon the deck of this boat, at the mo ment we present, the scene to the reader, stood five individuals, alike engaged in watching a group of persons, mostly fe males, who were slowly approaching the landing. Of these five, one was a stout, sleek negro, in partial livery, and evidently a house or body servant; three were boat men and borderers, as indicated by their rough, bronzed visage and coarse attire ; but the fifth was a young man, some two and-twenty years of age, of a fine command ing person, and a clear, open, intelligent countenance ; and in the lofty carriage of his head--in the gleam of his large, bright, hazel eye—there was something which de noted one of superior mind ; but as we shall have occasion in the course of our narrative to fully set forth who and what Eugene Fairfax was, we will leave him for the present, and turn to the approaching group, whom he seemed to be regarding with livelyinterest. Of this group, composed of a middle aged man and four females, with a black female servant following some five or six paces in the rear, there was one whom the most casual eye would have singled out and rested upon with pleasure. The lady in question,was apparently about twenty years of age, of a slender and graceful figure, and of that peculiar cast of feature, which, besides being beautiful in every lineament, rarely fails to affect the beholder with some thing like,a charm. Her traveling costume—a fine brown habit, high in the neck, buttoned closely over the bosom and coming down to her small pretty feet, without trailing on the ground—was both neat and becoming; and with her riding-cap and its waving ostrich plume, set gaily above her flowing curls, her appearance contrasted forcibly with the rough, unpolished looks of those of her sex beside her, with their linsey bed gowns, scarlet flannel petticoats, and bleached linen caps. " Oh, Blanche,'' said one of the wore venerable of her female companions, pur suing a conversation which had been main tained since quitting the npeu fort behind them, " I cannot bear to let you go ; for it just seems to me as if something were going to happen to you, and when I feel that way, something generally doe s hap pen." " Well, aunt," returned Blanche, with a light laugh, 44 I do not doubt in the least that something will happen—for I expect one of these days to reach toy dear father and my blessed mother, and give them such an embrace as is due from a dutiful daughter to her parents—•and that will be something that has not happened for two long years at least." But I don't mean that, Blanche," re turned the other, somewhat petulantly and you just laugh like a gay and thought less girl, when you ought to be serious.— Because you have come safe thus far, through a partially settled country, you think, perhaps, your own pretty face will ward off danger in the more perilous wil derness—but 1 warn you that a fearful journey is before you! scarcely a boat de scends the'Ohio, that does not encounter more or less peril from the savages that prowl along either shore ; and some of them that go down freighted with human life, are heard of no more, and none ever return to tell the tale." " But why repeat this to me, dear aunt," returned Blanehe, with a more serious air, " when you know it is my destiny, either good or bad, to attempt the voyage ? My parents have sent for we to join them in their new home, and is my duty to go to them, be the peril what it may." 4 4 You never did know what it was to fear!" pursued the good woman, rather proudly. 44 No," she repeated, turning to the others, 44 Blanche Bertrand never did know what it was to fear, I believe!" 4 ' Just like her father !" joined in the husband of the matron, the brother of Blanche's mother, the commander of the station, and the middle-aged gentleman mentioned as one of the party ; "a true oaughter of a true soldier. Her father, Colonel Philip Betrand, God bless him for a true heart ! never did seem to know what it was to fear---aud Blanche is just like him." By this time the parties had reached the boat; and the young man already describ ed—Eugene Fairfax, the secretary of Blanche's father—at once stepped forward, and, in a polite and deferential manner, offered his hand to the different females, to assist them on board. The hand of Blanch was the last to touch his—and then but slightly, as she sprung quickly and lightly to the deck—but a close observer might have detected the slight flush which mantled his noble, expressive fea tures, as his eye for a single instant met hers. She might have seen it herself —perhaps she did—but there was no cor responding glow ou his own bright, pretty face, as she inquired, in the calm, dignified tone of one having' the right to put the question, and who might also have been aware of the inequality of position between herself and him she addressed: "Eugene, is everything prepared for our departure ! It will not do for our boat to spring a leak again, as it did coming down the Kanawha—for it will not be safe for us, I am told„ to touch either shore between the different forts and trading pouts on our route, this side of our de,,,ti nation,—the falls of Ohio." "No, indeed !" rejoined her aunt, quick ly 44 it will be as much as your lives arc worth to venture a foot from the main cur rent of the Ohio—for news reached us only the other day, that many boats had been attacked this spring, and several lost, with all on board." 44 No one feels inure concerned about the safe passsage of Miss Bertrand than myself,' replied Eugene, in a deferential tone ; " and since our arrival here, 1 have left nothing undone that I thought might pos sibly add to her security and comfort." "That is true to my pesoual knowledge," joined iu the uncle of Blanche ; " and I thank you, Mr. Fairfax, in behalf of my fair kinswoman. There will, perhaps," he pursued, 44 be no great danger, so long as you keep in the current ; but your watch must not be neglected for a single moment, either night or day and do not, I most solemnly charge and warn you, under any circumstances, or any pretence whatsoever, suffer yourselves to be decoyed to either shore !" " I hope we understand our duty better, Colonel," said ono of the men respectfully. " I doubt it not," replied the command er of the Point; "I believe you are all faithful and true men, or you would not have been selected by the agent of Colonel Bertrand for taking down more precious freight than you ever carried before ; but still the wisest and best of men have lost their lives by giving ear to the most earnest appeals of humanity. You under.-tand what I mean White men, apparently in the greatest distress, will hail your boat, represent themselves as having just escap ed from the Indians, and beg of you, for the love of God, in the most piteous tones, to come to their relief ; but turn a deaf ear to them—to each and all of them--even should you know the pleaders to be of your own kin ; for in such a case your own brother might deceive you—not wilfully or voluntarily, perhaps—but because of being goaded on by the savages, them selves concealed. Yes, such things have been known as one friend being thus used to lure another to his destruction ; and so be cautious, vigilant, brave and true, and may the good God keep you all from harm !" As he finished speaking, Blanche pro ceeded to take an affectionate leave of all, receiving many a tender message fur her parents from those who held them in love and veneration ; and the boat swung out, and began to float down with the current, now fairly entered upon.the most danger ous portion of a long and perilous journey. The father of Blanche, Colonel Philip Bertrand, was a native of Virginia, and a descendant of one of the Huguenot refu gees, who fled from their native land after the revocation of die edict of Nantz in 1665. He had been an officer of sonic note during the Revolution—a warm po litical and personal friend of the author of the Declaration of Independence—and a gentleman who had always stood high in the esteem of his associates and con, empo raries. Though at one time a man of wealth, Colonel Bertrand had lost much, and suf fered much throughßritish invasion ; and when, shortly after. the close of the war, he had met with a few more serious reverses, he had been fain to accept a grant of land, near the Falls of the Ohio, now Louisville, tendered to him by Virginia, which then held jurisdiction over the entire territory now constituting the State of Kentucky. The grant had decided the Colonel upon seeking his new possessions and building up a new home in the then Far West, and as his wife had insisted upon accompanying him on his first tour, he had asseu cd to her desire on condition that Blanche should be left among her friends, till such time as a place could be prepared which might in some degree be considered a tit abode for one so ear fully and tenderly reared. Blanche would gladly have gone with her parents ; but on this point her father had been inexorable—declaring that she would have to remain at the East till he should see proper to send for her ; and as he was a man of positive character, and a rigid disciplinarian, the mat ter was settled without argument. When Colonel Bertrand removed to the West, Eugene Fairfax, as we have seen, accompanied him ; and coming of age short ly after, he had accepted-.the liberal offer of his noble benefactor, to remain with him in the capacity of private secretary and "THAT COUNTRY IS THE MOST PROSPEROUS WHERE LABOR COMMANDS THE GREATEST REWARD." LANCASTER CITY, PA., TUESDAY MORNING, MAY 18, 1858. confidential agent. On taking possession of his grant, the Colonel had almost imme diately erected a fort, and offered such in ducements to settlers as to speedily collect around him quite a little community—of which, as a matter of course, he became the head and chief ; and to supply the wants of his own family and others, and increase his gains in a legitimate way, he had opened a store, and filled it with goods from the Eastern marts, which goods were transport ed by land over the mountains to the Ka nawha, and thence to water by the Falls of the Ohio, whence their removal to Fort Bertrand became an easy matter. To pur chase and ship these goods, and deliver a package of letters to friends in the East, Eugene had been thrice dispatched—his third commission also extending to the es corting of the beautiful heiress, with her servants, to her new home. This last com mission had been so far executed at the time chosen for the opening of our story, as to bring the different Tiarties to the mouth of the great Kanawha, whence the reader has seen them slowly floating oil upon the still, glassy bosom of "the belle of rivers." The day, which was an auspicious one, passed without anything occurring worthy of note, until near four o'clock, when as Blanche was standing on the fore part of the deck gazing at the lovely scene which surrounded her, shy saw a seemingly flying body suddenly leave a limb of a gigantic tree, (whose mighty branches extended far over the river, and near which the boat was then swayed by the action of the 'current,) and alight with a crash upon the deck o the boat, not more than eight feet from her. One glance sufficed to show her what the object was, and to freeze the blood in her veins. The glowing eyes of a huge pan ther met her gaze. The suddennes. , of the shock which this discovery gave lice was overpowering. With a deafening shriek she fell upon her knees and clasped her bands before her breast. The panther crouched for his - deadly leap, but ere he sprang, the hunting knife of Eugene Fair fax (who, with the steersman, was the only person on dtntk besides Blanche,' was buri ed to the hilt in his aide, inflicting a severe but not fatal wound. The infuriated beast at once turned upon Eugene, and a deadly struggle ensued. But it was a short one. The polished blade of the knife played back and forth like lightning flashes, and at eve- ry plunge it tea.; buried to the hilt in the panther's body, who soon fell to the deck, dragging the dauntless Eugene with him. On seeing her protector fall, Blanche ut tered another shriek and rushed to his aid Lot asii-itanee from stouter Was at hand. 'I he boatmen gathered round, and the savage monster was literally hacked in pieces with their knives and hatchets, and Eugene, covered with blood, wa - dragged from under his carcass. Supposing, him to be dead or mortally wounded, Blanche threw her arms around his neck and gave way to a passionate burst of grief. But he was not dead—he was not even hurt, with the exception of a few slight scratches.— The blood with which he was covered was the panther's, not his own. But Blanche's embrace was his—a priceless treasure—an index of her heart's emotions and affections. It was to color his whole future life, as will be seen iu the progress of our story. Slowly and silently, save the occasional creak, dip, and plash, of the steersmen's oar, the boat of our voyagers was borne along upon the bosom of the current, on the third night of the voyage. The hour was waxing late, and Eugene, the only one astir except the \rivet), was suddenly startled, by a rough hand beinff placed upon his shoulder, accompanied by the words, in the gruff voice of the boatman : "I say, Cap'n, here's trouble !" “11 - hat is it, Dick'?" inquired Eugene, starting to his feet. 'Won't you see thar's a heavN i fog that'll soon kiver us up so thick that we won't b 2 able to tell a white man from a nigger ?" replied the boatman—Dick Win ter by name—a tall, bony, muscular, ath letic specimen of his class. "Good heaven ! so there is !" exclaimed Eugene, looking off upon the already misty waters. "It must have gathered very sud denly, for all was clear a minute ago. What is to be done now This is something I was not prepared for, on such a night as this." "It looks troublous, Uap'n, I'll allow," returned Dick ;" but we're in for't, that's sartin, and I s'posc we'll Lave to make the best on't." "But what is to be done ?—what do you advise !" asked Eugene, in a quick, exci ted tone, that indicated - some degree of "Why, of you war'nt so skeered about the young lady, and it wasn't so dead agin the orders from head-quarters, my plan would be a cl'ar and easy one—l'd just run over to the Kaintuck shore, and tie up." "No, no," said Eugene, positively "that will never do, Dick—that will never 1 would not think of such a thing for a moment ! We must keep in the current by all means !" "Ef you can," rejoined the boatman ; "but when it gits so-dark as we can't tell one thing from t'other, it'll be power ful hard to do and of we don't run agin a bar or bank afore morning, in spite of the best o' us, it'll be the luckiest go that ever I had a hand in. See, Cap'n—it's thicken ing up fast ; we can't see eyther bank at all, nor the water Luther ; the stars is get in' dim, and it looks as if thar war a cloud all round us." "I see! I see!" returned Eugene, ex citedly. "INlerciful Heaven ! I hope no ac cident will befall us here—and yet icy heart almost rnisgives me !—for this, I be : lieve, is the most dangerous part of our journey—the vicinity , where most of our boats have been captured by the savages.'' Saying this, Eugene hastened below, where he found the other boatmen sleeping so soundly as to require considerable effbrt on his part, to wake them. At last, get ting them fairly roused, he informed them, almost in a whisper, for he did not care to disturb the others, that - a heavy fog had suddenly arisen, and he wished their pre sence on deck, immediately. "A fog, Cap'n ?" exclaimed one, in a lone which indicated that he comprehended the peril with the word. "Hush !" returned Eugene ; "there is no necessity for waking the others, and having a scene. Up ! and follow me, with out a word !" He glided back to the deck, and was al most immediately joined by the boatmen, to whom he briefly made known his hopes and fears. They thought, like their companion, that the boat would be safest if made fast to an overhanging limb of the Kentucky shore ; but frankly admitted that this could not now be done without difficulty and danger, and that there was a possibility of keeping the current. "Then make that possibility a certainty, and it shall be the best night's work you over performed!" rejoined Eugene, in a quick, excited tone. "We'll do the best we can, Cap'n," was the response ; "but no man can be sartin of the current of this here crooked stream in a foggy night." A long silence followed—the voyagers slowly drifting down through a misty dark ness impenetrable to the eye—when, sud denly, our young commander, who was standing near the bow, felt the extended branch of an overhanging limb silently brush his face. He started, with an excla mation of alartp, and at the same moment the boatman on the right called out: "Quick, here, boys ! we're agin the shore, as sure as death !' 3 ' Then followed a scene of hurried and anxious confusion, the voices of the three boatmen mingling togethpr in loud, quick, excited tones. "Push off the bow ?" cried one "Quick ! altogether, now ! over wit her !" shouted another. "The de'il's in it! she's running aground here on a muddy bottom !" almost yelled a third. Meantime the laden boat was brushing along against projecting bushes and over reaching and every moment getting more and more entangled: while the long poles and sweeps of the boatmen, as they attempted to push her off, were often plunged, without touching bottom, into what appeared to be a soft, clayey mud, from which they were only extricated by such an outlay of strength as tended still more to draw the clumsy craft upon the batik they wished to avoid. At length, scarcely more than a minute from the first alarm, there was a kind of settling together, as it were, and the boat became fast and immovable. The fact was announced by Dick Winter, in his characteristic manner—who added, with an oath, that it was just what he ex pected. For a moment or two a dead si lence followed, as if each comprehended that the matter was to be viewed in a very rious light. ".I'll get over the bow, and try to get the lay of the land with my feet," said Tom Harris ; and forthwith he set about the not very pleasant undertaking. At this moment Eugene heard his name pronounced by a voice that seldom failed to excite ;I peculiar uwoti,,zi in hi, breast, and now sent a strange thrill through every nerve : and hastening below. he found Blanche, fully dressed, with a light in her hand, standing just outside of her cabin, in the regular passage which led lengthwise through the centre of the boat "1 have heard something, Eugene," she said "enough to know that we have met with an accident, but not sufficient to fully comprehend its nature," "Unfortunately, ;thou• two hours ago," replied Eugene, "we suddenly became in volved in a dense log ; and in spite of our every precaution and care, we have run aground—it may be against the Ohio shore it may be against an island—it is so dark we can't tell. But. he not alarmed, Miss Blanche," he hurriedly added ; "I trust we shall soon lie afloat again ; though in any even', the darkness is sufficient to con ceal us from the savages, even were they in the vicinity.'' "I know little of Indians," returned Blanche ; "but I have always understood that they are somewhat remarkable for their acuteness of hearing ; and if such is the case, there would be no necessity of their being very near, to be made acquainted with our locality, judging front the loud voices I heard a few minutes ago." "I fear we've been rasher imprudent," said Eugene, in a deprecating tone , "but in the excitement—" His words were suddenly cut short by several loud voices of alarm from without, followed by a quick and heavy trampling across the deck ; and the next women• Seth Harper and Dick 11 inter burst into the pas sage, the former exclaiming : "We've run plum into a red nigger's nest, Cap'n, and Tom Harris is already butchered and scalped !" And even as he spoke, as if in confirma tion of his dreadful intelligence, there arose a series of wild, piercing, demoniacal yells, followed by a dead and ominous silence. So far we have followed the lovely he roine and her friends in this adventure ; but the foregoing is all that we can publish in our columns. The balance of the nar rative can only be found in the New York Ledger, the great family paper, which can be obtained at all the periodical stores where papers are sold. Remember to ask for the "Ledger," dated May 22nd, and in it you will get the continuation of the nar rative from where it leaves off here. If there are no book-stores or news-offices con venient to where you reside, the publisher of the Ledger will send you a copy by mail, if you will send him five cents in a let•er. Address Robert Bonner, Ledger Office, 44 ' , Ann street, New York. This story is en titled, "Perils of the Border," and grows more and Inure interesting as it goes on. OLD FRIENDS TOGETFIEF 0, time is sweet, when roses meet, With spring's sweet breath around them And sweet the cost, when hearts are lost, If those we love hare found them ; And sweet the mind that still can find A star in darkest weather; But nought can be so sweet to see, As old friends 'nod together. Those days of old, when youth was bold, , And time stole wings to spend it, And you ne'cr know how fast time flew, Or, knowing, did not hear it; Though gray each brow that meets us now— For ago brings wintry weather— Yet nought can be so sweet to see Ae those old friends together. The few long known, whom years have shown, With hearts that friendsh p blessoi ; A hand to cheer, perchance a tear, To soothe a friends distresses ; Who helped and tried, still side by side, A friend to face hard weather ; 0, this may we yet joy to see, And meet old friends together. GRA,snoPPER. PLitwe.— A frimrtl Ott Imva, writr , H that "'U he g,tashennerr, er locusts. have, again made their appeal:dire in ear midst in Geom.- less millions, and already eenamened destroy ing nor Spring wheat. Fears are entertained that they will destroy everything in their way this season." -BUOILA.NA.N TEE NEWSPAPER. The old farm-house wore a quiet, pleas ant look, as the setting sun gilded its small window, over which the luxuriant grape vines were carefully !rained. In the open door sat the farmer, with a little morocco covered book in his hand, on which his attention had been fixed for the last hour. He was a man of method and order—old Richard Heath—and aside from his regu lar account books, which he always kept with scrupulous care, he always set down in this little book, in the simplest manner possible, all his expenses (no very compli cated account by the way,) and all he had received during the year, in the metal, as he said, not by the way of trade. The last account he had just reckoned up, and the result was highly satisfactory if one might judgefrom the pleasant ex pression of his face as he turned to his wife and addressed her by her pretty, old-fash ioned name. " Millicent," said he, " this has been a lucky year. How little we thought when we moved to this place, twenty five years ago, that we should ever get five hundred a year out of the rocky, barren farm." "It does pay for a good deal of hard work," slid she, " to see how different things look from what they did then." "Now I am going to figure up how much we have spent," said Mr. Heath ; " don't make a noise with your knitting needles, 'cause it puts me out." The wife laid down her knitting in per fect good humor ; and gazed over the broad rich fields of waving grain which grew so tall around ;he laden apple trees, that they looked like massive piles of foli age. Hearing her own name kindly spoken led her own thoughts far back to the past ; for after the lapse of twenty-five years. the simple sound of the name she bore in youth means more to a wife than all the pleasant epithets of dearest love, and darling, so lavishly offered in a long past courtship. Very pleasant was the retrospect to Mil licent Heath. The picture of the past had on it some rough places and some hard trials, but no domestic s rife or discontent marred its sunny aspect. There were smil ing faces on it—happy children's faces, without which no life picture is beautiful. Soft blue eyes shone with unclouded glad ness, and wavy hair floated carelessly over unwritten foreheads. She forgot for a mo ment. how they were changed, and almost fancied herself again the young mother, and tiny hands stole lovingly over her bosom, and young heads nestled there as of old. The illusion vanished quickly ; and she sighed as she thought of her youngest born the reckless boy who had left her three years before for a home on the sea. Once only had tidings reached her of the wan derer. The letter spoke of hardships and home sickness, in that light and careless way that reached the mother's heart more surely than repining and complaint. To know that lie suffered with a strong heart, with noble and unyielding resolution, gave her a feeling of pleasure, not umningled with pride. 1 , Ile will surely come back," murmured the affectionnte mother to herself; and I read the paper so carefully every week, that if it says anything about the ship Al fred sailed in, I shall be sure to see it." 4 4 Mrs. Heath," said her husband, inter rupting her meditations somewhat rudely, " we have spent thirty dollars more than usual this year ; where can it have have gone to 1" " The new harness," suggested Mrs. Heath, that don't come every year, you know." Well, there's twenty dollars accounted g‘ We had the carriage fixed up when you bought the harness," continued the " Well, that was eight dollars, that's twenty-eight we don't spend every year— but the other two, where can they have gone ?" Glancing his eye over the pages of the memorandum book, he continued— " I'll tell you what 'tis, the newspaper costs just two dollars, and We can do with it. It isn't anything to eat, drink or wear. I don't do anything with it, and you only lay it away up in the chamber. It may as well be left out as not, and Pll stop my subscription right away.' " Oh," said his wife, " you don't know how much I set, by the newspaper. I al ways have a sort of glad feeling when I see you take it out of your hat and lay it on the kitchen mantlepiece, just as I do when some of the children come home ; and when I'm tired I sit down with my knit ting work and read. I can knit just as well when I'm reading, and feel so conten ted. I don't believe Queen Victoria her self takes more solid comfort than I do sitting by the east window, on a summer afternoon, reading my newspaper." " But are you not just as well off with out," answered her husband, for want of anything else to say. " 1 never neglect anything else for read ing, do I V' asked Mrs. Heath, mildly. " No, I don't know as you do," answer ed her husband ; << hut it seems an extra like—l shall stop it ;" he added in a tone that shoNyed plainly enough he wished to stop the conversation. 4 . I shall take the paper," remarked his wife, "if I have to go out washing to pay for it." This was not spoken angrily, but so firmly that Mr. heath noticed it, though by no means remarkable for discernment in most matters. It sounded so different from her usual quiet, " as you think best," that he actually stopped a moment to con sider wheal° it was at all likely she would do as she said. Mr. Heath was a kind husband, as that indefinite description is generally under stood'; that is he did not beat his wire, and always gave her enough to eat. More ,han that,he had certain regard for her happiness which already made him feel half ashamed of his decison, but like other men who have more obstinacy than wisdom, he couldn't bear to retracted anything, and above all to be convinceu he was wrong by a woman. However, with a commendable wish to remove Ihe unhappiness he caused, he sug gested that as the papers were carefully saved, and she had found them interesting, she could read them over again, beginning at January and taking one a week clear through the year—they would just come out even, he concluded, as if it were a sin gular fact that they should do so. Notwithstanding this admirableTroposi tion he still felt some uneasiness. It fol lowed him as he walked up the pleasant lane to the pasture, and it made him speak more sharply than was his wont, if the cows stopped while he was driving them home, to crop the grass where it looked greenest and sweetest on the sunny slope. It troubled him till lie heard his wife call ing him to supper in such a cheerful tone, that heioonoluded she did'nt care much about the newspaper, after all. About a week after this, as Mr. Heath was mowing one morning, ho was surprised to see his wife coming out, dressed as for a visit. " I am going," she said ; " to spend the day with Mrs. Brown 3 1 leave a plenty for you to eat," and so saying she walked rapidly on. Mr. Heath thought about it just long enough to say to himself, "she don't go vis itin' to stay all day once a year hardly, and it's strange she should go in hay time." Very long the day seemed to him; to go in for lucheon, dinner and supper, and have nobody to speak to; to find every one so still. The old clock ticked stiller than usual, he thought ; the brood of pretty chickens, that were almost always peeping round the door,had wandered off somewhere, and left it stiller yet ; he even missed the busy•click of the knitting needle that was apt to put him out so, when he was doing any figuring. " I am glad," he said to himself, as he began to look down the road, at sunset, " that Millicent don't go a visitin' all the time, as some women do ; there she is just cowing." , 4 How tired you look, said he, as she came up ; "why didu't you speak about it, and I'd have harne,sed up and come after you?" «1 atn not very tired," she answered ; but her looks belied her ; indeed, her hus band declared she looked tired like for a day or two after. What was his amazement to see her go away the neat Tuesday in the same man ner as she before started. To his great dissatisfaction, everything seemed that day to partake of his wife's propensity for going from home. 44 A man don't want cold feed in hay time," he said, as he sat down to dinner. In the same grumbling mood, he recounted the mis haps of the morning, which seemed to be much after the manner set forth in certain legends of olden time ; for he embellished his recital by allusion to "The sheep's in the meadow, The cow's in the corn," adding that they wouldn't have been there if Mrs. Lleath had been at home, because she'd have seen them beforethey got in, and hallooed. She would have seen the oxen, too, before they got across the river. ;slid saved him tLe trouble of getting them b Lek. But after tracing all these untoward events to her absence, he said to hitnself conso lingly, I guess she won't go any more she always was a home body.' Mrs. Heath did go again, though, and again, and the day she went for the fourth time, her husband took counsel with him self as to what, he should do to stop her gadding.' Seated on the door-step in the shade of the old trees, he spent an hour or two in devising ways and measures, talking aloud all the time, and having the satisfac tion of bearing nobody dispute him. It is hard to think of her getting to be a visitin' woman,' said he ; 6 and it's clew• it ain't right. Keep her at home, I've read in the Bible, (old Richard's 13ible knowl edge was somewhat confused, and his quo tation varied slighlty from the scriptural phrase, keepers at home,') but it says too,' he added, like a true, sincere man, that husbands must get great store for their wives and treat them well. I won't scold _Millicent; I'll harness up and go for her to-night, and comin' home, talk it all over with her, and tell her how bad it makes me feel, and if that won't do, I'll—some thing else. In accordance with his praiseworthy res olution, lie might have been seen, about sunset, hitching his horse at Mr. Brown's door; for strangely enough, Mrs. heath's visits had all been Made at the same pla.co. Going up to the door, he stopped in amaze ment at seeing his wife in the kitchen, just taking off a great woollen wash-apron, and puttiug down her sleeves, which had been rolled up for washing. lie listened and heard her say, as she took some money from Mrs. Brown,-41t won't be so that I can do your washing again.' 'lt has been a great favor to have you do it while I have been poorly,' said Mrs. Brown, and I am glad to pay you for it.— This makes four times 3 and here's two dol lars. 'T:s just as well that you can't come again, for I think I shall be well enough to do it myself.' 'Two dollars—just the price of the news paper,' exclaimed Mr. [loath, as the truth flashed across his mind. Rather a silent ride home they had, till at length he said— 'I never was so ashamed iu my life !' 'Of what !' asked the wife. 'Why, to have you go out washing ; ain't so poor as that comes to.' 'Well, I don't know,' replied his wife ; 'when a roan is too poor to tak ea newspa per, his wife ought not to feel above going out washing.' Nothing more was said on the subject at that time, though some ill-feeling lingered in ,the hearts of each. The making up was no mawkish scene of kissing, embracing and crying, such as romantic writers build their useless fabrics with, but as Mrs. Heath was finishing her household duties for the night, she said quietly— "l don't think I did quite right, Rich ard." " I don't think I did either," responded the husband ; and so the spark was quench- - ed which might have become a scathing flame, blighting all the domestic peace under their humble roof. "At last the long voyage is almost ended, and the sailors talk only of home now." They talk of those they are to meet, of their wives and children, to whom their thoughts have so often wandered during these three years' absence. They 1 wonder if the young sailor, Alfred Heath,' who lies so sick, will ever see his home again; and with their i ough tones sub dued almost to gentleness, they speak of his anxiety to see his mother. He is so hopelessly ill that his heart is now where the worn spirit ever turns in its hours of bitterest sorrow on its approach to the unseen land—io God and his mother. Faintly as his heart beats,it still throbs with earnest desire for life. Dim as his keen eye has become, he fancies it would brighten once more at the sight of his mother, and his failing mind become clear ed, could he lean on her breast. . With folded hands the young sailor prays ; his words are confused and indis- tinot to those who listen, but all clear and earnest are they to the Great Listner above. Aud when the ship has reached her distant port, and mingling voices are all around the sick sailor, his comrades bear him comfortably to a home--a miserable home— but bettor to him than the rocking vessel in the midst of the sounding sea. " Now if 1 could see mother," ho murmured to the strangers around him. She is sitting by the vine-covered window patiently reading the shipping journal, and thinking, it was time for hiar boy to return, and hoping that he will never go to sea again. How quick the words catch her eye Arrived, ship Banner, Lovel." And it was a week ago : he could have been home by this time : " he will come to morrow night," she said joyfully, as she went to communicate the good news to her husband. They watched for him in vain that night, and then Mrs. Heath suggested what no uwe her ever failed to suggest when the long absence of a child was unaccounted for—he must he sick ; when night after night passed, and they neither saw nor heard anything of Alfred, her anxiety would let her rest no longer. " We will go for him, or at least go where we may hear of him," said Mr. Heath, who now, as well as his wife, readily assented. Their simple preparations for the journey were soon made, and with heavy hearts they proceeded in search of their son, with little hopes of gaining more satisfac tion than definite intelligence of his death. It was a dark and rainy evening when they entered the city, and after an hour spent in fruitless inquiries, they found the place where Alfred had been carried. Little care had he received in the crowd ed boarding house. There was none of the neatness and order that shows better in a sick room than anywhere else. Rough hands had roughly tended him, and pale and deathlike as he looked it seemed as if it mattered little what care he had now. In the agency with which the parents bent over the unconscious sleeper, and marked the sunken cheeks and wasted form, there was but one ray of comfort ; they could watch over him—they should not hear of his death with the sad thought that none but a stranger had soothed his dying pillow. The sufferer awoke from a taoubled dream, to find his aching head supported by his father, and see his mother's eye resting on him with a look of unutterable tenderness. So' faint was the smile of recognition with which lie greeted them, that only a parent's eye could have caught the fluttering expression. " Can't live, can',t live," said the'doetor, with a professional carelessness, as he entered the house the next morning. " But his mother has come !" said the landlady. "'('hat alters the case; he may get up again," answered the doctor, than whom none knew better how much a mother could do. But how frail seemed the thread that hold that young and promising life. For days it quivered and trembled with the slightest breath, and the mother tearfully prayed that it might not bo broken. A guntl : care and kindly watching as r ever blessed a sick bed, and young Alfred Heath, was not in vain ; gradually he grow better, and was able to talk with his par cuts, and asked them how theyoed to r enru come to hiw in an hour of n . 'lt was the newspaper,', id Mr. Heath; "just three words in th paper told us your ship had come. Yob. didn't arrive at home, and so we came to see if you were sick. You'll soon be well enough to come home, my boy. God be thanked,' ho added fervently, , for sending us to take care of you.' At length Alfred was pronounced well enough to ride, and in a few days the pleasant old homestead gladdened his sight How beautiful it looked as the sun shone on the vines in which it was em bowered, with their wealth of grapes, just purpling in the autumn sunshine. No one ,o joyful as Mr. Heath, who, after being gladdened by hearing Alfred say lie would never go to sea again, expres sed his opinion of newspapers in general, and his own newspaper in particular on this wise : I am so glad, Millicent, that you took that paper, for I count a paper just the most necessary thing in a family. We should never have had a boy here strong and well, if it had not been for it. It is an excellent thing, and I shall subscribe for it as long as I live.' CARDS.' I .11 ) M 0 V A L.--WILLIAM S. AMWEG, ,111-3 . at Lug, r,nov,”l his o@ce from hilt 1,111, - p 1.,. into S•mtli Hike stret, nearly oppnglte the Trinity Lutheran Church Am uEL 11. REYNOLDS, Attorney at Olner. N , .. 14 N.Jrth Duk,. street, opposite the Crout.ll.,u.e. may 6 tf 16 fl ‘ TIT T. Me P 11,/11T IL, ,RN EY AT LAW, ryllr 31 1y 11 STRASBURG. Lancaster Co., Pa IR. JOHN DUCAL'. A, DENTIST.--0111ce J N.,. 4 H hti . ...• 1, Linc Aster, apr 18 tf 13 E TON LIGIITNER, ATTORNEY _ r ti AT LAW. )I,tH Duke street, nearly the ('curt I,:enc.,to•r, tf II LDUS J. NEFF, Attorney at Law.-- A ()nice with it. A. Sl,A.timr, Esq., mouth-west comor of root, Square, Lancaster. luny 15, '55 ly 17 1: 4 , It F. D E t R T I C T !C' , I S t . N P E T I F: E A R '? LAW. II NW:T. DUKE STREET, WEST SIDE, LAN TELL, Pa. npr 20 tf 14 [REMOVAL. --WILLIAM B. FORDNEY, rt d Attorney at I.siv, has removed his ofilm. from North Queen street to the taiihlin.s In the couthnamt corner of Centre Square, forinetly known aw Ilubloy's Hotel. LaoraNter, rgirll U 7 EDWARD In'GOVERN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, N,. 5 NORTH DUgo ~purr—WEAR TUE COURT HousE, LANCA^TER, J - ESSE. LANDIS, Attorney at Law.”Ofm flee one 0 0 ,,r e,ef of I,..llbeti HotOi, Erik King street, in in ca 9 ter, toy,. All ..f :ierivonirlz—such na writing Wllle, Ac,-nunta. ,kr., will be attended to with may 15,'55 tf-17 `V I.LLIA.III W GITESIDE, SURGEON DEN'AST.-oflice in North Qll.ll street, 9d door from Orang, and lirortly over Sprenger & Westheaffer's ISM. k Storo. Lane:aid tr, may '27, IMO JHIESBLACK, Attorney at Law.--Of. lice in East King street, two doors east of Lechler's Howl, Lancaster, to. d'ir" All husiness connected with his profession, and all kinds of writing, such ne preparing Deeds, Mortgages, Wills, Stating Accounts, dm., promptly attended to. may lb. tf.l7 JOHN F. BRINTON, ATTORNBY APHT LAW ELP, ILADHIA, Ps., Iles removed Ids office to too residence, No. 249 South Bth . 6trei•l, ftbeve Spruce. Itofere by permisaion to Lion. H. G. LONG, A. L. LIAYEB Franaz - nov 24 ly. 45 " THADDEUS &TIMM EMOVAL.--DR. J. T. BARER, EIOR.. II HIPATIIIC PHYSICIAN, has removed his offlce to Lime street, between Orange and East %lug streets, west elde. Reference—Profoseor W. A. Gardner, Philadelphia. Calls from the couutry will be promptly attended to: aim 6 NO. 18 npr 8 tf 12