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ENT advertisements must be paid for I 5 ADVANCE. ALL Resolutions of Associations, Comm:mica tiona of limited or individual interest. and notices of Marriages and Deaths. exeeeding five lines, are chard TEN cENTS PER LINE. JOB PRINTING, of every land. In plain and teary colors. done with neatness and dtsT.atch. 'Handbills, Blanks. Cards.. Pamphlets. Billheads. Statements. kr., of every variety and style, printed at the shortest notice. TII REPORTER office is well supplied with power presses. a goodassort ment of new type. and everything In the Printing line can be executed In the most artistic manner and•at the lowest rates.' TERMS INVARIABLE CASH Pm2mer...zl aad Entimes Card: 3 -AMES WOOD, ' . . ! ... .. . • ATTORNEY:AT.T.AW. • melitt-76 . TowAsnik, P. 37 - Ni) 01IN F. SA. .ERSON, -- ATTORNtY-AT.T.AW, OFFICE.—Means Building (over Powell's Store). mchn-76 TowAND!,, PA. 11 - D. SMITH, DENTIST, I.—/• - Towanda. Pa. trill ee on Park street. north side Public Square, next to Elwell Aeons; . I mch9-76 IV..k Wv LITTLE, ATTOR.VE TS-AT-LAW, TOWAYDA, PA Office In Pattun's - Block, cnr. Main and Bridge-8t& Towanda, P. April 18.;78. GEORGE D. S ATTORNE r .4 .vp efir-VSELLOR-AT-LA TV. J OThee—Main,t.,.four doors North of Ward House P menses in Supreme Court of Pennsylvania and rnited TOWANDA, PA States Courts.—[DeciV 11_1 pir STREETER. • LAW OFFICE, • 1 iOW.,,NDA, PA. nVERTON & MERCUR, - ATTORNEYS AT LAW, ToWANDA • Office oyerMontanyes Store. - - [rnay67s. ;D'A. OVERTON. RODNEY A. 'St ERCUR, WM. MAXWELL, ' ME ATTORSEr-AT-LATV. OFFICE OYES DAYTON'd STORY, TOWAXDA,PA April 12, i 44., P ATRICK tt FOYLE, Towanda, Pa. ]lyl:= 3. (Mice, in ?tiercur's Mock ; 3. ANGLE; ATT6::SET-AT-LA TV Offioe - rm hh 1)a, ies & Carnahan, Towanda, Pa. 1.1n4 '77 Ur ri F. M.ASO ATTORNEY AT LAW, . . TOWANDA PA. . , Office flrbt door 5.01104 of C. B. Patch Esp., me ow! floor. Nos. le, I'S. EL. HILLIS, . - ATTORNET-AT-T.AV, TowANDA, PA. (Mee with Smith k3!nnt4nye. - [novil-75 .ANDREW . - I = J. JTTORNETJ.VD , C 0 VSSEL OR-A T-Lif IV, °thee over Cro, , t tiooh Store, two (loon. north of slovens: & Long Towanda. Pa. May be conbulted r German. [April 12, , MAIMAIM A TrOSSE YS-A T-LA S'ONVANDA, PA. Tift - re In Tragic k Nobte'sloa Towanda, Pa., Jan. In. 1576. • TIT 11. TII.O.IPSON, AtTORikIEY • -AT LAW. WYA_LUSING, PA. Will attend to all business cfitrtv , ti.d to 1114 care in Bradford, Sullivan and 'Wyoming Counties. Offer: with Esq. ranter. Enovl9-74. ELSBREE; 11l ATToI:NE \ - -AT-LAW. TowANDA; PA ME! ri L. LAMB, ATToItNEY-NT-T.AIV WILKES-BAME. Co'lections prtooptly attended to 0 vERTos & ELsBREE, ATT. •It- NETS AT LAIN-, f , iWAii'DA. PA. Having en. e.reti into 'e , ..-varti.n.lll p. offer:their prufeANional Defvlf es to, the fnit•lie. Spoelai attention given to i.u,iness in the Orphan'', and Regf.ter'APourti. E. OVERTON, .It. 0101-70) ELS BREt. ArADILL L LAW, , Tow. , INDA, PA. Ofare In WenCIN• Mork, iirst dobreouth of the First National bank, up-slain,. - H.. 1. MADILL. rj:in y)?.. .T. 1. CALIFF GRIDLEY & PAYN'E, .1. TT , / ;ZNE :S 0 . 1 , 1 • & N 4.8. 111,01. MA o: SYrztir OWA DA, PA ME E. c.,CalroLlY, HailEl ATTORNEY AT LAW, - .ANI) S:COMMISSIO,NER, ' - TOWA:SI)A, PA. IJEE . i..—Nunnle Public .quare & ATTORNEYS AT LAW, 1 MERCU-R.BLOCK. TOWANDA, PA. 1) c =-7% HPEET, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. IF preparvd to practice all branches of Ms Oilier, 'MERCER BLOCK,- (entrance on south Tou - AND.A. PA. dan6-76. DR. S. M. W001)13U11, Pliysi ain and Surgeon. Offon..: l over 0. A. Black , : Cro,kery xtore. • • Toranda, May hl'ArN E •, • .M. ca lie eon- Jib n: Dr. I . ,ferk.ir.. Drug Store. Do..t in to rg. A. M.. and ~. M. Spertal C.,•••1,1..0 given kt of .he V.ye and Towatal. I - IRS:JOHNSON tt NEWTON Ptivstriaoy: and Surgeons 01lire over Dr 77, , rtt!r Prot! Store. Towanda. l'a. ==E/ .." -7,tf D. L. DODSON, DrsTisr. - k. On and after Sept 21. ma ,- be fonn4 In the o r latt: , t n n , f t w ate rOk s , t n rw is „ ozi 21; u d ,1 11 n ,!: . :r s w of il l! i r i . et t i lratt's new ••Tr. 3-74 t f -SAT K-1:1, EX, DI:NTTST.-01116e over N. F.. Ito.onfwid's, Towanda. Pa. ht•elted ••Ilver. Rubber. and •l oatulum Tveth extracted witlund yaln. cwt. 24-7?.. nll. C. M. STANLY, DENTIST, _LI flaying rrrnovt.4 his Dental effierintOTracy & M.A.'s new Mock. over Kent & \Catrous• store, Is now-prepared to 40 all kinds of dental work. Ile has also put Ih a new gas aparatu.i. mayl37s. - (TALE. Agents for t. SNECTICI:T CA G LIFE INSLTU.kNCE UII\I _ - OS ti // Patton's Block, Bridge Sp llttri-1) 26 . -7 t. (1 S. RUSSELL'S NJ. • GENERAL INS.UR.ANCE AGENCY, Ai, ..1.-7nt P. ISa4. 1876 10WANDA IN:AI3ANCE AGENCY 1.. Y. ;,1 S ;eel, ar,p,,,,10 114 e Cor, Hottit. NOBLE & VINCENT, MANAGERS. `IIOOIIY, BLA CKSMITII. • Does all kinds of work in his Ilene._ Iltiliaqi-Stioi:t!tiG A SPECIALTY. Disease/ feet treated. Manufactures the cele brated C PICK. Shop;iol Plank Road, - near cid A gr;ctiThAVorka. Towanda, Pa., Jan. A, INSURANCE ; APENCY 7 _ RELIABLE.. AND FIRE TRIED Cocupanles rep .esen:ed : LANCSHIRE, • PACENIX, , -HOME, MERCHAN'TS. - O. ♦. ELAZIG Xarth 19441.4 IMI S. W. ALVORD, Publisher. VOLUME XXXVII. THE CHARGE OF THE RUM BRIGADE. torn, How did their glory fade I 0,. the wild charge they made All the world wondered. 7 Weep, for the charge they made! Weep, for the Runt Brigade 7 Fallen Six Hundred. Oheonta, N. Y. MARY 8. W ['ELLER The Captains " Last Love. 'The Captain is still in the prime of life;!.' the widow remarked to me. "He has,given up his ship; he' pos sesses a sufficient income, and he has nobody' i o liVe with him. I should like to know why lie doesn't marry." "The Captain was eseessiyely rude to me," the" widow's younger sister adde, on her side. "When we took leave . of him in London, I asked if there was any likelihood of his join ing ni at Brighton,this season. He turned his back on me as if I h'ad mortally offended him; and he made me this extraordinary answer: 'Miss, I hate the sight of !the seal' The man has been a sailor all' his life. What does he mean by saying that he hates the sight of the sea ?" I was entirely at the mercy of t=ie widow and the widow's sister. The other members of our little society at the boarding-house ball .had all gone to a concert. I was known to be the Captain's oldest friend, and to he well acquainted with alt the events of the-Captain's life. No polite al ternative was left but to answer. the July 27.76 questions that had been put to me.. "I can satisfy your curiosity," said to the two ladies, "without vio lating any confidence reposed in me —if you only have patience enough to listen to a very strange story." ;It is needless to report the answer that I freceiVeil. We sent away the tea-things, and we trimmed the lamp; and then I told the ladies why i the Captain would never marry, and why (sailor as he was) he hated the sight of the sea. • =I Jan. 1 16.75 The British mei clion'anan "Fortu na " (on the last occasion when our friend the Captain took command of the ship) sailed from the port of Liv erpool with the morning tide. She was bound to certain islands la the Pacific Ocean, in search of a cargo of sandal-wood—a commodity wh;cir, in those days, found a ready and pro- l i fit-able market in the Chinese Empbe. A large discretion was•reposed in the Captain by the owners, who knew him to be not only thoroughly trust worthy, but a man of are carefully cultivated duriii'g the leisu e liours"of a sea-faring life. Devoted heart and soul to his professional du ties, he was a bard reader and an ex cellent linguist as well. Having had considerable expeKence among ,the inhabitants of the Pacific Islands, he', had attentively studied their charac ..ters, and had Mastered their language in more than one of its many dialects.' Thanks to the valuable informa. ion thus obtained, the Captain was never at a loss to conciliate the islanders; and he had more than once succeeded in finding a cargo, under circumstan ces in which other captains had failed. Possessiag these merits, he had his fair shale of human defects. For instance. he was a little too con, scions of his own good looks—of his bright chestnut hair and whiskers, of his beantiful blue eyes, of his fair white skin, which many a woman had looked at with the admiration that is akin to envy. His shapely' hands wei e protected by gloves; a: broad brimmed hat sheltered his complex ion in -fine weather. from the -sun. He was nice in his choice of per fumes; he never drank spirts, and the sinell of tobacco was abhor rent to him. New men among his offices and his "Iv, seeing him s; udying in • his cabin, perfectly dressed, washed and brushed until Ile was an object speckless to look upon, sort of voice and Careful in his Choice of words, were apt to conclude that they had trusted themselves -- at sea under a commander who was an anomalous mixture of a sclioolmaster_ and a dandy. But if the slightest inflection of discipline took place, or ittlie storm rose' and the vessel was in peril, it was soon discovered that, the gloved hands held a rod of lion, 'that the soft voice could make itself heard through wind and sea TOWA . NDA, rA g,fiecifi tiorkg. All In league, all In league, All In league onward, Al! In the Valley of Death, Walked the Six Hundred. ••Vorward the Bum Brigade I ICheers fur the ,Whisky Raid r , Into the Valley of Death Walked the Six Hundred. •Forward the Itum Brigade Were all their friends dismayed! Yes ; and the soldiers knew Each one had blundered. Theirs not to make reply, Theirs not to reason why, Theirs but to drink and die. luta the Valley 6t Death, Walked the Six Hundred Druukards to the right of them. Drunkards to the left of them, Drunkards in front of them, One million numbered. Oaths fell like shot and shell, Rum did Its work so well. Into the Jawa of Death, Into the mouth of Walked the biz Hundred. Garments torn—cupboards bare— Children wltknaught to wear; Sleeping in gutters their Fathers are lying, while All the world wondered. Plungo Into want and woe, Onward they madly go. Weeping In anguish, Wives sit, for welt they know, Shattered and sundered, None will come back who go Of the Six hundred. Curses to the right of them, Curses to the left of them, Curses behind them Volleyed and thunderad. StOrmed at by those who sell, They, who had paid so Well, Well had been plundered. Clenched teeth and livid brow, Del tremens now, Thus young and old men fell Into the Jaws of Death, Into the mouth of Ilell, Not one was left of them, Left of Six Hundred. jiscd!anroii BY WILKIE COLLINS from one end.of the deck to the other, and that it issued orders which the greatest fool on board knew' to be or ders that saved the ship.. Through out his professional life, the general impression that this variously-gifted man produced on the little world about him was always the' same,. Some few liked him ; everybody re spected him ; nobody understood him. The Captain accepted those results, and went on reading his books and perfecting his complexion; and his owners shook hands with him, and put up with his gloves. The Fortuna touched at Rio for water, and for supplies of food which might prove useful in case of scurvy. In"due time the ship rounded Cape Horn, in the finest weather ever known in those latitudes by the old est hand on board. The mate, one Mr. Duncalf—a boozing, wheezing, self-confident old sea-clog, with a flaming- face and a vast vocabulary of oaths—swore that he didn't like . it. "The foul weather's coming, my lads," said Mr. Dunealf. "Mark my wors, there'll be wind enough to take the curl out of the Captain's whiskers before we are many days , older !" During a fortnight more the ship cruised in search of the islandi to which the owners had directed her. At the end of that time the wind took the predicted liberties with the Captain's whiskers, and -Mr. Duncalf Stood. revealed to an admiring crew in the character of a true propbet. For three days and three nights the Fortuna ran' before the.storm, at the mercy of wind and sea. On the fourth morning the gale blew itself out, the' sun appeared again toward noon, and the Captain was able to take an observation. The result in formed him that he was in a p.rt - of the Pacific Ocean with which he was entirely unacquainted. Thereupon the officers were called into the cabin. M. Duncalf, as became his rank, was consulted first. Il is opinion possessed the merit of brevity. "My lads, the ship's bewitched. Take my word for it, we shall wish ourselves back in our own latitudes before we are many days older." Which, being in terpreted, - meant that - Mr. Duncalf was last, like his superior officer; in a part of the ocean of which he knew nothing. The Captain decided (the weather being now quite fine again) to stand on under a press of sail for-four-and twenty hours more, and ; to see if any thing came of it. 1 , Scon after nightfall something did come of it. The look-out forward hailed the deck with the dreadful eiy, "Breakers ahead!" In less than a minute more everybody .heard the crash of the, broken water. The For ;Anna was put about, and came round slowly in the light wind. Thanks to. ;Le timely alarm and the fine weath er, the safety of the vessel was easily provided for. They kept her under short sail, and.: waited for the morning. The dawn showed them in the dis tance a glorious green island, not marked in- the ship's charts--...;an isl and girt about by a coral reef, and having in its midst. a highleaked mountain, which looked, throUgh the telescopeOike a mountain of volcanic origin. Mf: Duncalf, taking his morning dram of rum and water, shook his groggy old Lead, and said, (and swore.) "My lads, I don't like the looks of that island." The Cap tain was of a diirerent opinion. He had one of the ship's boats put into the water; he armed himself and sir of his crew who accompanied him, and away - he went in the ,morning sunlight to visit the island.- . Skirting round the coral reef, they found a na;ural breach which pro.ved to be brodd enough and deep enough not only for, tile-passage of the boat, but of the ship . itself if needful. Crossing the broad inner belt of smooth water, they approached the golden sands Of the, island, strewed, with magnificent shells, and crowded 1 )v the dusky.islanders--men, women and children, all waiting in bieal,h- . less' . aStonisnment to .see .the strang ers land. The Captain kept the hurt off, and examined the islanders carefully. The innocent, simple people danced and sang and ;lin into the water, ina ploriiiir their wonderful white v!sitoli by gestures to come on shore. Not a - creatme among them carried aqms of any sort; a hospitable animated the entire population. The men cried out, in their smooth, mus ical language, "Come and eat !" and the plump, black-eyed women, ;11 langhing together, added- their own invitation, in and be kissed!" Was it in 'mortals to resist such iemptaiions as these? The Captain led the w 0,.. on shore, and the women surrounded him in an instant and sc'eamed for joy at the glorious spec tacle of his whiskers, his complexion, and his gloVes. So the mariners nom the far north were welcomed to the newly-discovered island. The morning wore on. Mr. Dun can', in charge of the ship, cursing the island, over his rum-and-walcr, as "a beastly green strip of a place, not laid down in any Christian chart," was kept waiting four mortal hours before the Captain - returned to his command, and reported himself to' his officers as follows: He had found his knowledge of the Polynesian dialects sufficient to make himself in some degree under stood by the natives of the new 'isl and. Under the guidance of the chief he had made a first, journey of explo ration,-and had seen for himself that the place was a marvel of nal oral beauty and fertility. The one barren spot in it was the peak of the volca nic mountain, composed of crumbling lock; originally, no doubt, lava and ashes ' • which had cooled and consoli dated with the lapse of time. $o far as be bad seen, the crater at the top was now an extinct crater. But, if be had understood rightly, the chief had 3piaken of earthquakes and erdp tions at certain bygone periods,iome of which lay within his own earliest recollections of the place. Adverting next to, considerations of practical utility, the Captain announced that he had seen sandal-wood enough on the island to load a dozen ships, and that the natives were willing to part with - it for a few toys and trinkets. OB C. TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, pA., THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 1, 1877. generally distributed among 'them. To the mate's disgust,, the Fortuna was taken inside the reef that day, and was anchored before-sunset in a natural harbor. Twelve hours of rec reation, beginning with the next morning, were granted to the men, under the wise restrictions in such cases established by the Captain. That interval over, the work of cut ting the precious wood and loading the ship was to be unintermittingly pursued. " Mr. Dunealf had the first watch after the Fortuna had been made snug. He took the boatswain aside (an ancient sea-dog like himself) and he said in a gruff whisper: "My lad, this here ain't the island laid down in our sailing orders. See if mischief don't come of disobeying orders be fore we are,Mitny days older." Noing in the . shape of mischief happened that night. But at sunrise the next morning a suspicious cir cumstance occurred, and Mr. Duncalf whispered to the boatswain: "What didl tell you ?" The Captain and the chief of the islandersiteld 'a pri vate conference' in the cabin, and the Captain, after first forbidding any communication with the shore until his return,' suddenly 'left the -- ship tilone with the-chief, in, the chiet's own canoe What did' this strangedisappear ance .mean ? The Captain himself, when he took his scat in the - canoe; would have -been puzzled to answer that.question. "Shall we be a long time away from the ship?" he asked. Tke chief answered mysteriously :: "Long time or short time, your life depends on it, • and the lives of your mien." Paddling his light little vessel in silence over the smooth water inside the reef, the chief took his visitor ashore at a part of the island which was quite new to the Captain. The two crossed a ravine and ascended .an eminence beyond. There the chief istopped-, and 'silently pointed out to sea. The Captain looked in the direc tion.indicated to.him,and discovered a second and a smaller island, lying away to the _south-west at a distance of under two miles. Taking out his telescope from the case by which it was slung at his back, he examined the place through his glass. Two of the native canoes were off the shore of the new island; and the men in them appeared to be all kneeling or crouching in curiously-chosen at titudes. Shifting his range a little, the Captain next beheld the figure of a tall and solitary man—the one in habitant of the island whom he could discover. The man was standing on the highest point of a rocky cape. A fire was burning - at his feet. Now he lifted his ark:; solemnly to the skies now .he dropped some invisible fuel into the fire; which made a blue smoke; and now he cast other invisi ble objects into the canoes floating beneath him, which the islanders rev erently .received with , bodies that crouched in abject submission. Low ering his' telescope, the Captain lookd round at the chief for an ex*- planation. The chief gaverthe expla nation-.readily. sllis language may be interpreted in these terms: ' "Wonderful White stran g er! ,the island you see . yonder is aboly isl and. As such it is Taboo—an island sanctified and set apart. The honor able person whom you notice on the rock is an all-powerful favorite of the gods. He is by vocation a sorcerer, and by rank a priest. You now see him casting charms and blessings in to the canoes of our fishermen, who• kneel to him for line weather and great plenty of fish. If any profane person, native or stranger, presumes to set foot on that island, my other wise peaceable subjects will (in the performance of a religious'duty) put that person to death. .Mention this to your men. They will be fed by. my male people and fondled by my female people so long as they keep clear of the Holy Isle. As they value heir lives, let them respect this pro hibition. It is understood between us? Wonderful white stranger, my canoe is waiting for you. Let us go back." Understanding enough o f the chief's language Ilastrated by his gestures) to receive in' the right spirit the com munication th us addressed him, ;he Captain repeated the warning to the ship's company in the plainest possi ble English. . The officers and men hen took their holiday on shore, with the emception of Mr. Dunezir, who positively refused - to leave the ship. For twelve delightful hours they were fed by the male people and foadlea by the female people, and ,then grey were mercilessly torn their the flesh-pots and the prinsof their new frieues, and set to work on the se.adal-wood • in, good earnest.' Mr. DunCalr superintended the - towline, waitec fo,.•the mischief that was to come of diaobeyiag the owners' orde •s, with a _couthieuce worthy Of a better cause. -IV. • enough, ctruce once 0 more deciaref: iiself in favor of Cie ma..,e's point of view. The misch:ef seinally come, and l'ae c:iosen iastipment of it was a :landsome young islandev,who was one of The sons or .he chief. . - rae Contain had taken . a fancy to . sweet-tetre'ed, intelligent lad. Pursuing his studies in the dialect of tie island at leisure hours, he had made the chief's son his tutor, and had amused himself by. instructing the your h in English by way of re nun. Morethan a month had pass ed-in this intercourse, and the ship's lading was being rapidly complet ed, when, in au evil hour, the talk between the two turned on the sub ject of the Holy Island. "Does nobody live on the island but the Priest ?" .the Captain aBked.. The chief's son looked round . Ihim suspiciously. "Promise me you 'won't tell anybody !" he began very earnestly. The Captain gave his promise. ' "There is one other person on tile island,l the lad whispezed; "a per son-A° feast your eyes upon if you could only see her I- She is the priest's daughter. She was taken to the island in her infancy, and has never left it -since. In, that sacred solitude she bait never looked on swr REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER. human being but her father and her mother. I once saw her from my canoe, taking core not to attract her notice, or to approach too near the holy soil. 06, so young, dear mas ter,- and oh, so beautiful 1" The chief s son completed the description by kissing his own hands in silent rapture. - The Captain=s fine blue eyes sparkl.L ed. He asked no more questions, but, later on that day, he paid a sec ! - ret visit to the eminence which over looked the Holy- Island. The next day and the next' he stole away to the same place. On the, fourth-day fatal. destiny favored him. He saw the nymph of the island through his telescope standing alone upon the cape on which he had already dis covered her fathei. She was feeding some tame birds, which looked like turtle-doves. The glass Showed ,the- Captain her pure white robe .flutter ing in the sea breeze , - her long black hair falling ,to her heels, her slim and supple young figure, her simple grace or , attitude as she turned this. way and -That, attending to the wants of her birds. Before her was the blue ocean'; behind her was the lngtrous green of the island forest. The Cap taiii's vivid imagination supplied the inevitable defects of the glass. Ile looked and looked until his eyes and arms ached. And when she flitted lightly back into the forest, with her birds after her, the Captain shut up his telescope with a sigh, and said to himself, " i have seen an angel 1" From that hour he became an al tered man; he was langiiid, silent, interested in nothing. General opiti ion, fleeided that he was going to be taken ill. , A week more elapsed, and the officers-an& crew began, to talk of the voyage to their market in China. The captain refused to fix a clay for sailing. He even took offenseat being asked to decide. Instead of sleeping in his cabin, he went ashore for the night. • Not many hours afterward, just be fore daybreak, Mr. Duncalf, snoring in his cabin on deck, was aroused by a;, hand laid- on his shoulder. The swinging lamp, Still, alight, showed him the dusky face Of the chiefs son, convulsed with terror. By wild signs, by disconnected words in the little English which he had learned, the lad tried to make the mate,,un derstand hiin. Dense Mr. Duncalf, undeistanding .nothing, hailed the second officer, on the opposite side of the deck. - ' The second officer was young and intelligent. He rightly interpreted the - terrible news that had come to the ship. The Captain had broken his own rules. Watch ing his opportunity, under cover of the night, he had taken a'canoe, and had secretly crossed the channel to the Holy Island. No one had been near him at the time but the chiefs son. The lad had vainly tried to in duce him to'abandon his desperate enterprize., and had vainly waited on the shore in . the hope of hearing the sound of the paddle announcing his return. Beyond all reasonable doubt, the infatuated man had set foot on the shores of the tabooed island. The one chance for ids life was to conceal what he .had done until the ship could be got out of the harbcfr aid then (if no harm had come to him in the interval) to rescue him after nightfall. It was decided to spread the report that he had really been taken ill,,and that he was con fined to his cabin. The chief's son, whose heart the Captain's kindness. had won, could be trusted to do this, aad to .keep the secret faithfully for the Captain's - sake • • Toward noon the next day they attempted to take the ship to sea, and •failed for want of wind. Hour by hour the heat grew more and more oppressive, As the day declined there were ominous appearances in the ,western heaven. The natives, who had given some trouble during bite day by their anxiety to see the Captain, and by their curiosity to know the cause of .the sudden pre parations for the ship's departure, all went ashore together, looking .sus piciously at the sky, and reappeared no more. Just at midnight the ship (still in her snug berth inside the reel) suddenly trembled . from her keel to her mastheads. Mr. .Duri czlic surrounded by the startled crew, shook his knotty fist at the isl and as if he could see it in the dark. "My lads, what did I tell you ? That was ,a shock of earthquake." With the morning the 'ore:li - ening aanect of the weather unexpectedly disappeared. A faint hot breeze from tile: laud, just enough to give the ship steerage-way, offered Mr. Duncalf a chance of getting to sea. Slowly the Fcietuna, with the mate himself at the wheel, half sailed, half drifted, the open ocean,- At a distance of barely two miles from the island the bree%.o was felt no more, and .the vessel lay becalmed for the rest . of the day. . . At ni'.ht the men waited their or ders, expecting to be sent after their Captain in one of the boats. The intense darkness, the airless heat, and a second shock of earthqaake (just felt in the ship at her present distance from the land) warned ..be mate to be cauiions. "'I smell mis 'chief in the air,". said Mr. Duncaif. "The Captain must waii; ti'l I am sneer of the weather." Still no change came with the new day. The dead calm continued, and the airless heat. As the day declin-i ed another ominous appearance be came visible: A thin line of smoke was discovered through the telescope, ascending from the topmost peak of the mountain on the main island. Was the volcano threatening an erup tion ? The mace for one entertainer: no doubt of it. "By the-Lord, the place is going to burst up!" said Mr. Duocalf. "Come what may of it, we Must lhal the Captilc to-night I" What was the lost Captain doing ? and what chance had the crew of finding him that night? lie had committed himself to his desperate adventure without forming any plan for the preservation of own safety, without giving even a momentary consideration to the con sequences that might follow. The charming picture hat he had seen through ins telescope bad haunted J 4 44 1,3% :14 1 . 6 Ithigge the innocent creature, secluded from humanity in island solitude, was the one image that filled his mind. A man, passing a woman in the street, acts on the impulse to turn and fol low her, and in that one thoughtless moment shapes the destiny of -his fu tu-re life. The Captain, seeing the canoe on the beach, ac ted s on a simi lar impulse when he tdok the paddle and ' shaped his reckless course for the tabooed island. Reaching the shO,re while it was still dark, he did one sensible thing—he hid the canod so that it might not hetray him when the nay light came. That done he waited for the morning on the outskirts of the forest. . The trembling light of dawn re vealed the mysterious solitude around him. Following the outer limits cif the trees, first in one direction, then in another, and finding no trace.or any living creature, he decided on pene trating to the anterior of the island. He entered the forest. An hour of walking. brought him to, rising ground. Continuing the ascent he got clear of the trees, and stood on the grassy top of a broad cliff which overlooked the sea. An open lint was on the cliff. lie cau tiously looked in and discovered that it was 4itipty. The few household utensils left about, and the simple bed of leaves in a corner, were cov ered with finei . sandy dust. Night birds flew blundering out of inner cavities in the roof and took refuge in the shadows of the forest below. It was plain that the hut had not been inhabited for sonic time past. Standing at the open doorway_and considering what he should do next, the Captain saw a bird flying toward him outofthe forest. It was a tur tle-dove, so tame that it, fluttered close up to him. At the same mo ment the sound of sweet laughter be came audible among the trees. His heart beat fast; he advanced a few steps, and stopped. In a moment more the nymph of the island tlp peared, in her' white lobe, ascending the cliff in pursuit of her truant bird. She saw him, and suddenly stood still, truck motionless by the amaz ing discovery that had burst. upon her. The Captain approached smil ing, and holding out his ,hand. She never moved ;, she stood" before him in helpless Wonderment; her lovely black eyes fixed on him spell-bound:; her dusky bosom palpitating above the fallen folds of her robe; her r;eb, red lips parted in mute astonishment. Spell-bound on his side, ifeasting his eyes on her beauty in • silence, the Captain after a while recovered him self. He ventured to speak to her in I:he language of the maid island. The sound ofThis voice, addressing her in the language that, she knew, roused the lovely creature to action. She staned,.stepped dose up to him, and dropped on her knees at his feet. "My father worships invisible dei ties," she said, softly. " Are you a visible deity ? Has my mother sent you ?" She Pointed as she spoke to the deserted hut behind them. " You .appear to me," she went on, "in the place where my mother died. IS it forber sake that you. show , yourself to her child ? Beautiful deity ! come ;.o the temple—come to my father?" The Captain gently raised , her it orn the ground. It' her father saw him, he was a doomed Man. Infatuated as he was, he bad sense enougli' left to anounce himself plainly in his own character, as a mortal creature arriv ing from a far distant land. The"1.,7 . i , .1 instantly drew back from him with a look of terror. is not like' my faiter i " she; said to herself •, "be is not like me, Is he the lying demon of the prophe cy ? Is he the predestined destroyer of our Island ?" The Captain's experience of the sex showed him the: only safe way out of tlica.wl;watil position in which he was now placed. Ile appealed to his personal appearance. "Do I look like a, demon ?" he asked. . Her eyes met his. A , half-smile teembled, on her lips. The Captain ventcred one asking 'what she meant by the predestined destruction of the island. She held up her hand sol emnly and repeated the 'prophecy. The Holy Island was threatened with dish action by an evil being, who would 'doe day appear on its shores. To avert the fatality the place had been sanctified and set apart, under ;Ie protection of the gods and' their :wiest. Lime was the reason for the Laboo and for the extraordinary s: r;et.neti with Wh'icli it was enforced. I,:si.eoing attentively to his charming companion, the •Captain took her band.and pressed it gently. t "Do I feel like a demon ?" he whis- Her slim brown fingers closed frankly on his hand. "You feel .soft 'had friendly," she said; with the fear less candor of a child. "Squeeze me again. 'I like it!" The nest moment she snatched her 'aaad away from him. The sense of. his danger had suddenly forced itself on het mind. "It my father sees you," she said, "he will light the sig nal fire at the Temple, aad the peo; pie Porn' over yonder will come here and put you to death. Where is your wnoe ? No I It, is broad daylight. My father may' see. you on the water." • She considered for a moment, and, approaching him, laid her handS 'on his shoulders. "Stay here till night fall," she said. "My father, never comes this way. The sight of the place where my mother died is horri ble to him. You are safe here. Promise to stay here till night-time." The Captain gave his promise. rreed froin anxiety so far, the girl's mobile Southern temperament recov ered its native cheerfulness—its sweet gayety and spirit. She admired the beautiful spanger, as she might have admired -a new 'bird that had flown to her to be petted with the rest. She patted his fair white skin', and Wished , she had a skin like it. She lifted the - great glossy folds -of her long black hair and compared it with .the Captain's bright, curly - locks, and Wished she could change color with him from the bottom of her ,heart. His:dress was wonder to her. His watch was a new revelation. She rested her head on . his shoulder to listen delightedly 'to the 'ticking as he held the watch •to - her. air.: :Her Altsreint-Oreitit'plool'*itti • ~.•, her warm, simple figure rested against him softly. The Captain's aim stole around her waist, and the Captain's lips gently toughed hers. She lifted her head with a look of pleased imr prise. "Thank you," said the child of nature simply. "Kiss me again; I like it. May I kiss you?", The tame turtle-dove perched on her shoulder.as she gave the Captain her first kiss, and diverted her thoughts to the pets that she had left, in pur suit of the truant dove. ."Come," she said, "and see my birds, I keep them on this side of the forest. There is no danger, so long as you don't show yourself on the other . side. My name is Aimata; Aimata will take care of you. 'Oh, what a beauti ful white neck you have !" She put her arm admiringly round his neck. The Captain's arm held her tenderly to him. Slowly s tile two descended the cliff, and were lost in the leafy solitudes of the forest. And the tame dnye fluttered beforei them, a winged messenger of love, cooing to his mate. The night had come, and the Cap tain had not left the island. Alma ta's resolution to send him away in the darkness was a forgotten resolu tion already. She had let him per suade her that he:, was in no dagner so long as he remained in the hut on the cliff; and she had' promised at parting to return to him, while the priest was still sleeping, at the dawn of day. He was alone in the hut... The thought of the. innocent creature whom he lovOd 'was sorrowfully as well as tenderly present to his - mint., He almost regretted his rash visit to' the island. " I will take her with me to England," he said to himself. " What do I care for the opinion of the world ? Aimata shall be my wife." The intense. heat oppressed him. Fie stepped.out on the cliff toward' midnight, in search of a, breath. of air. The first shock of earthquake (felt in the ship while she wap inside the reef) shook the, ground he stood on. He instantly thought of the vol cano on the main island. Had he ;been mistaken in % supposing the cra fter to be, extinct? Was the shock of earthquake that he had just felt a warninc , from the volcano,'communi cated from a submarine connection between the two islands ? „He wait ed and watched through the hours of darkness with a vague sense of al-, prehension, which was not to be red- soned away. With the first rays of ; daybreak he descended into the for est, and saw the lovely being whose safety was already precious to him as his own, hurrying to Meet . :him through the trees. • She waved her hand distractedly, as she approached him. "Go.?" she cried; "go away in your canoe be fore the island is destroyed !”-- He did his best to,quiet her alarm. Was it the shock of earthquake that. had frightened her? It was not•only the shock of earthquitke, it Was sornr , thing more ominous which• had followed- the shock. There was a lake near the Temple, the Waters of which were supposed to be heated 1)3 . subterranean tires. The lake had risen with the earthquake,. had bub bled furiously, and bad then mel;ed . away in the night. Her father, View ing the portent with horror, had gone to the cape, to watch the volcano on the main island, and to .implore, by prayers and sacrifices, the protection of the gods. Hearing this, the Cap 'Sain entreated Aimata to ,let him see the emptied lake, in the absence of I.he priest. She hesitated; but his influence Was all-powerful. He pre v-iled on her to turn back with him through the forest. Reaching ib l e furthest limit of the rees, they came out upon open, rocky ground that sloped gentlydoivitwatd .(:)ward she centre of the island. Rav in°. crossed Vais space, they arrived at natural' amphitheatre- Of rock. On - one side of it the Temple appear ed, paftly excavated, partly formed by a natural cavern. In one of tile lateral branches - of the cavern was the dwelling .of the priest and his daughter," The, mouth of it looked out on the rocky basin of the lake. Stooping over the edge of the basin, the Captain discovered, far down in the empty depths, a light,_ cloud or steam. Not a drop of water was dS i bre anywhere. • " Does that mean nothing said Aimata, pointing to the abyss. She shuddered, and hid her face . -on the C.:,ps.ain's bosom. "iffy father says," she whispered, "that it is your do i [lg." ,- ' The Captain started. ~" Does your father knew that I ain 001te island ?" She looked up at , ,hirn with a quick auce of reproach; "Do you think I would tell him, and put your life in peril ?" she nsked. "My father felt the destroyer of the island 'in the earthquake; my father saw the coni inti destruction...in the disappearance. of the lake." Her eyes vested on him with a loving languor. "Are you indeed the demon of the' prophe cy ?" she said, winding his hair round her finger. "I am not afraid of you, if you are. lam a girl bewitched; I love the demon." She kissed 41 im passionately "I dcin't care if I die," sbe whispered between the kisses''" if I Only die with you." - - The Captain made no p.tl.empt to . season with her. Ile took the wiser , way—ae appealed to her feelings.. . " You will come with me to my own country," be said, "My ship is waitin g . I will take you home with me, and make you my wife." She sprang to her feet, and clapped her hands for joy. Then she thought of her father, and sat down ugdiu iu Wars." • The .Captain understood her. "Let us leave this dreary place,"' he said. "We will talk about it in . the cool glades of the forest, where you first said you loved me." •: She gave him her hand. " Where I 'first said I loved you!" she repeat ed, smiling tenderly and thoughtful ly as she rooked at him. They left the lake; together. . VII. - Tqe darknes s had fallen again. Tie ship wag stilt becalmed at sea. Me. Dune& came .pn deck after his supper. The thin line of siaoke, eePt using froi4 the - "Peat of the RE = pet i Annum. In Advance. mounts that evening, was now sue eeeded b ominous flashes of Eire from the same quarter, intermittent ly visible. The ' faint, hot breeze from the land was felt once more. " There's just an air of wind," the mate remarked. "We will try.'for the Captain while we have the chance." One of the boats was lowered into the water—under command ' of the second mate, who had taken the " bearings" of the tabooed island by daylight Four of the men 'were to go with him, and they were aIL to be well armed. Mr. Duncalf addressed, his final instructions to the officer in' the boat. " You will keep a lookout with a lantern in, the bows. When you get a-nigh the - island, you will fire a gun and sing out for the captain—" " Quite needless," interposed a voice from the sea. " The Captain is here I" Without taking the slightest notice of the astonishment he had caused, the Captain paddled his canoe to the side of the ship. Instad of' ascend ing to the deck of the Fortuna, he stepped into the boat. "Lend me your pistols," he said quietly to the second 'officer, "and oblige me by taking your men back to their duties on board." He looked up at •Mr. Duncalf, and gave some further di- . rections. " 1f there is any change in the weather, keep the ship standing off and- on, at a safe uistance from the land; and throw up a rocket from time:to . ,time to show your position. Expect me.on board again by sun rise." " What !" cried, the mate. "Do you mein to say you are' - going back to the island—in that boat---all by yoursel:l" "I. am going back to the island," answered the Captain, as quietly as ever, "in thiS boat—all by myself." He pushed oft' froM the ship, and hoisted the sail as he spoke. . " You're deserting your duty !" shouted the mate, with one of his loudest oaths. . 't Attend to my direCtions," the Captain shouted back, as he_drifted away in the darkness. Mr. Duncalf—violently agitated for the first time in his life—took leave of his superior officer, with a singular mixture of solemnity and politeness, in 'these words: " The Lord. have mercy on your soul!. I wish you good. evening." VIII. ~•Alone ,in the boat, the Captain 'looked with a misgiving mind at the Dashing of the volcano on the main island. If eveats had favored him he would, have removed A imata to the shelter of the ship on the day When he saw the emptied basin. of the, lake. But the smoke of the Priest's sacrifice bad been discovered from the main island ; and the chief• had sent two canoes. With instructions. to • make in quiries.• One of the canoes had re-• 'turned; the other was kept in waiting off the cape, to place a means of com municating with the .main island at the disposal of the priest. The. sec ond shock of earthquake had natur ally inc-eased the alarm of the chief. Ile had sent,messages to the priest, entreating him to leave the island. The priest. refused. He' believed in his gods and his saerifices—he be lieved he might avert the fatality' that threatened • his satictuary.- 7 - ,Yielding toll:re holy man, the chief sent reinforcements of canoes to take 'heir turn at keeping watch off the headland. Assisted by torches, the islanders were on the alert, Min su pe.Aitiousterror of the demon of the prophecy,) by night as weft as by day. The Captain would have risk ed certain death if he had ,ventured to approach the hiding-place in which - he had concealed his canoe. He Waited and watched.. It was only al ter Aimata had left him as usual, to return to her father at the close .of :,he evening, that the chances declar ed themselves in the captain's favor. The fire Dashes from , the mountain. visible when night came, had struck terror , inf,o Ore hearts of the men in. They thought of their wives; their children, and their .pos session o7.the main island, and' they one sod all deserted their Priest. The Captain seized the opportniaity of communicating with the ship, and o. exchanging 'a frail canoe, which he was ill!abl e e.to manage, for a swift,- sailing boat,, capable, of keeping the sea in' the event of stormy weather. As he now neared the land, certain • small sparks of red mov;ng in the• distance inrormed -him thai; the ca no s had been ordered back „to their duty. 'Steering bY,,the distant torch lights, he readied his own side of the island.without accident, and, guided by,-Lhe boat's lantern, anchored un der the cliff.' He climbed the rocks,. advanced- to the door of the hut;:,- and wasmet, to his delight and_ as tonishment, by Aimata on the thresh told. • • • " I dreamed that the anger of the deities had parted us forever," she said ; " and I came here to see if my 'dream. was true. Oh,, how I have been crying,' all . alone in the hut! Now I hive seen you I am satisfied Kiss me, and let •me go back. No, you must, not go with Tile.' My fath er has his doubts: m? railer may be out, lookino• e' for me. It is you that that are in danger, not I. I knew the forest as well by dark as by day light. You shall see me again at daybreak." . . The Captain detained her. "NoW you are Lere,". he said, "why should I wait; toplae you in safety, utail dsybreak ? have been to the ship; I have.brought back one of the boats. The darkness will befriend us—let us us embark while. we can." • She shrank back back as he took her hand. "..My father!". she said, faintly. „” Your faiker is in no dagger. The canoes are waiting at the cape. saw the lights as I passed." With that reply he 'drew her ,out of the 'hut, and turned his faCe to ward the sea. Not a breath of the breeze Whs now to' be felt. The dead • calm had returned—and the boat was too large to be easily managed by one man alone at the oars: " The breeze may come again," lie I said to her. " Waii, here, my angel, 1 for the ehaeee." 1 -Atite apoke the deep Alm( of the forest below theti was broken by a sound. A harsh; wailing voice was heard, calling *Abuts ! Aimata!" "My father!" she whispered;'he has .missed me. If he comes here, you are lost." She kissed him , with passionate fervor ; she held him to her for a rnth , ment with all her strength. "Ex pect -0 me at daybreak," she said, and • disappeared down the landward slope of the cliff. He listened, anxious for her safety. The voices of the father and daughter just reached him from 'among the trees. , ,The Priest spike in no angry tones; she had , apparently found an 'acceptable ex- , cuse for her. absence. Little by little . the failing sound of their voices told him that they were on their way back • together to the Temple. The silence fell again. Not a ripple broke on the beach, not a leaf rustled in the forest. Nothing moved but the re flected flashes of the volcano on the black sky over the ,main island. It was an airless and an awful calm.. He went into the hut and laid down on his bed of leaves, not to sleep, but to rest. All his energies might be required•to meet the com- • ing events of the, morning. After the -voyage to and r from the ship, and the long watchiii that had preceded it, strong as he was, he stood, in Aged of repose. For some little time he kept awake, thinking. Insensibly.the oppression of the intense heat, aided in its influ ence by his own fatigue, treacherous ly closed his eyes. In spite of him self, the weary man fell' into' a deep sleep. • He was aroused by a roar like the explosion of a park of artillery. The . / volcano on the main island had burst / into a state of eruption. Smoky/ - flame-light overspread the sky, a flashed through the open doorway f • the hut. He sprang from hiS co eh —and found -himself, up to his ees in water.-. Had Had the seaoverflowed4helandl He waded out "of the I hut, and the water rose, to hist middle. He looked round him by the lurid flame- light of the eruption. The one visi ble object within his range,' of view was the roof of the hut. In every other directibn the waters of the hor rid sea, stained blood-red by the flaming sky, spread swirling and rip pling strangely in the deadcalm. In a moment more he became conscious • that the earth on which he stood was sinking under his feet. The water rose ; to his neck; the last vestige of the' roof of the hut disappeared. He looked round' affair', and the truth . burst upon him. The island was sink- ing—slowly, slowly sinking into vol canic depths, below the utmost depth' of the sea! The highest object was . the hut, and that had dropped, „inch - bylinch, under water, before his' own e.yes. Thrown 'up to the surface by occult volcanic influences, the island had sunk back - finder the same influ ences to the obscurity from which it had emerged 1 A black, shadowy object, turning in a wide circle, came' slowly near him as the all-destroying ocean wash ed its bitter waters into , his mouth. The buoyant boat, rising on the sea as the earth deserted it, had dragged its anchor, and _was floPting round in "the vortex made by the slowly-sink- jug island. .With a last desperate hope that Aimata might have been saved as hd'had been saved, he swam to the boat, seized the heavy oars ;with the strength of a', giant, and ‘" made for the place (so far as he could - guess at it now) where the lake and the Temple had once been. ' looked'round and round him —he strained his eyes in the vain at:- • tempt to penetrate below the surface of the seething, dimpling sea. Had the panic-stri ck en waters in the ca- noes deserted their posts without 'an effort to save the father and daugh- • ; ter ? Or had they both been suffo cated, before they could make an at tempt to escape from their cavern? He called to her in his• misery, as if she could hear •him out 'of the -fath omless depths, "Ail:fiats ! Aimata !" The roar of the distant eruption an swered bim. ! The mounting fires lit the solitary sea - far and near over the . sinking island. The boat turned' slowly, and morOslowly, in the less- ' ening vortex. Never again 'would those fresh lips', touch his lips with • their fervent kiss.! Alone, amid the mighty force 4 of nature in conflict, the miserable : Mortal lilted his hands in frantiesupplication--s.u'd the burn big sun glared down on him in its pitiless grandeur, and struck him to his knees in the boat. His reason • sank with his sinking limbs. In the merciful frenzy that, succeeded the's , shock, 'he 'saw her afar off, alive again' in her white robe, an angel poised on • ° the waters, beckoning him to-follow her to the brighter land the better • world. He loosened the sail, he seiz ed the oars, and the faster he pur- • 'sued it, the faster the mocking vision ' tied from him over the empty and endless sea, NUMBER 31. The boat-was disc_overed the next morning-from the ship. All that the. devotion of the officers of the Fortu na could do for their .unhappy -corn :mender was done on . the homeward • voyage. Restored to his own coun- - try. and to skilled medical help, the • :Captain's mind by slow degrees re ! ; covered its balance. He has taken his place in .society again—he lives, '! 'and moves 'and manages his affairs like the rest of us. But 'his heart is Beall to• all new emotions; nothing '•„ lives in it but the sacred remembrance of his last love. He neither courts .nor avoids the society of women. Their sympathy finds him grateful, but their attractions seem to be lost on him ; they pass from his mind 'as they pass. from his eyes=-they stir nothing ill him ,but the memory of -Aiinata - . . • " Now you know, ladies, why the Captain will 'never marry; and ; why.. (snack- as he is,) he hates the sight of the sea."— ‘ Sp;ei%. of the Timm, T E third river Scotland is the Fori b. Now is a good time to buy thei mome ters. They are lower Wan they have been since last spring. "WHAT wouheyou do, madam, if you were a geotlemau?" "Sir, what would you do if you Were,one,?" • OF A barber's shop that 'was forme, ly a law-office, the newspaper says tbot peo ple get shaved there just the same. THE .morn you damp the Ardor of a troublesome talker by throwing cold wa ter on his effusions, the sooner be diies up. - X conalcEn'sjury, in the case of a wan who was : killed by a falling icicle, lender d the verdict that he "died of bard drink." " WAITER !" "Yes, sir." "What's 'this?" "It's. - beali soup, sir:" "'No matter what it has beep. The question ; is : What is it now?" • "Attu these gratuitous?" asked an old gentleman of a druggist's assistant, talcing a - patent-medicine almanac from a pilo - on .the counter . '. "No, them's' almanaca,'' curtly anewored-the In!htor tad u3iiitm ant. lEil ,~~"~;;