111 : 1 till II ' 'I TERMSl-fitl.e5 Per Year,) IN AD VAXCEi? ? f AN INDEPENDENT FAMILY NEWSPAPER. (7 S Cents for 6 Months f I 40 Cts.for 3month8 , .1 ir ' Vol. VIII. New Bloomfleld, Pn., Tuesday, February 24, 1874. i IVo. 8. '.ISPOBLISHBO IVKHT TUBSIIAY MOHNINU, BT FBANE MOSTIMES & CO., : At New Bloomfleld, Perry Co., Pa. Being provided with Rtenm Tower, and large Cylinder and Jon-Presse". we are prepared , , . loiloall kind! of Job-l'rlntini io ' good style and at Low 1'rlces. ADVERTISING BATES: Tratitititt H Cents per Uno for one Insertion 13 twohisertlons 15 ' three insertion Bnaintss Notices In Local Column 10 Cents per line. WuFor Io iker yearly adv'ts terms will be given upon apphcutlon. ' ' . Tlit Homa for 11V OWe nle a home where the evening winds play And breathe all so low In the ear ; Where the night Is not night, but with love Is all day, And the leaf never once grows sere j Where the emerald grass springs In long, tufted knots, And the wind slgheth gently between, And the shadows drop down In their dark, checkered spots, As If hiding the deep, deeper green. Give me a home by some cool, glnssy stream, Where the gables their Images show ; Where the long trailing Tine are as in a sweet ' dream,' And drop from the eaves hanging low Where in summer the sound of the turtle is shrill, A it come from the dank pool afar ; And the chorns of insects, from meadow and hill, Begins with the earliest star. Give me, O give me a home in a wood, A home in a wood wild and free ; Where the many-voiced thoughts that on the heart brood, 1 May expand and grow great with each tree ( Where the bee cometh dally to gather the thyme, And the squirrels so busily run, And the mosses so gray grow still grayer with tine, And la silence the circling year run. For th Dloomfteld Times. THE MYSTERIOUS FRIEND. A Story of Old Virginia CONTINUED. ' "7"OU won't do anything at that dis JL tance," said the captain. Orlando made no reply, but on the next moment he raised his piece and fired. To the crew it seemed as though he had taken no aim, and they expressed them selves by a low murmur to that effect ; bnt their disappointment was changed to aston ishment when they saw the pirate who was just in the act of raising a match to the priming of the long gun, drop backwards from sight. " Load tike rifle, quick," exclaimed the youth, as be took the other in his hand. Another of the pirates stepped up to the long gun and raised the lighted match, but ere he could accomplish his purpose, the unerring aim of, the young hunter sent a bullet through his head. Again and again was the pirate's match raised to the gun by the hand of a fresh recruit, but the cap tain of the brig made out to keep the rifles ready for use, and the youth used them with futal precision. Six men had been picked off in this way, when the pirates seemed to have abandonded their favorite engine entirely ; for though the gun might by some means have been touched off from a secure hiding-place, yet its aim was now false, and they had found to their cost that lie who would go forth to point it anew went only to his certain dath. By the time, however, that the pirates abandoned their long gun they had ranged near enough to make effectual us of their batteries, and in a few moments , after Or Undo had fired bis hut shot, the brigantine lot drive her broddnlde of six twelve pound ers. Some of the shot took effect upon the brig's side, for she trembled beneath the concussion, while one or two eame whizzing harmlessly over the deck. At this moment the biigantlue ran up the black flug at her peak, and fired a gun to windward. . .. "That meaus for ui to heave-to," said the mate. , " Yes," returned the captain, "and the follow mean that we Mhall know his er rand, too." Then tinning to the man at the wheel 1)0 ordered the helm to be put down and the fore yard braced sharp Up. In a few mo ments more the mainsail was clewed tip, end the brig lay . almost motionless upon the water. The pirates, : however, even though their request hod been thus readily oomplied with, proved 'most treacherous ; for the laying of the brig to the wind had brought her head exactly into the position to receive a raking' fire, and on the next moment she got it from the pirate's broad side. None of the brig's Crew were harm ed, however, for at that instant their ves sel's bows were raised upon the bosom of a rolling sen, and the enemy's shot struck low, though some of them hit the brig. As had been anticipated, the pirates pre pared to board the bows, for already had she run under the brig's forefeet and luffed short up. The captain of the merchantman called all his men afjfc, and having hidden the two guns as much as" possible by low ering the main spencer across them, he saw that they were aimed properly, and then, with a lighted match behind him, whilo the mate stood in the same manner he awaited the onset. ' At length the pirate's bows grated along under the brig's fore-chains, and as the grappllngs were thrown on board, the buc caneers began to swarm in by the fore-rigging. Borne twenty of them bad gained the deck, and were upon the point of rushing aft, when the captain applied his match, and from beneath the innocent looking sail there poured forth a sheet of flame and as the myriad messengers of death went on their way. The captain was not disap pointed in the result of his shot, for the spikes and bolts had been packed in such a manner that they spread in all directions, and the havoc they made among the advanc ing men was fearful. As the pirates saw the fate of their comrades they set np wild yells of rage, and those who were behind dashed madly on, but ere they reached the gangway they were met by the mate's shot, and for a few moments they hesitated. Twenty, at least, of their men were either killed or totally disabled, and they had not many over the same number left . "Pistols, ray men I pistols!" shouted the captain of the brig, as the pirates once more started aft. The pistols were discharged, but only one or two of the enemy fell, and the remainder came dashing wildly on. The crew of the brig drew their cutlassoss, and with a fearful clashing of thirsty steel the combatants met. Orlando Chester stood apart in the weather gangway. In one hand he held his heavy cutlass, and ia the other hand a loaded pistol, but as yet he had mingled not in the tight. At length he saw the captain of the brig fall beneath the cut lass of the buccaneer chief, and ere long the mate sank dead upon the deck. The pirates were gaining ground ! All the men who were pow left were favorably disposed to the youth at least, in their sympa thies; and as the thought came to our hero's mind be grasped the cutlass more firmly in his hand, brought his pistol to its rest, and then, with the hope of liberty beckoning him on, he rashed forward to the scene of conflict. 1 During any period of a battle the ap pearance of a new enemy In the field no matter how insignificant the enemy may be cannot iail to produce some effect upon the opposing party. . Until the young hunter rushed forward from the gangway he had not been observed by the pirates, and as tike first blow was aimed at their chieftain they were fur a momout so start led that the paints of their weapon were involuntarily allowed to drop. Orlando's blow bad boen calculated for an effective one, and the pirate chieftain foil beneath it never to rise again to earthly life. In a mo ment the buccaneers recovered their sus pended senses, and two bright cutlasses gleamed at ouce above young Chester's bead, but he was calm in his purpose of self-redemption, and hi quick eye served him faithfully. With his weapon, still red with the fallen chieftain's blood, ho struck off the blow of the assailant upon the right, awl with his ready pistol he shot the other through the bead. This feat of Orlando's, as terrible as it was unexpected, served a double purpose. It not only struck terror to the hearts of the pirates, but it also gave courage to the crew of the brig. Nolan sprang forward to the youth's side the rest followed his example, and with a loud shout of victory they set with almost demoniao bravery upon the enemy. Foot after foot did the pirates give up of their ground, as one after another of their number full beneath the determined strokes of Orlando and his com panion, until n length, with not over a dozen of them alive, they turned at the foie rlgKgi ad leaped upon their own deck. Dick Nolan threw their grappling after them, and in a few minutes the brigantine bad swung off and started away from the scene of ber unsuccessful combat. "Chester," said Nolan, as he grasped the young man by the hand, after the pirate was fairly off, " will you forgive me for the part I took against you ? You've proved yourself a noble man, and I could never rest easy if I thought you'd laid up anything against me. Only say you'll pardon me." " You have my pardon,fully and freely," replied the youth, as he returned the warm grip of the old sailor, " and now I trust I am at liberty, at least, as much as the con fines of ship hoard will admit of." " That yon are, and if you desire it, the brig shall be at once put back," said Nolan. " I could wish, at least, that you would land me as near Jamestown as possible." " I don't know but that we shall have to put back there at any rata. The captain and mate are both gone, and I don't much feel like putting the brig through to Eng land myself." , , The crew were loud and enthusiastic in their thanks to our hero ; and from a doom ed prisoner he found himself at once trans formed into a hero and commander, for all hands expressed themselves ready to obey his wishes. Upon examination it was found that eight of the crew had ' been killed, while two were so badly wounded that they were completely disabled, so there were only nine men, including Orlaado, left for duty. The first thing done was to get the deck cleared of the dead, and though from the bosom of the victorious youth there issued a silent prayer for the souls of the depart ed, yet their bodies were consigned to the blue deep without any other ceremony than the lashing to the cold feet of a sinking weight Then the brig was filled away, and after a short consultation her head was put back, the wind allowing her to lay, close hauled, just up to her true course for the Chesapeake. The second mate knew' but very little of navigation, so the command of the vessel was given by unanimous con sent, to Nolan. As soon as the deck was washed, and the true course marked out, attention was turned to the moving of the two guns, but before they were got back to their re spective places one of the men came running up from below, with his face all blanched with fear, and pointing down to bis shoes, which were full of water, be exclaimed : " We're sinking 1 Bee there it's already over my shoes in the cabin I" For a moment Nolan was horror-struck, buthe soon regained his self-possession,and bidding the man of the wheel look well to bis charge, ho called upon the rest of them to follow him and hunt up the leaks. As soon as the hatches were taken off, it was found that the water was already deep in the hold ; and even Nolan started back aghast as he found that there was a shot hole through the side of the brig, and that it was now not over foot below the water line. ' lie sprang back upon the deck, and having rigged the pumps, he set four of the men at work upon them, and with the rest he went again upon the search. In the excitement of their'victory the men had entirely forgotten the shots they had received from the pirate, and now they found out their effects too lata ! Half the cargo in the hold was covered, and it soon became evident that there were othor leaks than that on the side, and ere long they found that they had three more shot-holes in the larboard bow, through which the water was pouring in torrents. An hour earlier ; the shot-boles might havo been stopped, but now it was too late. With a fearful energy . the men worked away at the pumps, but still the water gaiued upon them alarmingly, and upon sounding the well it was found that the in truding element had gained nearly two feet since the pump were rlggod. "It's no use 1" uttered Nolan, as the men let go of the pump-brakes in despaiK " We might as well try to pump out the ocean." , " Then the brig must sink," said Orlando, in a half inquiring tone. ' " Yes, there is no help for it," returned Nolan, as he stepped to the main hutch way and looked once more Into tho hold. "How long will she be able to float," in quired the young hunter, over whose mind a new fear was beginning to creep, " Not over an hour at the furtheht," re turned Nolan, " for the more water she takes in the faster she'll go." The pro tempor commander knew , that it would be useless to bestow any moie time upon the pumps, so be turned his at tention at once upon casting looso the long boat and rigging up the stay and yard bur tons for hoisting ber otit In half an hour the boat was safe alongside, and provisions and water enough for a fortnight's, allow ance were with considerable difficulty got out from the store-room and stowed away in her stern-sheets. , The boat's mast was next stepped, with its sail . brailed snugly up, the stays were banled taut, and the jib rigged in its place. , The . men took with them such arms and amunition as they could procure, besides tho charts, ; compasses, quadrants, and other small articles of value that could be got out, then the two woun ed men were assisted , into the boat, and shortly afterwards Nolan and his ...compan ions followed. . . All was now ia readiness, and at the word from Nolan the painter was cast off, the boat's head shoved off, the sails loosened, and with a bound almost of animation, the frail bark started from tho vessel's sido. The sea was not very heavy,and the swells, though somewhat high, were long, and steady. The young hunter cast his eyes back upon . the brig, a strange feeling of awe crept over his soul as he saw the heavy fabric roeling to and fro upon the verge of its grave. . While yet he looked, the vessel rocked more beuvily then stood for a mo ment still, as if contemplating her doom then a perceptible tremor shook her vast frame, and with one heavy throe she pitch ed forward, plunged , her bows into the; flood, and in a few moments more the blue water closed over her forever. In half an hour after the men had taken the last look at the old ocean dwelling, the dark curtain of night settled over the vast deep, and Nolan divided his men into watches, giving to the second mate . the charge of one, while he took charge of the other, and after making arrangements for the course through the, night, half of the men drew their blankets around them and lay down beneath the thwarts to seek re pose for their weary limbs. . , ; . , ., , When the morning dawned, the wind, which had been .comparatively low during the night, began to freshen, so much so that it was found necessary to take a reef in the mainsail, and as soon as this was accomplished Nolan and the mate distrib uted tho morning's meal. While the men were engaged in eating their breakfast, one of them, who had stationed himself in the bows, uttered a sudden exclamation of joy, and as the boat rose upon tho bosom of the next sea a sail was distinctly made out to the northward and eastward. , A new hope Instantly sprang up in the bosom of the raeu, and putting up the helm they eased off the sheets and stood towards the discovered sail. The pistols were load ed, and one after another they were dis charged Into the air, with a sort of reck less hope that the sound might reach those who could save them. Nolan had stationed himself against the mast with a glass, and for a long time be gazed steadily upon the distant sail. The men watched his count enance as though it were an index to their prospects, and they hung upon each vary ing lineament of his features for the raising or the crushing of their hopes. At length the gloss trembled in Nolan's band,a shade of deep disappointment overspread bis face, and with a groan stepped down from the thwart. " My men," said he as ho closed the glass, " she's steering from us, and is al ready more than hull down !" The boat was onoe more hauled upon the wind, and with sad and heavy . hearts the crow turned their eyes towards the point in the horizon where tho object of thoir sudden hopes had disappeared. They were nearly five hundred miles from land, with nothing but a single inch of plank between themselves and eternity, a heavy sea running against them, and a prospect of having their provisions destroyed by the salt water that cams dashing . over the bows. i., , ; Hearts that had been tied to earth for years , now began to turn to a Power mightier than their own, for their lato con quering strength, and the weapons that lay about them, were utterly . void against the relentless storm-god, and a they lay upou the bosom of the treacherous ocean the ill fated men know not, how soon it might open its broad, deep grave to receive them 1 CHAPTER X. 1 UNKXFKCTED INTERVIEWS. It was one month after the mysterious disnpicaranoe of young Chester from the Jamestown jail. Night had succeeded a pleasant day, and shortly after its sable curtains had been drawn over the colony, Chiron sought the dwelling of Itoswoll Berkley. Upou the brow of the old huuter there was a stamp of deep sufloringjRud his kindly speaking features were tortured with vivid lines of unmistakable anguish ; yet over all there was a firm set cast of a powerful determination . which bespoke a will that was not to crushed by misfortune or disappointment., ; , Mr. Berkley , was alone in his private Btudy, and though his appearance was in dicative of much .emotion, yet it .would have been diffloult to docide whether 'twas a cowardly fear, or a domoniae satisfaction, that moved him. He was engaged in look ing over some papers, when he heard the door of his room opened, and on looking up beheld the towering form of Chiron. ,i , . " Now, by the saints of heaven I" utter ed Berkley, as he recovered from the first shock of the meeting, " your insolence is becoming unbearable. : If you do not leave me on the instant, your arrest . and com mitment shall be the oonsequence." , " Soft, soft, my dear sir," said : the old hunter, f I think you would flud it hard to have me arrested." , . ' f . "Not so hard as you imagine.' The death of Oilman and Colton may yet have to be answered for.". ; , - ,. , . i . "So, so ; then your . accommodating doctor has been blabbing. But look ye, Mr. Berkley, do you wish a thorough in vestigation of that affair before the public?'' . Mr. Berkley met the keen glance of the hunter, and he quailed before it. , . In his soul he dared not meet the steady gaze of his visitor, for there was something in hi tone and manner, and his very appearance, that struck a dread to bis heart. But he bad sense enough to know that if he did fear, he had bettter keep jt as much aa possible to himself, so he-, endeavored to conquer his emotions, and turning to Chi ron, be said : ,. . r, " I fear no investigation, sir, of any of my acts; but I can inform you that the laws, protect the dwellings of our citizens from the intrusion of common brawlers, and you, bad better beware how you lay iyourself liable to them. I would be alone.". .. . "And in a few moments you shall," re turned Chiron, who could not help smiling, at the sudden change in his host's ground of complaint ; "but first I would ask you once more, what has become of Orlando Chester?" "I know not." " Beware, Mr. Berkley ! What havo you done with him ?" "I tell you I knew nothing of him, only that be has escaped from jail," answered the agent, in trembling, fearful aocents,but yet with an apparent coolness upon his features. , . ; "Then you will not give tne a clue to bis whereabouts?" continued Chiron. " If he were upon the gallows, I would give you a passage in the same direction." "Thank you kindly, sir; but I shall have no need of your services,", said the hunter, and then lowering his voice to a tone of the deepest import, he continued : " Now let me tell you, sir, that though you refuse to acknowledge your hand . in this matter, yet I know 'twas you who did it ; but 'twill avail you little. Your ends will not be so easily answered. . You have in ' some way disposed of the son, and you tried to dispose of tho mother, but there I thwarted you. And now, Boswell Berk ley, I tell you that the dreaded secret is not . locked up in the bosom of Morgiana. Chester. , I know that seoret, and there is another beside whose ears have drank it in, so you need not thiak to save yourself by Ibe doath of the mother and her child.". : "Villain, you lie !', shrieked Berkley, utterly frantio with passion. "I have no secret I care not for Mrs. Chester, save to place her in safoty." . , . , "No secret?" , . ,. , .'.. ."Nol,", : l , . . .. i , " Not even with regard to a oortain duel ouce fought, wherein you figured behind the scenes ?" uttered Chiron. Roswell Berkley sprang from his chair, -and tho words, ".Villain Liar" broke from his bloodless lips, but ere he could speak further his power of utterance scorn ed to fail him, and grasping his desk for support, he sank back into his seat. Tho old hunter regarded him fora moment with a look of utter contempt, and then turning away, be left the villain alone. "It's of no use," murmured Chiron to himself, a he stepped from Berkley's house, "he won't oriminate himself furth er by acknowledging his agency in the re moval of Orlando ; but I don't believe he'll trouble Morgiana again, after what he has just learned." lue hunter's oourse lay towards the house of Bir Oliver Wimple, and when he reached it he hauled his canoe to the shore, and ' was just turning to pass on through the garden, when the sound of distant oars struck upon his bar, coming from down the river. Continued next week.