... __ . • . , h 1.. .... , .. . . , „,..,,,,,,, ,t' SLOAN, PUBLISHERS. VOLUME 24 . . B rgINEIIB DIRECTORY.,-...w: • — IRA S. GRAVES. tittt ft ottru. • - . 10 .ts.torm—Nanafactory of the i zmer _ - - - _ _ L oATri t, Erin. Pa., TM hinbert peas be plait - - E4krh . • A TAXIES'S AUTOBIOGRAPHY. ?Mei ' Pa. S. C. -- -Rho-Tv - - _ __.......„_/: 14XL __. - ponst. South aide. al tie Addle Bq , Ina. lIIANTID ITT WILLIAII nears. 1 ~,,,.. tad Po o ch &meta, Bri o, *, I eras born and was mime, in Coaseetient , r( I .b.' t:u T IPA L I K I'NE&Y44.I FON LAB . Bobo DO LA. Bobo/ to ask sad was wrecked is Alpe*: E H. ABELL. (1 " 1 " 6 " 8 " 4 " a s"" 1 .a p es 1 °ll k Mb**. eosins beck, to keep eelbool I begs& I P ` row s sitsiss , Rooms over the Erie Ronk. Bomb . the Lomond. Brie, Pa. . these at the aaw-mill I proved a 0 , , taken in are best stykrer tbe MI, and narrate - t I Gds , And as • minister made a soissU kC sy:sga, wi l --- T. D. EDWARDS. Reckon I felt mote at 'tome ips a lawyer, otr Art• Coonat , toa at Law. Warren P a. pn.. Ere. as a dottier. I learned how to,,perers. , . ~,i bonne. , and collections will metre prompt -a Bat the long words Is the saedieal /saloon -L— —_ 84:rui I forgot for a eceple'styeers, I 1 D WALKER & eO. groat In ma:papist against Lie domed Maxima. .ivey.• produce awl Commission Merclimete; (moth When I Isonssitaasied the Bela vets:atom. 0 , 1 , 0 , gig of the Public. Bridge, Ig r i i i, Pa. _Naleti ka Coal, Salt, Pilaw. staca4 rub, Lim , Jost ?era change, dien , a paper I edited, I • Iron Nada, Stoves, Castings. le., with ..aat Stoat, , . Brasfield politsoiani, and pitched into books: awed factlitle• for sin= either by Atostuluats, 1 , I „„,kb,„,ner". or bY 44 That was before I was envoy accredited. '• • , .',,,,,,,,L, I- 1) 0 _1_1 1 ills• Austrian plenipo—GenstalSnaolts C:1f0. 1 0N GR - AlfAbi s l "to • tint life that of minister riskiest. or AND COI .11121.1.112 AT Law. 0111011 on trench rt., Posting dispitehis to kings .ad want testy Last corner 4.1 the Park, Erie. ..;,..• .....---.. ..:1 -----T r. W. AolittE, • OW se *of paipesiie tnitenerf, Hanged if I care to mine at my lot. .1 , drocenes. Provisions, Wines. Lepton. Candies, • 1, on, ,i,..m. !whit Booth a Stewart's State.st. I - ._ _ - VINCENT, HLMROD & ('n., ...v. . r 4 T. FIRS of 5t04 4r. Hollow Ware. Murkier, Ma- . (thOit t ilttseellanti, , ~, , ~,„ Car., etc .. State St., Bale Pa. ~.) ..._ ' THOMAS M AUSTIN, 1 . ,yit l Tilt' nits op lA. LOMAT* I to.; • .„ ~ c• .A.. Watehes;lseiry, Silver Spoons, Masi- . A SALT WATER BUBBLE. ~,-.:,„,..„ Looking Glasses, Lamp. sad Pansy I - ______............_ ,!„ ..cde and retaiL - BY itswAn MAtiTIMaiILE H. - I F tV.SY,Weit 4 A, CALICO JACK. JAREeKt: A side State Street, Erie, Pa. L. TIBBALS & CO. Q Lti tri rag rum or WALICIa TlallA11.) 141. C. , 9011 . . and Shipping Merebants, and deal a /tif. Flour. Fish, Snit, Water Lime, Plaster, ilk., D-4, Erie. Pa. - Packages intended for out e 1... rtaricr.l. ELS GUNNISON, .11 Look., Stationary, /fallibly Wiliam's, •Chsip mo , ,t,.•heet Musts, 'Newspaper*, bold Pens. Kelt :to". door west of the Read Bowe, Erie. BOOTH & STEWART, t•itl and Retail Leiden. itt Feeley and otayde Dry ,n 1 Mdlowry,so. Ml, Poor People's Row, opposite • liotol. LIDI)ELL, KEPLER & CO. Ti Er , ~ f Iron Erne*, Railing, Steam %Alert, rb.) ,, r.. Fire Pro..f Shutters, and ell kinds of Moebi t ! f , tue3 Castings, ke.. done to order.• 1 . RK & I :4IETCALF, and retail dealer,. lu Dry Goode, Carpeta, and , eries.-.Nr,. 1 Reed Mu.... JOHN B. COOK,. ...tple d nary Dry anode, Anil the ctonte.,l a, gore in the rite, Chospn444. Xrie. Pa. STERRETT & YiBAY, J .bheror And Fetal Dealer in wet and dry lire ?r..% lOionsd. Produer . Poreisnt and litancetic low and Stone Wart... Flour, Fu.h. Snit. tats.. Shot. Cure, Safety Fu. , ‘.. Frem•4 1... it, the lieerl non**. Erie, sin and Canal limas. Velsociii. Hotels, sod Pri- ..11,1.1:ed with say or the shute artieles /411,1 ery eheap. ' WM. 8. LANE, - 3 Coy •oELLO it LAt•.—Ooiee over Joekootee ,rte-East corner of the Publie Poona. :CKLE: & REPLIgIi, Groeerief, Hardware, Cr.ekery, Dl.ek. State 'meet. Brie. Ps. bit " C. BRANDES, Fncsa~—office at hia riPidenMon Eighth , (111 , t11YrtIVII and Holland; Er ie . Pa. - - S.tNIFORI) 41: CO, N,Ter. Haat Note?, DmHA, C•rtifinuei 9.ght Exchange on the principal tiller I, 17 ve. a— T STUART, - • Partictas--Reeidendie on Fourth claret. one tlu “lii'Apotliecary - itlkts , Gorman and Americas Hardware and Nails. Aprils, Vireo. Iron and Steel N. 3 u.a. Eno, Pa. c DWr:LI4 & BFNNEIT, ,bbeir. and Retail healer,. in Dry Gorata, llro xery, (Ammar*. Carpeting, Hitch/arc IP, Spiker. le. Empire Stores State Sin...i s , below Brown'', Hotel, Erie, Axle Armr, Spring., and a •wrtmant,or Saddle laid Carriage Trimmings 11.7.11V1N _ _ Us% AWL Justice of the Peace, rind ilireht for :too! Life Insulating Coitieny--oSee .Writrhee atom Erie. Pa. GEORGE H. CUTLER, Omni. Erie Coanty, PK IColleetiont. ; •annera attended to witb pre4tpe,4 and JOSIAH REII-OGG, y 4.1 Commission Ilterehant, an the Public. State street. !=== I. MfLI.S, -- - Wholesale Nam in Groceries, Wines, ors —duo 'Foreign Fruit,ltats. Pielden and 'plan, Lobsters, Presnerres, and Herisetrieally clef of every description always on hand. Nn. 1110-t, Statc-st,, opposite Brown's New Ho- . Nee York. W. I. Miw, Buffalo. :heir MOOR, Oysters in shell. from .1. iesst.. New York. which "will be sold news. A. C. JACKSON, AO, Erie, Ps. CUTER A: BROTHER, &tail dealer' in Drop, Median*. Paton. (Rasa kr.. No. 6, Reed Doure4trie• • l AMLS LYTLE, .. , lifiebaat Tailor, on Ow paddle equate, a few .^.. ; • Nilt. mein, Erie. ' JitHS H. BURTON d , CO. • Aln ItcrAti..l.Liuer. u Done, Meglieine., Dye •1, , b. Rood HIROO, ‘• ~ ., 1 •", and Bonk.. :.-1.+1..a0.y, and Printer'. Card.. No. y, • 4,1. T.. it Pa ' FORS BEEBE dSTEWART, ?- , . , Hans and Surgeons. Me* and Residen :ow awl Swaim Stdleta. IMO t t - u - s, — ,i7:sl,ll;i, and e to 7.P. "Now.for it!" shouted the Colrain, in a voice JOHN WARN .tCO. • Merthantn, dealer i n in Coal, ! of thunder, as the harpoon left his hands, and Ltel fora daily lins of rpper Twk• was buried deeply in the back of the porpoise.— gridb. lie. i EXAMkrecimpAN - v r "Haul in! hen! in! why (keel you had in?' 4 ' to No. S Raid Inset, saw sever. • "Haul in! haul in! responded Mr. Weatmaent 11;°.eleek' A. 311 ' ; the'mate, and the remainder of the crew in chap. 3: o'clock. I'. 31. /FIG II SIOTITCIN, rus, as they rowed in the elect of the nrpe, drew totumissioa Merckutat. Public Dock, Eric. the struggling and astonished fish from beneath 4. ?al Fish. Moat and Plasttp.. - - . _ • the shin and after a Revere struggle, hoisted him I ROZENSWEIti- A, (.74t. /11 , IP LIMO " 4 1 " .1 up to tloe "grit. ready made clothing. Boots awl Shoe,., As. , "A bowline! A running bowline to clap over Welt. tilutr -uvet, Eris. his screamed Mr. Kee stameot—"or we s h a ll ARSIIALL VINCENT. y 0* " . lase him—the harpoon is drawing Ant!" LAlF—Oent up stairs in Tam =serf o f the Prothonotary:44 . k'. Erie. A running bowline, formed aloof the fore-top- MURRAY WHALWN, ; niamtsMaysail wits thrown over his 4ib CoulslLLoll .he taw / new. , unn don, west *wen st ree t . tail, notwithstanding the oonvulsive efforts of the . cc,u•l. Erie. TERRALS,i l inen the noose was jammed fast, and the mate Ley Goods, Dry Groceries. Croeekry. Hard- • 1: Brawn's New ifoul. in a triumphant voice proclaimed that he—that - - - - -- SMITH JACKSON, ; is, the flah—was safe. In a few moments h e Dry Goods. Groceries. bwidware. Quasi.. ware. was 'saluted in on deck, by the united forte of r ,, L. Sail , AS.. in, che st ed., Eric. Pa. the crew, whose white prawns indicated by many a sanguinary spot and streak, the bloody business in which they had been engaged.— Thrown into the lee scuppers, the Benching pro. eel; eoismeneed, and the porpoise was soon strip pod of his jacket of blubber in true scientific style. The harslet, resembling a pig in appear- DR. O. L ladansr. ' awe as well as favor, was carefully preserved, Resident Dentist Oa gen passed over to the cook, who soon had it ready eke `r , ulh side of Aa ,g e u ggi mig tb• Polak NOM% slew for the frying-pan, and in due time it ,lippeered Bash aJaz Teed' la" i Kata. tram eau 1,. an milk", ° m u m in de cabin, and formed a welcome +Mon to olt pew liotd,aiminuarss leun t h ti.. "th deansd with Wattage's's and a ! a the breakfast table, The reinala4r the nil _ of pataci idearasec Dassalles sa went w ierag spg. sal was dies Weed up to the msia- st n —for the • W• THORNTON. XOT•RT rwsz.:a. Rood" as 4 irTrtgage Loam'. tad eantally dr..wn. O ee , Wriliebt't Rloek - - - - - - - - Y. CIIAPQI , whit, Ificninr-015e• id the " 10 " , orser of Stittraad Fifth tareet. tp am.. P t i tw muumahle, lad ; Inanted. . . t.. . . . . 's , - . . ' " ' ' • • sn, -.. . . ..'-.; , • . , . . .. . . T - -, . •. .- • ~ . . , . . .. .. . .. . . , . ‘ 'V - C •* ._ ~. ~,. : . : , .. 1 f ,Vrait ita 4TA - . A . -MAIM , . ; :.,.:. „ , -,., +, age j ... , ..., . ..,..... .., ...., t oi tib .L .. r , 4 .- . ..' V , '',' - 4 ~ . ... . ' 0 1 "-like Arian an the Doipkintra hook, I tow his make weltaainowee with the wawa,. As ham u I could sea.' 'Porpoises! porpoises! porpoises!" Such will the cry one morning about six belle, on board the ship Lobster, of Portsmouth, N. FL, and the cry was taken np in all parts of the ~hip. and the shout of "porpoises!" "porpoises!" wag heard in every key, from the gruff bass of the boatswain.lo the shrill treble of the cabin boy. 1: Ell 3E12! The ship Lobster was bound, t. Liverpool, end was now approaching soundings . off Cape Clear, after a long and boisterous passage. The crew were a lively set of fellows, and eagerly seised upon anything which promised eTeitement and a little relief front the monotony usually attended on along passage across the Atlantic. The erg o "porpoises:" seemed a magic charm to rouse ill their energies into aetkm, and every man hastened to the weather aide of the desk, and with ontstretche4 neck, and glistening eyes pro trading from their sockets, were soon earnestly gazing torus& that part itof the oeeat► indicated by Sam Stailtwt:ather, a gnarly-looking old tar, who was standing on the starboard cat-head, holding on by the fore tack. And there, sure enough, away off on the weather bow, was seen a shoal-4 porpoises, rap- ' idly approaching the ship. Tilley seemed to be in high glee, sporting with each other, leaping out of the water, and playing a variety of antics, which would hive excited the admiration o f a harleuniu. ••Where is the captain?" exeltitued 31i. We-.- macot, the mate. "Steward, wall the captain." "Aye, aye, sir," and that sable functionary (lived below. "Hand along the harpsm:" yelle,l the mate. "Bend on the end of the forelefrimil halliasti!!" "Aye, Ky.., sir." And now Captain Rutherford, its mar%elleus scanty costume, came rushing no .I.•ek, with ea ger determination in his look, if lie WWI re. rAveil on mighty deeds. "When? are the. por poices!" he exclaimed, as he sprang out of the companion way. In three bounds he reached the forucestle; the Lobster was not aneverlaat iugly long, maids", looking, modern mammoth clipper. "Here they are, sir! almost under the bows!" icreamed Sam Stszkweather. Captain Rutherford took his station on the bowsprit shmuds, albeit he was pretty sore of a ducking. "Reach me the liorpoon! Be lively, lads! What are you about! Now stand by!— See all Ow to haul one of those &nous aboard!" and with stalwart arms he brindished the death- dealing instrument. - A tall block was ta, •.. rare stay, ' through which the topsail halliari was rove, and then made fast to the eye of the piece of .r..ipe permanently attached to the harpoon. i The unsophisticated fish, unconscious of den * ger, and attracted by a very natural curiosity, began to gather riff"-TII 'he bows of the Lobster. One of goodly sit • ^d .41 double portion of animal spirits, or too eager t.• diEphij^hisvon- I.deroloi activity, made a cede beneath the bow. • itprit, which brought him near the stern of the ves4el, and direitly beneath the (net of his form. idable foe,, armed with the weapon of destrms. tion. =EI use of any one in the cabin or forecastle who was desirous of regaling on such fresh grub u could be furnished by the coarse, oily, taa, repul sive-looking flesh of a porpoise. I have said that the whole crew of the ster participated in the excitement caused by this incident, and gladly aided in capturing the Ash. There was, however, one exception in the shape of Jack Callimaneo—or as his shipmates called him, Calico Jack—e, neat, trig-looking, snag-built, warm hearted-tar, who by his cour age and activity in times of peril, and his kind limas and good humor in pleasant weather, was • favorite with all on board. But greatly to the astonishment of the crew, - duriug the hubbub, noise, and confusion, caused by the attack on the porpoise and its successful result, Calico Jack, en far from lending a hand, stood leaning over. the waist. with his arras folded, apparently looking in the depths of the ocean, and deeply engaged in philosophical redeeti 'us of the gra- • Vest " h ."4671' • WM not unnoticed by several of the crew, *ha, during the battle with the porpoise ; were too busily engaged to ask hint what was the meaning of such conduct-4m after the usual, order and quiet on laud the Istbsteronolt the piece of the interesting proceedings which". have attempted to describe, some of, his shipmates Calico Jaek on his indifference, and asked why he did not lend a hatid to haul in the por poise. "Ab, mid Jack, with a doleful grin—"l have helked faith many a fish in my day,---but in fishing days are over, lA'S nev er try to crteh a . fish again, especially a pur . • Poit*'•! "What is tie. resat* of that,'..' inquired Sam Starkweatber. "Taking fish it capital fun.— Porpoisai are eo•gtcat things, to be sure--but even a porpoise is better than nothing." • "That's true," replied Jack. "A porpoise is akapitalpiemid at a pinch, as I 'have found out by experienee, I was once active enough in catching fish, but now I cannot look upon Such sport without disgust; and I have 81/0111 never to injure a porpoise!" '4lmett that!' said Sam - . "Yon must have had Rome strong reason for taking such an oath; and you must tell us all about it, if you have to spin a yarn as long as the flying jib down-haul." The hardy crew of the Lobster gathered around Calico Jaek, insisting on bearing his too t ry. The poor fellow held off as long as possible, i bet at last, after making a very wry face and ! bringing himself to anchor on the windlass end, gave in, saying—" Well, I suppose I must spill you my yarn, if I hope for a quiet life; and if you have any wish to know my oxperieseo•in fishing in general, and my opportunities fee studying the habits of the porpoise us particular, lea•. sae your furs, as the monkey said when he sliced off the cwt.'s listening tackle with one of the captain's razors." The crew gathered around Calico Jack, for mod i1....5 r . . 0. amain, .1•04, Ir— ,piipiar among the shi p 's rompsuy--eould sing a good song and talk like a hook. They expec ted something interesting, End listened, with ex emplary stteution, while be proceeded with fish story all follows: •`lt is now just three years. seven months and ninetetli days, since I sailed from New York in the ship Pocahontas, of three hundred and fifty tons, bound to St. Jago, in the Cape 'de Verde; thence to. Rio Janeiro, The Pocahontas was a good ship, and well formed; the captain was an honest man and a real sailor, and the officers were not so bad as they might have been. On the whole, there was little to find fault with, for 1 doubt not all hands were treated with out much kindness and indulgence as-they . deserved---and we got along 4ery harmoniously together - "As we drew ep towards the Cape de Verdi', the wind was light, and the weather was pleas ant, and the ship's bottom being *little foul, a large number of Ash made their appearanee— dolphins, bonetas, and albioores. They seemed to ay—"catch me and eat me!" in snob an im ploring way, while they sported in the water be neath the bows, that no man, with the heart of a stock-fish could possibly withstand the temptation to capture them—or at least make the 'attempt. If lever had a weakness, of which there may be some doubt, it we. an excessive fondness for fish ing. Trout in the fresh water streams of New Hampshire, my native State; pickerel in her ponds—cod on the beak of Newfoundland--bor -1 racooters in the West Indies—hallibut on Geor ge's Shoal—maim in the broad ocean—or dolphin and bonitos in the tropier—it was all one to Jaek: I loved the sport, and indulged my fondness for it whenever alid wherever I tad a chews. You will therefore not be surprised, shipmates, that I bailed with great glee the O ptimum of various kinds of fish around the Po. eabostae, es we were drawing up towards the spa dr Verd, Wands. "In those days I never went a voyage to sea with Out being well provided with fishing gear of all kinds. I had hooks of various sum, from b hallibut hook, double @banked for an albioore, and ganged with stout wire, down to a hook mull enough to catch a rudder fish--.-and many were the hours of my watch below I passed on the dying jib-boom-end, trying to book a boneta —or on the martingale, with the gainee, attempt ing to strike a dolphin. And as neither the cap tain or the mates cared much about fishing, I had it pretty much all my own way. "One unlucky day after we had made Bona_ vista, and were standing in for SL Jago, with a moderate breese, I beard a cry on deck, of "dol. phis—two big dolphins right under the bower— It was about mix bells in the afternoon. I was busily engaged in making up sow old duck into I a pair of trousers, at the time—but the moment I heard the words "big dolphin," I 'dropped my duck like a red hot marlinepike, took a couple of large hooks, stoutly ganged, out of my ...lest, in. I atinetirely put them in my pocket, and rushed on deck. "Whet are the dolphin!• , I examined, as I seised the mime, which was lying an th e f em . mile. But at that inowisst a black squall was rapidly rising to windward, add the watch wow too busy is tab** sail to attend in ray wow tic's*. l apnea tip lamming the wight)wookhasd ERIE, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1554. "I was a good swimmer, and a heu.toop from the quarter deck was tossed overboard at ware, whieh I pilled towards in quick time, and got boll of; but the squall blew with great violence, and was attended with considerable rain. Of amuse I lootAight of the ship in ♦ ism minutes, and I saw with a glance that there was hat s slender chance Poor Pilgarliek; and let me tell- yoti, shipmates, there are many better berths for an honest fellow in this life than to be 4trug gliog alone in the wide (wean, with nothing to buoy you up buts hen-coop,. and no ship i n +light! I hope you may u. ter have .weasion to try it, "The squall' lasted for an hour, and raised such a commotion among the wave, that r could hardly retain my station on the hen-coop, and I was sometimes •eompulled to stoney more emit watee.than was iltortiter agreeable, or good for Mie's health. When the weather cleared up I raised my head at high out of water a- I could, and looked around for the ship, but no ship was right. - The Pocabouuts bad gone on her way re joicing, andleft Jack Calimaneo behind'. "But a true sailor will bever despair—he will never dowse his flag s s long as there is a shot in the locker—and although, as night was coming as sea matters looked rather dark and dreary, I really wished myself on the deck of a good ship —yet I called philosophy to my aid, and reflect ed that my condition, though bad enough in all emiscience, might have been worse. I still had a hen-coop to cling to through the . night, and I might, by an extraordinary piece of good luck, be picked up by a &other or some other vessel in the morning. It is true, it would sometimes occur to me that my legs dangling in the ws,ter would make a nice tit-14t for a hungry shark— and also that, as few vessels ever emssed the spot where I was, the chances of being snatched from the clutches of Davy Jones were about one out of a thousand. But I stoutly resisted r.ll such gloomy forebodings, and iusardly_resolved to do all that a man could do to says my &hetet!, I ehoull be drowned, it 'mild he through uo fault of my own. 'That W 39 41 , 11i4 night, Ali that I p a .,. 04,1 on the hen-' p. it bol`PUled lik , hair 3 dawn night.; 11)1ee1 one.. dayligit Lit bo t.. tuewhat, fatipt74 mutt hungry. !four mu? hour i,omei, and my pro peels wor , ay dismal as ever. The wind had died away w d y a dead calve--ltd this, although it tnad myl :aviation op the raft mow comfortable than daring a atiff breeze, diminished my. ebance4 of ecospe as no teasel could tine to my rescue. "It was, as near as I can calculate, about four bells in the afternoon, while I wae lounging on my hen-coop, with my heel under my wing, and thinking whether it wax likely I should ever again indulge in the luxury of malt junk and mouldy biscuit in a ship's forecaitle, that I was startled by a noise which sounded like the blow ing of a porpoise. I looked up, and beheld an immense shoal of those noble fish, coming from the south in a direct line towards me on their way to some better - marine pasturage, perhaps thousand al miles off. I had no inclination at that moment to harm them--and I prPsume they had no wish to harm me.. I rupposed, alvi mat. ter of course, they would not notice so insignifi cant a being u Jack CsHume° on a hen-coop. but posh forward on their journey as quick as possible. "But I was out in my reckoning. Ttie per- poises saw the hen-coop, and a sailor hanging to ; it--a novel sight which aroused their curiosity, and they crowded around as if determined to fa- atom the mystery. I did not like such close companionship with the rascals—and made a great splashing in the water to keep them at a respectable distance. But it was of no use. It was not often that an opportunity offered to make acquaintanceship with an old salt, and they ; seemed resolved to improve the present chance. They forgot the object of their journey, and the importance of despatch, and jostled one another in their efforts to get near, and find out what was going on. tAh" thought Ito myself, 'my be fellows; if I was.nnw standing on the bow of a good ship with a harpoon in my fist, I would sickle your curiosity to some purpose.' . . "They crowded nearer and nearer. At length one big fellow, who seemed a sort of king among them, trade a dash towards me and thrust his : ugly nazsle between' my legs, giving at the same time a snort, whether of triumph, admiration or surprise. I cannot tell , which scattered the water all over me. At this moment, provoked at the rascal's impudence, I recollected the fish-hooks in my poekk. and as he turned and 'attempted to repeat the muneavre, with admirable presence of mind, a quality which never forsakes me, shipmates, io any strait, I thrust a fish-hook in each of his jowls, just forwent of his eyes, and held bard on the ganging'. At the sawn mo ment, I dropped upon his back, seated myself firmly in the saddle, and hauled taut upon both parts of the bridle! In this way I kept his head to the water's surface, and easily defeated his desperate attempts to plunge into the depths be low. Finding himself foiled in all his efforts to unseat me, he suddenly started off in an easterly direction, as if a shovel-nosed shark of the larg est aim wag after him. *1 50 A YEAR, IN ADVANCE. in les.s . than two minutes was starbliug on the lower martingale stay, with one arm around the martingale Im a UDC of the tinlphins--ti big f e ll ow hi. was 1 , 00 ! The squall was rinse aboard of us, coming thick and heavy! and I wa.t too eager to secure my fish, to attend properly to my own safety. I made a furious throw at the dol• phin, with what effect I know not—for with the effort I missed my hold, and fell overboard' The Neal struck the ship at the same time, and as the old Pocahontas dew pot ,me while I was struggling in the foam, I heard one of 'my ship mates cry out in a voice of terror, "A man over board!"—at the wune time that the eaptain shout ed in a voice of thunder, "lat go the topsail halliards, fore and aft!" “The ben map I soon bat sight ed, and the ether porpoises astonished st my unexpected eon duet, and not Insuring what I might be tempted 10 do assm v sesttered in every dimetioe; and them was asoming Oyer tilt) ocean - mires st thelake rt sever Weir* or , lifosea knots, on the bmit sid • porpoise. EMI Jly situatital trim a novel one. It required no little siren& toti skill to mime ley emtroter, keep his nose at the water's edge. and steer him in the right flireetion; hut I felt that my chance of getting out of Davy donee' clutches this time was far better on the porpoise's back than when clinging to a hen-coop, half buried in mat water, out of sight of land. •`I knew that when .the island of St. Jago could not be more than thlyty miles off in a south east direction—for I had heard the captain-way to the chief mate, after he marked the ship's place on the chart that afternoo—and I tried hard to steer my ship for St. Jago, by keeping the sun well on the larboard quarter But I had tough, work:. I would rather be rattling down the topgallant rigging in a hurricane, or lying to in Mawatehuttetts bay in a northeast wow storm, with the deep and rigging covered with ice, than to manage a headstrong porpoise with a bridle without a curb. With all_my ef forts Feould not prevent his broaching to ocia anion:illy, and •his wake was as.crooked as the track in the 'mow of an old man-of--war's man who had just been paid off! -Such wild steering lengthened my distance considerahly--fterertheless; in about an hour looked oat sharp for land; but it was full two hours before I sari it, rising, as it were. all at once, high out of the ocean, about three points oa the starboard bow, and not more 'than nine or ten mama. A noble landfall! And a glad sight it Ira*, shipmates, I mark you, for f longed to finish rity ride—and I gave the - old fellow beneath me a kiek or two to quicken his pace; and away he went again ss if a granspus had kicked hint in the end. 1 "As we drew in towards the land. spied a j little open hay lined with a white .sandy beach, leak of which were erected softie dwelling houses —and on this spot I at once made up my mind a, bench my craft--;die I ainnd in direotly for the bay My 'appearance at this time, mining in from the open sot at a furious rate, with' ludter two•thirds of my body oat of the water, fruit have been singularly striking, and calculated tip si tract atteuties. At all events; it seriously alarmed the quiet imhahitanni of this little vW lage. They gathered on the shore, wan. women, and eltil,lreu, to the souther of fifteen or twenty. armed with old tuuedkets, enthdises, hatcheta, aid harpoons, prepared to oppose my landing by force of arms, if necessary They looked so formida ble and threatening, that, if I could have had my own way, I should have hove to, within hail of the shore, and held a parley. Bid may faithful ' friend, to whom I was firmly :detached, would stand for no ceremony, hut f.irwar,l with inereasins spot *prank the 'deuce. I bad only debt to ware my hood and /lent watigo! before I fiend the porpoiw! bad run him : self upon the beach. hard and lAA. with on his bark. "1 never saw folks so astmaishell as those Por tuguelie wore. One among, them could speak FAIR ' att uKattiatiou rimers and acclamations by the whole compeny. The pirpoise also came in for a share of their ad miration. They admits-4 hie noble Kim and plump rvrtimut, and although. I begged hard for his life, wishing to return him safe and sound iato his native element, I soon saw, it was of no me; phis fate was settled; and as the sun went town, ' they were feasting on his carom and trying out his blubber. Poor old fellow; I shall nerer for= get hint! (and Jack wiped a tear (ma his'eye ; with his starboard flipper.) "Thew people treated me kisdly, mid the sad day carried me over to Pod Prays, isto Shia harbor the Puoahoutas was jest esteriag. I bor rowed a boat, pulled "long the aide, sad asked the eaptait if he wanted a pilot: "The captain looked hard at me, asd answer ed,rather grnfHy, 'No" "I had a •sombrero' hat on, which a kindheart ed native had given me, and the skipper tild'at know me. Never mind,' said I, shall come aboard.'• - "The tone of my voice, which i» not a common one—for I have been told it resembles the sound of a bassoon afflicted with the phthiaic—bother ed him, and he watched me closely as I passed over the side; but I had no canner jnmped from the gunwale on deck, lifted my 'sombrero' from my head, and with a bow, said quietly, hare come aboard, sir." than be threw his hat . half way up to the main-top, rut a regular pigeon-wing, and called out at the top of his' voice, 'lt is CALICO JACK, as 411 Te as my namely Jeremiah Thomp- ruio .in my own hook was ended, and I was ghtil enough .to find myself once more on the deck of the good old Poeshontsa. Bot, shipmates since that time I have abandoned in disgust the sport of catching fish at Rea, and as for lending a hand to harpoon a porpoise. I would as wino %end an iron through the best friend I have in the world." THE TWO BPIEE from the Autobiography of liwv. J. B. Valk-, As early as the year 1790, the bit:A-house and stockade above the mouth of the. Hocking. river, was a frontier poet for the hardy pioneers of the Northwestern Territory. There Nature was in her undisturbed livery of dark and thick forests. interspersed with green and Sowing prairies. Then the forest had not heard the sound of the woodman's axe. nor the plow of the' husbandman opened the bosom of the earth. Then those beautiful prairies waved their golden bloom to the God tof Nature; and . iummag the most luxuriant of these were• those which lay along tne Ilockhocking Valley, and %specially that portion of it - on which the town of Lancas ter now stands. Hare the tribes of the North and West met to counsel, and from this spot led forth the warpath in different directions. Upon one of theae coos ekes, when the war spirit moved mightily among the sons of Nature, and the tomahawk lahped in its scabbard, and the spirits of their friends, who had died at the field of battle, Idabel the warrior In his sight visions and called loudly for revenge, it was aismtained at tho garrison above the math of the Hoekhocking river, - that the tali aim trernipsthering in great numbers *r the pir pau at iiiribbigi blot es goes parr or* frau- tiers ; To meet the crisis, two of the meet skill ed and indefatigable spies were dispatched to watch their movements and report. M'Clelatel and White, two spirits that never quailed at danger, and as unconquerable as the Lyhian lion, in the month of October, and on one of the balmy (1.11,s of Indian 'termer, took leave of their fellows and moved on through th e th e thick plum and hazel bushes with the noiseless tread of panther*, armed with their unerring and trusty rifles They continued their moral, skirting the prairies, till they reaehed the twee remarkable prominence, now known by the name of Mount Pheasant, the western termittatiou of which is a perpendicular cliff of rocks of some hundreds of feet high, and whose petunia, front a western view, towers tit the clouts and over. looks the vast plains below. When this point was gained. our holly spies had a positson faint which they could see every movement of the In dians below in the valley. Remy day sand a new accosiou of wartime to the eoinpauy. They wituemed their mercies* of horse-racing, running fooweees, jumping, throwing the tomahawk and .Lowing; the old sachems looking on with their Indian indiffer ence, the aquaws engaged in their drudgery, and the ehikiren engaged in their playful gunshots. The arrival of a new warrior was greeted with terrible shouts, whish, striking *hesitant! face of Monet Pleasant, were driven back in the various indentatjons of the surrounding bits, producing reeerbitiona and echoes as if ten thOttead fiends were 'gathered as a universal levee. Suck yells would have struck terror to the hearse of those unaccustomed to Indian, revelry. .. To.our spies this was but martial music- .1 strains which waked their witehfuluens, and new- ly strung their. veteran courage. From their early, youth they had always been eu the frontier, and were well.pneticed is all the subtlety, craft and cunning of Indian warfare, as well as the ferocity and hiCesd-thirsty nature of these savage warriors. They were, therefore, not likely to be ;ensnared by their cunning. nor, without a desper ate conflict, to fall cicalas to their scalpiapknivee or tomahawks. On several tierasions, small par ties left the prairie and ascended the mount from the eastern side. On these occasions the spies would bide in the deep fissures of the reeks on the west, and again leave their hiding plats" when their unintited and unwelcome visitors had I disappeared. For food, they depended on jerked venison and elan bread, with which their knapsacks were wall stored. They dare not kindle a fire, and the report of one of their rifles would hero hreught upon them the entire fora of the Indi ana. Per think, they &speeded on some rain water which still stood in the hollows of some of the rocks: but, iu a •short time, this store was exhausted, and l'elelattil and White must abandon their enterprise or find a new supply. To accomplish this must hazardous enterprise, M'Cleland, being the oldest, resolved 4, make the attempts and, with his trusty_ rifle in his shoulders, he deeenital, by a circuitone rouse, so the prairi'e, skirting the hill on the north, and i under oover of the hasel thickets, be reached the river, and turning to a bold point of the bill, he found a beautiful spring within a few feet of the river, now known by • the name of Cold *Spring, ou the farm of D. Talmadge, Esq. He filled his canteens, and returned in safety to his watch ful, taintimakm. It was now. determined to hav e ion fresh supply of water every day, and this duty was performed alternately. Oa o ne •of these occasione, after White had 1114 his canteens, he sat s few moments watch ing the limpid element as it canes gurgling out of the bosom of the earth, when the light sound of footsteps caught his practiced ear, and upon turning around he saw to squaws a fewieet him. upon turning the foot of the the ..- dent squaw gave ewe- of those far-reachine whoops peculiar to Indians. White at once compretw* ded his perilous eituetiou: if the alarm should reach the camp or town, he anti his companion .must inevitably perish. Self-preservation com pelled him to inflict a noiseless death on he squaws, and in such a outniter se, if possible, to leave no trace behind. Ever rapid in thought and prompt in action, be sprang up o n hie victims, with the rapidity and power of a lion, and grump ing the throat of each, 'sprang into the 'river. He thrust the head of the eldest under the water. While making strong efforts to submerge the younger, who, however, powerfully resisted him, and. during the short struggle with this young athletic, to his astonishment she addressed bbn in his own language. though in almost inarticu late sounds. Releasing his hold, she informed him that she had been a prisoner for ten years. end was takes from below Wheeling, and that the Indians had killed all the family, and that her brother and herself were taken prisoners, but he succeeded on the second night in making his escape During this narrative, White had drowned the elder squaw, and had let her float off with tit:• current, where it would not probably be found out soon. He now directed the girl to follow him, and with his usual speed and energj, pushed for the mow. They had scarcely ; gone half way. when they beard the alarm cry some quarter of smile down tile stream. It was supposed some party of Indians, returning from hunting, struck the river just as the body of the squaw floated past. White and the girl succeeded in reaching the mount, where MeCleland had been no indif ferent spectator to the sudden commotion among the Indians. The prairie parties of warriors were seen im mediately to strike off ia every direction, and NV bite and the girl had searady arrived, before a party of sense twenty wareien had reached the eastern acclivity of the mount and were cautious ly and eariftilly - keeping under cover. Soon the spies ow the swarthy foes as they glided (nun tree to tree aid from rock to reek, till their posi tion was sarrounded, azoeps on the west perpea tkiaalar and all hope ci Neaps was cut 'off. in this perilous condition, nothlug was left but to sell their lives as dearly as possible, and this they resolved to do, sad advised the girl 'to es ape to the Iniffans sad tell theta she had belie taken primer. She said, "Nos death to me, in the pet)[ os of my troth people, Is s *attain.' giViit°). tare : 1. B. 14. J 4 NUMBER :39. -gg av4i times sworter than oaptivity awl davtity,,,,..,,pme; riot Dinh we with a gun. awl I will oliew yeatig* TV cftp titait am well a+ air. This plaere I Wry.. Item 111 . $ hour.* rhalt Ti. , bleelling with piwailkiL i fit and should dilwr or y•ot peyou will carry : Kr.; aitii tidings of aty death to my f.,w_relati4na.7 410 4, ReinoteitrAle , - , tiri,%ktl fruit loss. Tite ~pion qu i c kly naatureil their plait of difenite,•Wor ,, Pki vigorously comtionreil the AMA' from the f r est;:f when., from th , very liaeltlaute of the . :;:: mount, Ow i•avages t,adviotte, in single tiikh ;4;1 ., .iwt without any novvrt. • Ileyotul.. thin weigh. ther'zi' - i* warrior 4 tivailelhetnvelvws !NIA , irn.l trots it a:: advaneing, but i ii pas4ing from oue to othef . t they must he a 1 41.41 mimeo 4t.stu ' vluri • of their swarthy Swan" . VIM esougit-titr the iin , wring litho of the +vim, Indians (wing i-utio.-1:% ignorant ov, mat.> itoniti(l/ 0 in ninbuseade. titer. wore eautioUs how they ii4:`, 4 "'" vaneeiL After bravely nusintaissiug the fight in front :,-.1- . ,4.. 1 and keeping dm enemy in check, they ditivessodliett 1 a new danger thee:o,4lns - - theta. The AA' ftef ig lr.. now made ce *ohne yr paratieue in allsel, Um* .` on die Sleek, which eould lee more entereeliall : •,, , • dune by reaching an teolated rock lying is sem of :. the ravine; ,in the leathern hillside. This reek ' ' nom gained by the Itlien-. they u eild brine the : spies under point hl tuk -duet of Ili • rill.•eritheut. ic e ,. ' the puseibility of .ftecepse. Our brave witness ' • the titter leirekissmess of their 101 . 113441.41. WM* - nOthing tliOl4l avert fall a brave eouspeeime e ml e an nnerring eb it. The-c they had we, bit the • . , bray never despair ; With I'M:. itupendiug fate resting upon elem. thee cum-flatted vales antral- • = calming, and as unwearied a- .the strouge e e d l t..- .. , sire if life and the r e siscauee of a twee:aeons-kw ----. c,titlireme erase. - - . . Hum M'Clelauel saw e tall awl swarthy figara . - preparing to spring from 31 reeert :to near to the • fatal rock that, bound 14f two would reach it, sad • all hope of life thou wiei g.me. Ve fele`that all \ depended au one ,iugle adventurous thee; heel ee: although but an such or two of the warrior's body was exposed, and that at the distsure of eighty Or - . *hundred yard", he resolved to r • all; ettolly raised his rifle to his face, nod , ing the sight ,ati gst with his hand, tie drew a tend sure that hoe • . felt cones:Lim; it. would a., the truirk.l Ile touched the trigger with his linger, the hkunner ease down, but in place of striking tire, it broke his flint into many pieueee. and although he felt that' I the Indian must. reeeli the reek before he could - . 4 , adjust another dant, 13 ' proceoJed to the task with -'.. 4 ' 4 .' ' the utmost veal:wain , . . • 1 , 1 Casting his eye toward the fearful point, sad- ', ' ' - denly be saw the werrior stretching every anti- • de Toe' the leap, awl with the agility of the lila- ther he made the spring, but instead °freedman , ' ' -'''' ... - the rock, he gave a yell, and his dark bodylo - ..!' • .'' and rolled down the steep into the valley below ' '-'' . He had eventually rewired a death-wound from ... - '.. some unknown hand. A hundred•vuoioes re-echo- ' I- '.- ed from below the terrihl.• eleuut. It was ell- ' dent that they : had lost a favttrite warrior, as well an being disappointed for a time, of the meet ill= -' _ portant movement. A very few minutes proved " '. that the advantage gained weell be of short tin- . ration; for already the spiv. caught c glimpse ti • .•• a tall swarthy warrior cautionely advancing to -----: the covert so recently occupied by his fellow eons-- 't . '" '‘ pinion. ,Now, too, the attack in front wia re-' .' - '-''l sewed with increased fury, so as to require the . 4 ~ ' * l ' ineemant lire of both spies to - prettent the liali- - 1 1' -__ tints to leap to the fatal reek. Thnteillfrets. 0 111131.11., and the Indian torutug a , eau.tcrwtt, Wise , corpse rolled down the hill towards tidy former ' rompanion. Again an nukuowu agent had iti- imposed in their behalf. This second seerifice ' met dismay into the ranks of their 31+Failsoti.; and just as the sun was disappearing behind the west. ern hills, the foe withdrew to a short distance, to devise some sew mode of attack. This respite came most seauensably to oar spies, who had kept, • their ground, and bravely tosiutained the utse- • itad fight.from nearly the middle uif the day. Now, for the fret time, rd... the , girl musing, and the spies thought that threugh terrur she had eecaped to her former encore, or that -be - Mel been killed during the fight, but they wee tett long left to Conjecture, The girl was seen emerging from bleitioda rock and coming to them with a rifle in aei hand. Duenag the Melt she . .:w a warrior rail who had adyancedleatue distanue before the rust, end while some of then' changed their peeitiou, she resolved at once, live or the, to pees _-as herself of his! gun and austmitiems; and ' crouching down beneath the underbrush, she crawled to the place and suumeetiesi iu her enter prise. Her beau and watt hint eye had early no ticed the fatal rock, and here was the mysterious - hand by which the two warraws fell, the laatit ing the twee.. intrepid and 14..4i-thirsty of Ille Shawnee tsetse, and the leader uel the vitalism} which killed Ler mother. and her 'sters, and leek e. her auti her brother prisoner, - Now, in the west, arose dark elenullil i wiltels . s o on overspread the whole heaven-, awl the vie- : meets were pest %ids peals ef thunder_ Itark . wets, deep and gloomy, altmteled the wilful,. heat '- yew.. This uLtektteen great!) embarraestel the ' ep ee ; i e s t „.4- eeutetuplated etzlet escape, euppe ite that they totglit reatiti) 1.., Wei, way. ail aCeidentally fall on their enemy; but A Short cant imitation decided the plan; it wee agretel that ILO' giru ahead • , , ,, tareniost, fr ont her intimate ku e wi- ed ge of t le i.realities, aoth.uother might be gain ed in case they ehoull fall In with any of the par: ties or outposts From her kuewletige of the , language, she taught therive the sent Meisel* the a •quel proved, for seartady bee th -y 31a1e c u,1,4 a Landniti yard,. when a. low wheel ft ow the girl warned them of their danger. The spies enuk silently en the wound, where, ' by preview- arrangement, they a. re to renaint. till the bign II was Octet.* by the girl I., , uant'e , go: liar absence, for the space of a quarter ot t anknue e '' beg-tn to exeito the most -erilats apprehessiiMm t Agin she appeared, and told them she- Itawinees' ~,,,de d in , remeying twit ,eutioels toes short 4ill. ' lance, who were ultreetly um their reute. The de*. ce ps was no i:elletely resumed, and the spies fol lowed their intrepid leader for tea t& wile in 01 most. pe Bo und silence , when tin t barking dr a dog-at a short distance apprised them of new dan--' ,ter. The almost simultaneous click , f th e S pi t e; rifles was heard by the girl, who stated that they Were now in Olt mild of the Indian teacups and their lives depended on the most pretested silence; . ~.....,. and implicitly following ter flee:act:4. weeeesesi • A moment afterward, the girl was are etteel b r , „ 4 ,,,,,. , Mayuaw; from an opening in her wigavain; . *,:,„ , iteeplied. in the Indian language, and - ''" t'..,, , :, I pingottill pressed forward. In. a short time' stopped and assured the spies that de , vi ' ~• . - - .was cleared, and that they had passed the gresti••-' . ' est danger. ',She knew that every leading paw . was guarded safely by the Indians, and at once resolved to adopt the bold adventure of parsing ' through the centre of the village, as the least hi= swans, awl the Fennel proved the correetness or, - :: a her *meat. They now steered a coarse 6.,A::,„....., ..,, die Ohio river, and a ft er three diye'triseelarritilee ,,,. e , ~ ed safe at the blockhouse. Their estsps and 41,1, , , - . ~., venture prevented the Indians from their eon tkaf s 1; ''.,. plated attack; and the rescued girl peuved,tp - bn p , ~,,k the shier of the intrepittflorusel WashkurieWl.s ... ". elm* in the history a radian warlinet;W:e#'": l '''' the rinewned spy of Ceplain Kma*a•blC,itly ''':" 44 .t 4-1. &suntan% da. - ,- :-. -. :e..fe. eesslbreeeess liE INVI =MI . /4 e-- y r, ...' 3" •,,, =