Vet. VI, No. 21.] IMIRIZEI OF TIM HUNTINGD9N JOURNAL. The " Jouttam:" will be published every Wednesday morning, at two dollars a year, lipid IN ADV &NCE, and if not paid with in six months, two dollars and a half. Every person who obtains five subscribers, and forwards price of subscription, shall be tarnished with a sixth copy gratuitously for one year. No subscription received for a less period than six months, nor any paper discontibued until all arrearages are paid. ar.lll communications must be addressed to the Eiltar, POST PA.IDi or they will not be attended to. Advertisements not exceeding one square, will he inserted three times for one dollar, and for every subsequent insertion, twenty live cents per square will be charged. If no definite orders are given as to the time an advertisement is to be continued, it will be kept in till ordered out, and charged accor dingly. - AGENTS 10 It The Ustatitagdon Journal . _ Daniel Teague, Orbieonia; David Blair, Esq. Shade Gale; Benjamin Lease, Shirleys burg; Eliel Smith. Esq. Chilcottstown; Jas. Entriken, jr. Ceffee Run; Hugh Madden, Esq. Sfiringfield; Dr. S. S. Dewey, Bir mingham; James Morrow, Union Furnace; John Sisley, Warrior Mark; James Davis, Esq. West townshifi ; D. H. Moore, Esq Frankatown; 80. Galbreath, Esq. Holli daysburg; Henry Neff, Alexandria;. Aaron Burns, Williamsburg; A. J. Stewart, Water Street; Wm. Reed, Esq. Morria township; . Solom m Hamer:Aeff'B Mi ll; James Dysart, ill nth S/truce Creek; Wm. Murray, Esq. Graysville; John Crum, Manor Hill; J.. Stewart, Sinking Valley; L. C. Kessler, Mill Creek. POETRY. THE MERRY TIME OF MAY Come glad zephyis of the balmy west, Walt on thy wings our thoughts away- - - Bid cur sorrow-seekingibreast Hai' the happy morn of May. The wart,lers: of the grove Sing gaily o'er the green ; Tito red-breast and the doVe Bask in gay nature's.sheen.l. I'll wander far o'er The wild, O'er hill and landscape g ay; Seek the gushing river's side, And list the woodinymph's lay And as the stfeath (loth run, To its eternal home— A mirror of the'sun— I'll gaily sport along. Avaunt! then, winter-time, away, I'll think no more on thee, . I will be meek and ever pray, Thy face no more to see. • Then for the days of May, And the'merry songster's note, 'We'll rouse the slum'bring lay, As we gaily sail our boat. NOT MARRIED YET. Not married yet! all, let me th►nk— How horrid is the thought, That eighteen summers have escaped, And still I am not caught! And still—and still—'tis like to be, If things don't alter soon: No matter—l'll live on in hope, At least another moon! IsTo offer yet! ah, what a thought, For a maiden past eighteen, With face and form as faultless too, As any ever seen! Alt, wherefore do they keep me back? why this long dtjay? 2 1 0 man nerd ask TIIIS maid Lut once yo game tit.; wedding day. OE QUIET, DO, I'LL CALI, MY MOTHER!! As I was sitting in a wood, Under an oak tree's lofty cover, Musing in pleasant solitude, Who should come by, but John, my lover; He pressed my hand, and kissed my;cheek, Then warmer growing, kissed the other, While I exclaimed, and strove to shriek, "Be quiet, do! I'll call my mother!" He saw my anger was sincere, And loyinOy began to chide' me, ' And wiping from my cheek theZtear, He sat upon the grass beside me ; tie feigned such pretty amorous.woe, Breathed such sweet V aws one on another, I could but smile, while whispering low, "Be quiet, do! l'll call my mother!" THE JOURNAL. He talked so long, and talked so well, And swore he meant not to deceive me, I felt more grief than I can tell, When with a kiss he rose to leave me! "Oh, John!" said I, "and must you go? I love thee better than all other! There is no need to hurry so— I NEVER MEANW TO CALI. NV MOTHER!" MISCELLANY. From Graham's Magazine, for May TIRE REEFER OF 170. BY THE AUTHOR OF "CRUIZING IN THE LAST WAR." The Sea-Fight "Sail ho !" sung ont the look out, one sunny afternoon, as we bowled along be. fore a pleasant gale. In an instant the drowsiest among us was fully awake. The officers thronged the quarter-decks ; the fore-topmen eagerly scanned the horizon; the skulkers stole out from beneath the bulwarks where they had been dozing, and the late quiet decks of the schooner, which but a moment since lay hushed in the drowsy silence of a sultry afternoon, now swarmed with noisy and curious gazers. Whereaway asked the officer of the deck. "Broatton the weather-bram." " Can you make her 3ut "A heavy square rigged ve s sel." " no her royals lift T' " Aye, sir ; but only this moment." . . "How does she bear 7" " West and by west sou' west." "A West Indianian, perhaps," "Ay, sir, I can see her to'- gallants now: they belong to a heavy craft." 'Pipe all hands to make sai!, boat swain. ' . • "Aye, aye, sir." "The strange sail is hauling up into. the wind,?' sung out the look•out. • "Ay—take the glass, Mr. Parker and spring into the cross trees to see what you can make of her.. All hands aloft—loose and sheet home fore and maintopsails. Merrily, there. How does she look Mr. Parker r "She seems a heavy merchant-man by her rig: ab! now her topsails lift, large and square, with a cross in them. It's not the rig of a man-o'-war." "Ease oft the sheet—man the lee-brace; --hard down the helm." "Ay, ay, sir," said the quarter master, as he whirled around the wheel, and the gallant craft danced lightly up into the wind, like a racer beneath the spur ; while the men stood at their respective stations eagerly waiting the command. Round there, with the foretop-sail— haul it: fore and aft—belay all !" came in quick succession front the quarterdeck, as we bowed before the breeze, and dash ing the splay on either side our cutwater, went off• almost dead in the wind's eye. The sharp wind, as at sang through our cordage, and the momentary dashing of the sea across our bows, as we thumped against the surges, anorded a pleasant re lief to the occasional creaking of the shrouds, or the dull monotonous sounds of the water washing lazily alongside, which we had been listening to for the last hour. The change had an exhihirating effect upon our spirits, which was percep tible as well among officers asamong men. Besides, we were all eager for a prize. Every man, .thererore, was at his sta tion, and a hundred eager faces looked out from the forecastle, the tops, or where ver their owners chanced to be. The captain, too, was upon deck, &Alining the stranger with a scrutinizing eye. "No, sir—her courses show to the very foot; but here it comes--six ports on a side, sir, though they look like palmed ones." "She's setting her light sails." "Every one of them, sir : and wetting down the mainsail." • "How are her decks t" "Crowded, sir. There's the glancing of musket as 1 live; all, of a dozen. She carries troops, sir, 1 flincy." ..A transport ?" ::Aye, sir!" MC interest had gone on deepening, during these rapid questions and answers, u,ntil at my last reply a suppressed buzz ran rwind the ship. No one spoke, but each lookel'into his messmates' fl,ce, and it was obvious that the question, "could we capture our opponents, or would we ourselves became the prey V' was upper most in every mind. But the person most interested in the event was appa rently the least concerned of any; and uithout moving a muscle of his face, the captain leisurely closed hisjilass, and turning, with a smile, to his lieutenant, said,— We shall be likely to have a sharp brush, Mr. Lennox :in tact, our men are getting rusty, and we want something of a close•contested battle to burnish them up. We shall open thepagatine, and go to quarters directly." "ONE COUNTRY, ONE CONSTITUTION, ONE DESTINY." A. W. BENEDICT PIIIIMSFIER AND PROPRIETOR. HUNTINGDON, PENNSYLVANIA, WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 1841 Every thing that could be made to draw, was by this time set, and we were eating into the wind after the stranger with a .apidity that promised even to the- most sanguine of us a speedy realization of our hop's. As we gained upoin the merchant man, the crowded state of his decks be came-more and inure apparent, and we. could plainly detect, by means of our glasses, that every exertion, even to wet ting down the sails to the royals, was be ing made on board of him to escape. But all was in vain? Few vessels afloat could beat us on the tack we were now going, nor was it long before we had the chase within.range of our long Tom. "She hasn't shown her bunting as yet;' said Captain •Stuart, "but we'll throw a [ shot across her, tun up our flag, and see what answer she makes." The long,gun was cast loose, the foot of the fiiresail lifted, and the gunner apply ing the Match, the moment our ball went whizzing on its way ; while at the same moment our flag was run up to the gall, and blowing out to leeward, disclosed the arms of our colony.* For a few minutes the shot might have been seen richochet ting siting the waves, until it plunged in to the sea a few fathoms on• the larboard of the stranger. Still, however, no en sign shown by the chase. "Pitch a shot into her this time, Mr. Matchlock," ejaculated the skipper ad dressing the gunner, "and see if that will bi ing her out." "Ay, ay, sir," said the old fellow, squint ing at his piece, and aware that he was one of the-best marksmen afloat in any service, "ay, ay, we'll an uke them to a sense . of their condition presently; we'll drive the cold iron through and through the repro• bates: too high a little more starboard— steadily all, and mark di! mi-chief," cried the old fellow, applying the match. The rest of the sentence was lost in the deaf ening report of the cannon; a sheet of fire was seen streamin out an instant from the mouth of the piece; and as the pale white smoke sailed slowly eddying away to leeward, the old gurner might have been discerned, Lending eagerly forward, land shading his eyes with his * hands, as he gazed after the path of the ball. .•By the Lord Harry how it makes the splinters fly !" said the old fellow, as the shot, striking full on the quarter of the chase, went through and through her deck. "And there goes her flag at last," said Westbrook, as the ensign of England float ed from the quarter of the merchantman, while at the same moment a cloud of ,smoke puffed from the stern, and a shot skimming along the deep, toward us, plunged into the waters a cable's length ahead. "We're beginoing to make him talk, eh 1." chuckled the gunner, waxing warm in his work. 'Let him have it again now— ah that will bring out his teeth--give it to 'ens, you old sea do*," he continued, familiarly patting his piece, "and by the continental Congress, he's got it among his sky-scrapers. There come his tegal lant sails —hurrah !" The fight now became one of intense interest, for the merchantman perceiving that escape was impossible, seemed deter mined to resist to the last, and kept up a brisk and well directed fire upon us from his stern guns. Their' range not, how ever, so great as that of our piece, we were enabled alter a while to regulate our distance so as to cripple the chase effec tually without sustaining any damage our selves. But it was not long that we were !suffered to maintain the combat on our ,own terms. Woriled beyond endurance by the havoc made among his spars, the chase soon put his helm up, wore round, and In tiling up his courses in gallant de , fiance, came down boldly towards us. "‘Ve shall have it now," whispered ' .Yesthrook as he stood by the division where he commanded, "they must out number us two to one—but we'll give them a lesson for all that." "Ay hand to hand, and foot to foot, will be the struggle,•and God deleud the right." No sooner had the chase altered his course, and shown a determination to ex cept a challenge, than the firing on both sides ceased, and the two ships steadily but silently approached each other. The eve ut a battle is a solemn time. '-however men may talk in their jovial hours, or feel amid the maddening excite. ment of the contest itself, there is some ' thing inexpressible awe-inspirio • in the consciousness that we are soon to be sr-. rayed in deadly hostility against our fel low creatures; and now as Igazed along the silent decks, and beheld our brave fel lows gazing, as if spell-bound, upon the The present national flag, cmsisting of the gars and stripes, was not adopted until 1777, when Congress passed a resolution to that effect. Prior to that time each commander used whatever device suited his fancy. The first ensign of Paul Jones is said to have been a pine tree, with a rattle snake coiled at the foot, about to strike, and the motto, "don't tread on me." The arms of a colony. as is this instance, were often tisrt).,"gv3, approaching foe, Ipercieved that their em otions were akin to my own. Yet there was nothing of tear in those hardy bosoms. There was a compression of the lip, an occasional flashing of the eye, and a half suppressed word now and then among the men, which showed that amid all their P other feelings, a deep, unflinching detes tation of their tyrants was uppermost in their hearts. At times their eyes would glance proudly along our sanded deck, with all its apparatus of cutlasses, board ing pikes, and cannon balls, and then turn indignantly, and almost triumphatly, to• wpm] the enemy, now bearing down upon us. Meantime a deathlike silence king Upon them; not a sound was heard except the sighing of the winds through the ham per, and the dash of the waters under our bows. The chase had now approached almost within musket shot, and yet no demon stration of an attack had been made. We could see that her decks was alive with men. From every port, and look-out, and top, a score of faces warned us of a bloody battle. Each man was at po'st, determination stamped on his counten. ance. as I gazed upon this formidable array of members, and beheld the com paratively gigantic of our adversary, steadily advancing on us, like some por tentous monster of the deep, I almost trembled for victory; but when my eye. fell again on the brawny chests, and de termined visages of our gallant crew, I felt that nothing but extermination could prevent them from hoisting our own flag above the proud ensign of our foe which now flapped . lazily in the breeze. But my reverie—if such it might be -called— , was cut short -by perceiving a sheet of flame rolling along the Englishman's side, and, while his tall spars reeled backward with the recoil a shower of shot came hurt• ling toward us. In an instant the gall of our mainsail fell ; our sails were perforat ed in various places; and a cannon ball striking us amid-ships, cut through both bulwarks, and laid one poor fellow dead upon the deck. 'File men started like hounds when they see their prey. "Stand to your guns—my men I" thun dered the captain in this imergency, "let not a shot be fired until I give the word. Beaesteadily upcn your helm, and lay us across their bows." The moments that elapsed before this .l endeavor could be consamated seemed to be protracted into an age. Our gallant fellows could, meanwhile, scarcely be re..! strained within the bonds of discipline. As shot after shot came whizzing over us, the crew grew more and more restive, casting uneasier glances at our command-. er at every successive fire. Several of the spars had by this time been wounded, and our hull showed more than one evi dence of the foe's skill in gunnery• At length a shot came tearing throbgh the bulwark but a short distance from where I was stationed, and after knocking the, splinters wildly hither and thither, struck a poor fellow at his quarters, and laid him mangled and bleediag across lais gun. ran to him. One of his shipmates had al ready lifted the man's head up, and laid it carefully In the lap of a comrade. The lace was dreadfully pale—the features urr• naturally distorted. Agony, intense and irresistible, was Written in every line of the face. The motion, however, revived him, and he opened his eyes with a groan. Unsettled as was their gaze, they took in the anxious group aroun I him. He saw, on every face, the deepest commisseration. His glazing eye lightened for a moment. "How are you Jack?" said the shipmate in whose lap he lay. The dying man shook his head mourn• fully. "'Don't you know me, Jack?" said his messmate. There was no answer. 'llweyes of the sufferer were closed. "God knows 1 little thought you were to die thus?" continued his shipmate with emo tion- "For twenty years, in gale and calm, in winter and in emotes we have sailed together, and now you're going to part company without being able to bid an old messtnate farewell," and he wi ped the cold sweat from the dying man's brow. "Jack, Jack, don't you know me? Can 1 do nothing for you?" The sufferer opened his eyes, and made a gesture as if he wished to he lifted up. His desire was gratified. He looked a round eagerly until his eyes fell upon the enemy. _ "Ifury—me," he &int!) , articulated, "after you've—hauled down her flag. And—and Rover," and his voice, fur an instant, became stronger, "send the prize money to the old woman—and—a—a." He gasped for breath. "What? —in God's na►ne what?" But the senses of the dying man began to wan der. "Speak!—Jack— for the love °MA!" "—ails—wc—e—el!" murmured the man, '3 rukenly. He ceased: ot,quiver• ink, motion passed across his face. His shipmate gently laid his head upon the dock. "He's dead—and now boys for re venge!' said Rover, as he started to his feet. The crisis had come. So rapidly had the foregoing scene passed, and so intent ly had we all been gazing upon the dying roan, that, in the interval, the schooner had gained a position on the bow of the enemy, and as the sturdy seaman rose up from beside his murdered companion, we ran shot across her in a raking position) and before the words had died upon the air, die long expected command came from the quarter deck, to open fire. "Fire!" shouted our leader, "one and all--pour it to them—remember 3 ou fight for your all!" • 'Give it to 'em there, my boys," thundered the gunner, "that's it; there goes her sprit sail yard --hurrah!" 1t was a terrific scene. No sooner had the signal been given, than, as with one accord, our gallant fellows poured in their deadly fire. Every shot told. Stung al most beyond human endurance by the re• straint in which they were kept, and mad dened by the spectacle of a messmae slain at his post before he could fire a shot, our crew fought, like demons rather (has men, jerking their guns out as if the were playthings in their hands. Nothing could withstand them. Not a shot was wasted on the rigging of the foe: every one was driven along her crowded decks. Ihe slaughter was Immense. Man and boy, sailor and marine, officers and crew went down before that murderous, inces sant fire. The flashes of the cannon, the roars of the batteries, the .crashing of spars,and the shrieks of the wounded and the dying rose up together Li terrific dis cord. Meanwhile the thick clouds of smoke settled down upon us, hid the hull of the enemy completely from sight. Nothing but her masts, rising tall and gallantly above the dim canopy of her decks, could be seen, Directly one of these was seen to stagger; then it sway ed to and fro a moment; and directly giv nig a lurch, the whole lofty fabric of spars and hamper went tumbling over her side. "Hurrah, boys! we have her now," shouted the captain of a gun near toe, "there goes her foremast—let her have it I l again," and, jerking out his piece at the word, another discharge of grape was sent hurling along the enemy's decks. By this trine the two vessels had got a -1 foul, the bowsprit of the the having be , come entangled with the shrouds of our main-mast. Unable longer to resist the whirlwind of grape poured along their deck, the crew of the enemy determined on making a desperate effort to retrieve the tide of battle by boarding, and gath ering suddenly forward , at the call of their leader, they made an instantaneous rush upon us. But their attack was quick ly met. A momentary 'vacillation of the veil of smoke hanging over the deck of the foe, by disclosing the numbers gather-, log upon her forecastle, betrayed to our gallant leader the intention of the enemy. lie.saw at a glance that the attack must be repulsed speedily or that we were lost. The vessels were already rapidly swing ing around side to side, and in a few mo ments the overwhelming numbers of the Englishmen would be enabled to leap up on our decks, with almost aA much ease as if we were moored along side of their craft in port. Not a moment was to be lost. Either the enemy must be repuls ed at once, and so promptly as to pre. elude all future attempts of the like char acter, or else we must lose every advert. tage we had already gained, and be over powered finally by the mere force of num hers. What 1 have taken so long to de scribe, flashed through our minds with in conceivable rapidity. The captain did not hesitate a moment. NVaving his svord aloft I.e thundered, "Boarders ahoy! 'mister at the main— to beat back the enemy," and then in a lower tone he added, "charge the long gun to the muzzle with grape—" Obedient at the word our gallant fel lows hurried to their stations, and stood eagerly awaiting the onset of the foe who having, by this time. mustered on the fore part of their craft, stood ready to spring upon our decks at the first op portunity. That was now at hand. The two ships, which had momentarily rece ded, re rolled together, and every man of the enemy's crew strained muscles to their utmost tension, as he prepared to spring on our decks. Never shall / forget that sight. Clue tered around the fore shrouds and on the At head, and coffering the whole space beTween, where the dense masses of the enemy, their dark frowning countenances and glittering weapons forming prominent objects in the spectacle. Tkey had sprung up, as if by magic, from a sewed lurking places, and gathered at the call of their commander. now stood with threatening numbers about to leap upon us. To re sist such a whirlwind of cutlasses with oor little crew was well nigh madness. But our leader fad already determined to make their very numbers the cause of their ruin. At this mast eat, when the WHOLE No. 2g4' two ships approached each other, he tur ned rapidly to the gunner, and 'shouted, "Give it to them with the long gun-- The effect was electric. With a noise like the bursting of a volcano, the instru ment of death went off, belching forth its firy torrent with resistless fury. An ava lands could not have swept off its VIC.. tilos more ruthlessly than did that dis charge disperse the foe. Nothing could withstand that hurricane. of grape, Its effect was awful. Clearing a !anal through and through the crowd upon the forecastle of the enemy, it tore its pas sage onward amid the spars and hamper of the ship with resistless violence, al most drowning the shrieks of the dying, and the curses of the wounded, in its ter rific crash. The enemy's boarders stag gered and fell back, and before they could rally the two ships fell asunder. While they were still wavering, our hamper be came disentangled, and we once more floated free of the enemy. As we pas sed along her side our fire was renewed with redoubled impetuosity, while the Englishn.an crippled as he was by our last tri A liti',C il:scivirge, could only feebly repl. "Pour it in, my lads," shouted the gun ner again, "and we'll soon bring her to quarters—give it to 'em now, for the hon or of old Plymouth." "God Nave the king;" came hoarsely back from the enemy, "blow the rebels out of water." The.speaker was standing just abaft the mainmast, and had distinguished him. self, during the attempt to board us, by his vehement gestures, and apparent in. fluence over the men. / noticed the eye of Westbrook watched him keenly as he spoke. Suddenly an ofFicer approached and gave him an order. Ile looked a round, started from - his protected situa tion and dashed up the main shrouds, with the intention, as we now perceived, of reeving a rope which had been shot a way, and the loss of which prevented the main topsail from being hoisted to the cap. , " They're about to make off," said I to Westbrook 'he's a daring fellow to go aloft in this, any how." • "Ile's not so sure of success," said Westbrook, “for they'll have a shot at him from the ftirecastle? The man had by this time, with almost inconceivable rapidity, effected his pur pose, although more than one musket had been fired at him from our craft. He now turned to descend, but proud of his achievement, he could not resist the temp tation of a momentary bravado. He took off his hat and gave a hurrah. “It's your last boast," cooly said West brook, as he snatched a musket, and lif ting it to his shoulder, glanced his eye a long the barrel, and fired. / shuddered involuntary, even though an enemy was the victim, for 1 knew Westbrook's dead ly aim. My pressage was true. The man struggled on his footing an instant; made an abortive grasp at the air instead of a rope; falling backward, struck the shrouds, and re-bounded into the sea. He squatted a moment on the water like a wounded duck, and then sank forever, leaving only a small dark stream of blood upon the wave to Lill where lie disappear ed. By this time the fire of the enemy had almost ceased, and, even amid the smAte of battle, we could see that her scuppers. were literally running with blood. An ineffectual attempt was now made to es cape from us, but we ran down upon the enemy at the first symptom, and re-com menced our fire with unabated fury. Their rigling was soon terribly cut up, as we now aimed principally sat that. As a few moments removed all possibility of an es cape on the part of the Englishman. anal as we had suffered ourselves in' our bans per somewhat from his fire, we can ail, short distance, to repair our damages. An hour and a half sufficed to place us in neatly as good a condition as before going into battle, when running down up on the enemy we once more opened our battery. The first gun, howe‘er, had hardly'been fired, before - the British en sign, which had doggedly been kept fly ing, was hauled down. I was dispatched on board the capture. As I stepped up on herilecks a scene of desolation met my eye:. v path was literally slippery with ly a man was on deck. 'lle helmsman, a single officer, two mar. ines, and a few common seamen, were the only ones, of all that numerous crew, who were not wounded or lead. God knows a inure terrific slaughter I bad never par. ticipated think I behold it at this clay. COURTING ..Ma, what tines cousin John hug sister Bridge so for?" "La, Simon, you have such eyes—he's only a courting tier, my "Golly gracious, ma'-don't he court her lard thouih :" .-.1.0