lie VOL. I.-NO. 8. THE COLUMBIAN, A Dorriocratic Nowspapor, M roDLunBD roa ins moriitrroKs dt DHOCKWAY St PHEEZE, BVEBV FIIIDAY MOUSING AT Blotmbirf, Columbia County, Pa. THK prlnolploa of Uils papcrareof the Jefferson tan. Bohoal of politic. Those principles will never U compromised, yet courtesy nnd klndess shall Dot be forgotten In discussing them, whether with individuals, or Willi contemporaries of tlio Press1 The unity, happiness, and prosperity of tho coun try 1 our aim and object) andiw tho means to tecum that, wo shall labor honostly nnd earnestly tor lo harmony, succcssand growthof our organ Uatloa. It be seemed to tho Proprietors that tho re quirement of a Oonnty newspaper have not been heretofore fully met by their predecessors or con temporaries ; and they havo determined to, if powlblo, supply thodeflclcney. In a literary point of Tlew also this paper will aim at a high stand ard, and hopwi to cultivate In Its readers a correct tnt and sound Judgment on merely literary, as wall a on poljtlcal questions. The news. Foreign and Domestic, will be caro Oilly collated and succinctly given ; wldlo to that of our own State and section of tho filato, partic ular attention will bo directed. Important Con reetonal and Legislative matters will bo fur nished weekly to onr readers in a rondablo and tcllablo form j and votes and opinions on lmor lant and leading rucasuriw will be always publish ed; so that our paper will form a complete record of current political ovents. The local interests, news and business of Co lumbia County will rocclvo swcial attention; and w will endeaur tomakothe paper a ne cessity to tho former, mechanic nnd laboring man, upon whom at last oil business Interests depend. Tho flrealdo and family circle will bo diligently considered in making up tho paper. No adver tfcemeuts of an Improper character will ever, un der any protcit, be admitted into ita columns. IU Conductors are determined that it shall bo en tirely free la all respects from any deleterious doctrine or allusion, so that every man can placo It la the hands of bis children, notonly without fear, but with confidence In its teaching nnd Undenclos. Promising to use their very best en deavors to ful11 In letter and spirit the amiounce raentbove set forth, tho Publishers of Tun Co lcxdiam trustfully places It before the people be lieving that It will answer a want In the com munity hitherto unsupplicd. To OOBSEsroxDrNTs. In order to make Tni Ooixhuiax as complete a record as possible of all beta and events, accidents, Improvements and discoveries relating to Columbia County, we re spectfully Invito correspondence, accompanied with responsible names, from all points. If facts, dts and names are carefully given the Editors will put tao Information In proper form. Tuxa of SCDacniPTiojf : Two Dollars for ono year when payment 15 tuado In advance; ami all subscriptions not paid In advance, or by tho first day of April, 1807, will Invariably be charged Two Dollars and Fifty Cents. All contracts of sub scription and for advertising will be mado with tho Publishers and all payments therefor enforced In their names. s Tub Columbia!? will bodollvcrcd through the malls, to subscribers In Columbia County, free of postage. To those outside of the County, flvo eonta per quarter in odvanoe, paid at tho office where received. Terms or Axiykrtihimo: One sqnaro (ten line or leas) one or threo Insertions $1,60 ; each subse quent Insertion CO cents; ono square one month 13,00, two squares $3,00, throe squares (3,00, four squares fo.00, half column 910,00, oneoolumn 15,00. Executors or administrators notices 83,00; Audi tors $2,60. Editorial notices twenty cents a line. Other advertisements Inserted according to spe cial contract. Transient advertisements must bo pro-paid. Jobbing of all kinds neatly and prompt ly executed. SJETVsrAtxn I-aws. 1. A postmaster Is required to give notico by letter (returning the puper does not answer the requirement of the law) when n subscriber docs not take his paper from the office ; and to state tho reasons for its not being taken. A neglect to do so makes the postmaster responsi ble to the publisher for tho payment. S, Any person who takes a paper regularly from tie post office whother directed to his name or another or whether ho has subscribed or not, U responsible for the payment of tho subscription a. If a person orders his paper discontinued, he must pay up all arrearages, or the publisher may continue to srnd It until payment Is made, and collect the whole amount whether It Is taken from tfce offloo or not. There can be no legal discontin uance until tho paymiut Is made. 4. If a subscriber who is In arrears orders his paper to be stopped at a certain time, and tho publisher ooatlnues to send it, tho subscriber is twund to pay for it If he takes It out uf tho post office. Tho law proceeds on tho ground that a caan must pay for what he usos. 8. The courts have decided that refusing to take Mwspapcrs and periodicals from tho pot office, or removing and leaving them uncalled for Is prtaaact4 evidence of intentional fraud. AW It is, In oil eiuo, more likely to lie sat Is fac tory, both to subscribers and to the lubllsher, that remittances and all communications respect ing the business of the paper, bo sent direct to the offlce of publication. All letters, whether relating to the editorial or business concerns of the paper, and all payments for subscriptions, advertising, or Jobbing, are to bo made to and addressed BUOCKWAY Jt FltEUZK, "CbluflWun Q0," rtLMOUSBUnO, I'A. Trtnted at Ttoblsoci'a HulldlDga, near tho Court Quom, by Ciias. M. VAnjIMWLICI, Frank K. Knvdiii. IXCHANGR HOTEL, li liLooiiHiiuua, com'muIa consTY, pa. The nnderslKUod having purchased this well, knowa and oentrully-located house, the Exchange Hotel, situate on MAIN BTUKET, In Illoomkburg, luiruodlaudy opposite the Columbia County Court House. reaiJlulJy Informs his friends and the public In general that hU Iiouko Is now In order tor tho reception and cuterulnment or tnmneis bo laay bo disposed to favor It with thiir ens- turn. Ho lias sparwl nu lupcnuu lu preparing the Exeliauge for tlio cimrbilni'ieiit uf his guest.., urlther shall there bo tins thing wanting (on his port) to minister to their personal iiunfurt. Dis ks mm is spocloav, und enjoys nu ixrelit nt imsi fcea ligation. Oiunlbuo rnn at all limes beiwin th JIx sbanga Hot! and the YiirUA- railroad dejuits, by wbleJi travelers will lo plejisantly eonveyid to Mid from the respective stations lu due tluiu to .t the JOHN I'. t'AKI.OW. l.76iH, Msr Of, IW POETRY. SONG. rareftmiEli A' " ""Wcvcr, It has ; bein III his last bin Blr Peter lies, tt no knew not what it was to frown I Death took him mellow, by surprise. Through all our land wo could not boast A knight more gay, moro prompt than ho To rlio and fill a bumper toast, And pass It round with "Three times three I" Nono better knew the featto sway, Or keep mirth's boat In better trim ; For nature hail but Utile day lAUthatot Ivhteh ihr tnnl,l,,t 1,1m The meanest guest that graced his lword Was there tho freest of the free. Ills bumper toast when Peter poured I'uoseu u rounu witii "inrco times three," He kept at truo good humor's mark Tho social flow of pleasure's tide ; He never mado a brow look dark, Nor caused a tear hut wlmn It .1ln.1 No sorrow round his tomb should dwell ; Jioro pleased his gay old ghost would be, For funeral song and passing bell, 10 near no sound but "Threo times three I" MISCELLANEOUS. IN A BIN. nv c. HiiAcicr.n'om), Ono night, coming out of tlio theatre, I saw a man vlgilently watching tho "guttcr-rats," "rough," anil workmen pushing and crowding out of tlicgallerv exit. Ho was a thin, haggard, wills- ucreu lenow, with a wild glare in ills eyes, hair uncombed, anil n liberal tprlnklliig of shavings over his wrin kled clothes. Leaning against a lamp post, tho crowd, as it surged Iieavilvbv. jostled him from his position, and I saw, rrom Ii is empty coat sloove, that his left arm was gone. There was some thing peculiar about tho man, perhaps the painful eagerness of look and man ner ho exhibited, that caused me to loungo against tlio building and await results. Tho crowd dispersed, and tho man and I were left together. "Were you looking for anyone?" I inquired, stepping Into tho light. His wild eyes scanned my person from hat to boots. "Yes," ho answered. "A friend?" " "An oIdacquaintauce,"andhoturned away from me. "Stop a minute," I said seeing his an noyance. "I am called a queer fellow, and you must excuso mo If I ask you If you wold like a good warm supper?" I am hungry," he answered energet ically, and moistening his lips with his tongue. "And thirsty!" "Very." "You shall have pomething to cat and drink, upon ono condition." . "Well?" "That you tell mo how you lost your arm." "Aro you a detective, mister?" he suspiciously demanded. "No." "Then I'll go with you, thank you," and he began to brush thoshavings from his clothes, and to clumsily smooth tho unkempt hair. There was a restaurant close by, where. I ordered a substantial meal for my guest. That finished, and with a pitch er of something warm within his reach, lie told tho following story, beginning in a moralizing strain, and stopping at times to fill his glass from tho pitcher, or to walk tlio llttlo compartment with a nervous step that seemed to ease his heart a little. I did not interrupt him to question or comment on his story, told in a deep base voice, with a broad accent that made tho interview strange ly musical. His narrative, pruned of many inaccuracies of expression, began as follows : "If, as I have somewhere, read, (and I have read a little,) a man's life is mado up of accidents, then tho history of my life would, 1 think, prove tho truth or that assertion, for I am scarcely out of ono trouble, great or small, before an other treads on its heels and trips me up. I am a poor man, always havo been one, if poverty has any blessings, any salve for the ragged wounds it gives to tlio ragged men and women, 1 know littlo or nothing of them. "I havo seen women string beads; black and white and red and blue beads held on a needle for a second, then pushed downwards to make room for more. That Is the way tho thread of my life has been strung with troubles, and there's been very little of the puru white among that kind of beads. It's been tawny white and sooty white, ami Jet black, and bruised green, and blue, but littlo that was pure ami unsoiieiij no beads of amber, pearl, or gold. "I'm not complaining; for years of troublo have ruined that miserable way of relief. After thirty years of conllict with tho world, I am like a blind man In a light j overybody hits mo when I don't sco 'em ; accidents and Incidents bruiso body and soul, and I can not see whither they como or whenuo they go. What's the ue of such u fellow as I am? He's no use to any one not even him self. . . , . "You wanted to know how I lost my arm. Shouldn't you think that was a pretty bad mibfortuiio? I count that as ono of tho dingy white beads of my life, for, though I lost my arm, I Kived my life, anil I cling to llfo us If it wcro full of happiness. This may teem unreason able, yet It's natural. "If it had n't been for Kngland and Chicago, I lon't think my left slcevo would bo empty. There's nriddlo you cau't gui'i-K. No ono can guess it who tlotn't know my whole lire; una rm iP-?ifol,owini! Jiul'illo drinking catch Is by v.V Jl'm!!.M. Ixlv. v' n" "'! l found in nn.?r.'.Mrl,iJ'y 1'1"1' V"1 od "Hiadlong Hall." The BLOOMSBTJHG, the only ono whoknowltsalphabet from A to wclll almost to .for I don't think I've many moro years to live. "Perhaps you'll not think much of my riddle when tho story's told ; but you must not forget that It cost mo my arm, and you'd placo a big price on your arm Yes 1 upon a littlo bit of your lit tlo linger I Mino was a dear adventure, therefore ; but, through It, I got some thing I can't sell; nor can I buy that which went for nothing. I've said that if it hadn't been for England and Chi cago I should havo what I havo not, and should not havo what I have a dangling sleeve. To make this plain, I must go back ten years or so, to show how tho whole thing happend. "My parents, a buxom, hale, and cheer couple, with n heartiness of life and living that sweetened their food with wholcsomo llavor, wero small far mers In England. They were poor, and had six children. Children aro the teeth of poverty, and bltohard. llutmygood parents kept cheerful and worked hard, and tho teeth stopped biting after a while. My mother used to say that her children kept Iterative; because so long ns they were they dependent upon her she coultlnH give up ; and when they be came Independent, slio could not get out of tho old habits. Anyhow, they had tho children, of whom I was the eldest. When I was about twenty-two years old, I came to the conclusion that I had milked tho cows anil held the plow nnd trampled In Its furrows about long enough to prove that I couldn't succeed in life in filch a way. It's tho hardest kind of an existence, tills farm work, and I've always wondered how young men of spirit could enduro its dullness when they were working for somebody besides themselves. Shino and storm brings no relief, and finally the boy grows up to bo a man, with mighty lit tle spirit, and whoso thoughts areall for plowing and sowing tho ground and getting out of it food enough to feed the stomach of those belonging to him. I thought it would bo with me as with my father and bis father, and for gene rations of fathers and sons. "Even now I cannot decido whether I was right or wrong in going to another country. At that time we had lots of stories of how poor people thrived in America; how they had a little ease and comfort and independence iti that country before they died. Hero and there I managed to save a littlo money, and I resolved to leave tho home folks and go to America, believing that I should not fail of success. The old peo ple had children to comfort and care for them while I was gone. Ah! those were grand hope, of mine! And you see mo now ! "It was all arranged among ourselves, and father out of his little savings, gave mo money which I was to return to him if I got along finely in my new homo. But I did not intend to set out on this long nnd lonesome Journey without ta king with me, as my wife, a littlo fair halrcd las as modest and industrious a girl as could bo found in the country. This lass was liesiio Tlllot. Ono day I spoke out my love. '"Bessie, dear, will you go to Ameri ca with me? Do you love me enough for that?' "She put her arms about my neck and looked up into my faco with her great hazel eyes. "'Hobcrt.'sho said, 'I will go with theo anywhere, and bo glad all tho time.' Then she kissed me. "'But, Bessie, girl, I'm poor, you know. And there's the great ocean to bo crossed. When that's betwixt us and tho old folks, we'll ho among stran gers, and havo much to suffer. There's hard work to bo done, and, worst of all, there's tearful loneliness and hoiue-slck-ness. Eh ! Bess, can you bear liuuger in many a way?' '"Try mo! I'll go with thee, Bob, and help thee all 1 can, and bo a good wife.' I knew she was as truo as steel. "Ono night, going homo from a visit to Bess, I met Tom Brlnton. Ho was waiting for mo at tlio big elm Just by tho turn lu tho road. An idlo fellow given to beer drinking and low compan ions, he had moro money than any ono in his station In lire. Where ho got his money was uncertain. Learned in horses and in Jockeying, ho had a knack of ticklclng tho prldo of owners of nico nags lu the neighborhood. Ho was not a handsome fellow by nny means ; but his smart ways and speeches mado him a favorite with many of both sexes. The way I como to know him was be caiiso wo lived within a milo of each other and met on tho highways and nt country fairs and frolics. I had seen him too, a half-dozen times ntTillott's house during previous years. I had never liked, oulv endured him. knowing him as a very muscular fellow, a good wrest ler ami no mean player with his lists; in fact, a bully, as you call that kind ol' a man in this country. Ho was sitting on a log by the roadside. ''Ciond evening, Bob,' ho said, as I camo opposite him. 'doing away soon, I hear,' '"A fortnight hence,' I replied, not stopping in my walk. Seeing this, ho jumped up from tho log nnd c.uno after me. '"Stop, Bob,' he commanded. 'Stop! I've something to hay to you; and I want to say It to-night, now, because I'm going away in tho morning.' '"Well, what is it?' 1 said, stopping. 'I'm in a hurry.' "Yes, yes ! And your truly going to America?' ho asked onto moro inn mu sing sort of way, and looking at mo from toe to head. 'Antl-nnd -confound PA., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1867. you! is Bess going with you?' ungrlly. "'Yes I' '"Do you know, Bob Campbell, that I loved that girl, that I love her now? nnd she said' " 'There, there, don't tell mo your se crets!' I cried, with a wish in my heart to get peaceably away from tho fellow, who, it was plain to mo had been drink lug. " 'But I tctll tell thee. Why not listen quietly until I've done. 1 loved her nnd told iter so. And she refused ; but sho did not tell mo sho loved you. That 1 found out yesterday. Sho threw mo off for your baby-faco nnd tho few pounds you've begged of' "'Stopl' I commanded, pushing him away from me. 'I'll hear no more such vile stuff,' and walked off. But I had not gone threo steps when I felt Ills nrms clasped around my waist, holding my arms closo to my side. "'You shall hear me, curso you!' ho shouted,closo to my ear. 'I'vowoltedfor you to tell you that I hate you hato you because you're going to tako away from mo tho only woman on earth I can love. You needn't try to get away. Bo still, or I'll kill you. So long as I 11 vo you will havo an enemy. You'd better remember that.' "Just then I heard tho rumbling of a wagon toniing toward us. He heard it too, and for a minute stood and listened. Then with an oath, ho suddenly whirled mo around and struck mo three heavy blows full in the face with his huge list, knocking mo senseless to the ground. Wnen I opened my eyes again a farmer, a neighbor of ours, had my head on his knee and was wiping tlio blood from my face ; tho rascal had given mo ono blow that had cut open my cheek, and left a mark until this day. Tom Brln ton had run Uko a deer across the fields, the farmer said. Anyhow, that was the last seen of him in the place as long as I remained. Bess nnd I wero married and camo to America as happy and lov ing a couple as ever crossed tho waters. When I lauded in Now York my pocket was picked of all my money tho few pounds I had saved to buy mo a littlo land nnd I was friendless. It was an awful time that followed, sir." The poor fellow seemed overcomo by tho memory. Tho perspiration beaded from his forehead, his eyes filled with tears and ho nervously fingered tho glass that still contained a few drops of liquor. Then, with a determined eflort show ing Itself in his compressed Hps, With a gulping noise In his throat nnd a dash of his arm acro-s his faco ho struggled with his feelings to continue tho story. "Alter this misfortune, I tried to ob tain work. Now nnd then I got a job that gave mo enough to buy us a little food. But what could I, a farmer and a farmer's son, do In a great city that needed urticans, not farmers ? It was a hard and bitter struggle for life. I had just got a place as porter, at good wages when when my dear, darling Bessie when sho sho died." His groans and tears and sighs mas tered his firmness and ho bowed his head upon the table. I could understand the loneliness of his life, and that the dead wife was a being worshiped above all else in the world. It seemed so cru el of mo to obtain from my guest so sor rowful n story, to recall memories so fragrant with keen, undying grief, that I placed my'hand upon tho head of tho weeper, and tried by words of sympa thy ami of cheer, to lead him away rrom tho sad story of his life and leave it un told. But after a littlo while ho raised his head tho faco white and tho eyes tearful. "You must excuse me this weaknes-i," he said. "It Is nothing new. I suirer every day, as now. I cannot forget my darling. Only when I'm dead will the trouble end, and the hcart-acho stop, and tho tears be unshed. It doesn't seem right, perhaps, for a poor man to nurse his sorrow for so many years. Yet many a man does it, nnd no one knows it but himself. Ono cannot forget the happiness nnd misery of tho past ; tlio memory of them grows upon him liken cloud. I ask Clod that it may soon end." Font littlo while ho was silent, his eyes closed and his lips moving ns if in prayer. "After Bessio'i death," ho continued, with a shudder, "I took to liquor Jnt to stop thinking, to havo nn easy spell. But I only mado matters worse, and fi nally, after a touch of tho tremens, I went on board ship nnd sailed to Capo Town, in Africa. It was fivo years be fore I got back to America. I was tired of sailing and of life; but not having tlio cowardico to commit suicide, though I was always wishing myself dead, I struggled along as of old to get my dal ly bread. Drifting hither nnd thither, working n week In ono place, a month in another, 1 finally brought up ns a la borer In an elevator In Chicago. It Is not nice work, 1 must say; but one grows to bo proud of tho great things that dot tho wharves along tho nasty creek. To mo an elevator always seemed a monster, restless with hungry life; and wo poor fellows did nothing but tend to its wants, running up stairs and down stairs through clouds of choking dust, and deafened with tho din of rat tling machinery no light Job, sir, 1 can assure you, seeing that an elevator Is seven, eight, ten stories high, and big enough to hold tho houses of a small village. Ah, they aro wonderful things those elevators! And now that I am away from them I feel tho strength of their size, and what a little thing 1 was in such a place. Then tho rattle of tho cups going up or down with their fill of grain mado music to my cars, and start ed many n quwr Ihouirht In my rnlnd as I went through my hours of day or nlgld work. It was strange to sco how quick their armies of banded cups would drink to emptiness a car or ves sel loaded with grain, and carry It up to giddy heights to bo tumbled Into huge bins. Tlieso bins, sir, are forty to sixty feet deep, nnd funnel-shaped nt tho bot tom, where there Is a sort of valve or gate, which, when opened, lets thograln Into a spout. If tho gate h opened when n bin has six or seven thounnd bushels In It, you can Judge, sir, that there would be a whirlpool that would suck down tho strongest mnn to a horrible death. Wonderful, terrible monsters nro tlieso elevators, with their humps of houses on their roofs, their awkward ppouts, their dizzy heights, and dinnal, dusty, chasms of empty bins. It makes mo sick to think of them now." Tho man really did look a littlo whi ter In tho face, and nervously lingered the empty sleeve of his Jacket ; but he was over wlth.tho feeling In a minute, and went on with his story : "I had been nt work about week In ono of tho largest of these elevators, when, one afternoon, I wns sent, In company with another laborer n big whiskered, swearing, ruffian fellow, to tend to a bin that was about to be emp tied. Wo were sitting on the edge of tho bin waiting for tlio grain to run, when my companion, who seemed to bo under tho iulluenco of liquor, called out: " 'I say, Mike.' "As I havo said, tlio fellow was a ruf fian in appearance. He seemed to have quite a liking for me, as lie tried to bo with mi) in my wiirk as much as possi ble; but I couldn't bear him, nnd did everything to bo rid of him. Ho knew my name well enough, nnd it angered mo to have him call me in this way, so I said, sharply: '"My name is not Mike!' "'How should I know'." ho asked, looking angrily Into my face, ns if lie wished to mako me quarrel with him. " 'You havo heard it more than once,' I said. 'You know very well what it is, Joe, and there is no sene In giving n man a name as does not belong to him.' '"Then don't call mo Joe! that ain't my name; it's a couutcrficit. I'm Tom, which Is a better name.' "He bad a piece of chalk in his hand and began to print with it on tho big beam on which wo sat. T-o-m, T-o-m, T-o-m, he scratched in largo scraggly letters, all tho whilelooklngat mo from under his heavy eyebrows. Then ho made a B, and rubbed his hand across it as soon as it was maile. "'Bob, it's a long way down there,' pointing into tlio half-filled bin. " 'Twenty feet, perhaps.' " 'Twouldn't kill a man, the fall, eh ?' moving closer to mo. "'No!' " 'But it's as good as water to drown him If tho grain bo moving, and the dust and chuff flying?' "'Ho wouldn't live long, that is siirel' " 'Then go down thero !' ho yelled, giving mo a blow and a push that hurled me headlong from my seat. 'Go down there! stay thero! die there! rot there! Bob Campbell ; and don't forget when your u-dylng, that Tom Brlnton rent you.' "That fall didn't hurt mo a bit, and I began to crawl toward tho ropo ladder hanging against tho side of tho bin, thanking Clod that the grain hadn't be gun to move, elso 1'tl bo a dead man in mi time; but us soon as tho ruffian saw what I was aftor, ho went round and pulled up tho ladder. '"Let that alonol' I shouted, feeling how littlo hope of escape I had with the ladder nut of my reach. Ho laughed, and filing tho ropes over tho beam. "'Do you mean to murder mo?' I cried. "'No! I'm going to leave you there, Bob. You've fallen in you sco ; that'll bo tho verdict when they find your body. You'll want your shovel, man, to mako the thing look natural ; I'll throw it to you in a minute.' " I felt quite sure that it was so dark in tho bin that ho couldn't seo mo very plainly, if at nil, and that ho tried to lilt me with thoshovel. I crawled clne to the side, witli ono cheek against tho wood. Looking up, I could seo him, directly nbovo me, peering down into tlio gloom, and with that shovel In his outstretched hand, ready to spear at me as If I wero a fish. Thero followed a stillness that continued for fivo minutes during which ho stood on his guard. Sudd"!tly, I heard-tho muffled rattle of machinery, and felt n strango power pulling nt my feet, whllo my whole body seemed to bo sliding gently down ,u bottomless pit. In nn Instant I know what was happening. " The (rain imj running I "I madly Hung out my arms, and my fingers clutched ono or tho upright beams. As I drew up against the rece ding torrent, I heard a laugh above mo, and tho words : '"llemember Bossio Tillott, Bob Campbell, and that I loved her, anil the words I spoke to you by tho big elm ! (lood-by !' "When I looked up tho man was gone rrom my sight. I don't know ex actly how I managed to climb that big beam. I think thero wcro nails here and thero that helped my feet anil hands, for nfter I was rescued, my body was round to bo covered rrom head to root with great gushes or scratches. Anyhow, slowly nnd painfully, I man aged to reach tho top, and threw my left nrm over tha edge of tho bin, and j;w?ed hr hrepth, Then "hen I "'fl so near to safety, to hope, to lire, I felt a horrible, sickening blow upon my arm a blow from something neither dull nor sharp. I scented to feel tho cutting of -tho flesh, nnd to hear the breaking of tho bono. Tho nrm, bat tered and broken, lost Its grnsp, nnd I fell back Into tho horror and darkness of the bin. Hardly had I touched tho yielding wheat when my shovel was thrown from above, nnd struck within it few Inches or my head. Though my arm hurt mo terribly, I didn't faint, I was helpless; tho dint wits stifling, tlio grain was whirling, and tumbling and hissing, as It slid towards tho vor tex a few feet distant. I heurd the murmur of machinery In motion, nnd tho rushing sound of the wheat as It poured Into tho spout. Where I lay tho grain had not yet begun to inovo luto the littlo whirlpool ; but I knew it would only be a minute or two before I should bo toeing and struggling in that treacherous quicksand, and then stifled, mutilnted, and dead, at the spout. The dint seemed to circle nbovo me, and leave me a little air to gasp. "Lying thus, hopeless nnd helpless, a carelessness or death came upon inc. My lire came to mo in all Its details, Its Joys and sorrows. I had visions or green Ueld,and heard tho soft gurglo or brooks and tho songs or birds, nnd tho rustling of leaves. Then Bessie's sweet face, as it was when we wero married, smiling and pretty with dimples, seemed to bo above, and close to mine, as if waiting for a kiss, as lu tho oldeu time, before sho was taken rrom me. I mrgot nil elso but her race. 1 had only n con sciousness that 1 was going to her that sho was waiting Tor my release that she might go with me on the last great jour ney. It seemed as IT tho great roller would never como nnd givo mo to my darling. "I mut have been growing uncon scious, I think, ibr a sudden throb or pain in my arm robbed mo of my wife's face, and brought back tlio old feeling of resistance against death. I felt that I was going downward, gently, but ir rcsistably that every grain beneath mo was moving nnd shifting and slowly descending. Tlio circle of tho whirl pool had reached me, and was dragging mo down to torture and to death. I couldn't 1 wouldn't submit to such n death ! It was horrible ngony of soul and body, sir. T screamed for help ; but the tlust, entering my mouth, nose, and eyes, strangled and blinded me. 1 looked for the shovel; it had disappear-1 etl. I wtw going, too. Maimed and gapping for breath, I fought against the power that was slowly, but surely, drag ging mo down. I plunged my arm deep into the wheat, nnd tried to pull myself up. In the dismal, murky light or tills hideous den, I struggled as but few men have ever struggled. I was a giant in my battle for life. I thought no more of my broken arm. I was burning with lieal, parched with thirst, blinded nnd choked with the lino dust ; but I fought and shrieked for help nil the time. In my fierceness I tore my clothes from my hotly nntl Hung them away, and tho grains of wheat scraped my wounds and pierced my naked flesh as I tried to spring forward ; but nothing hurt me, not even my nrm. "Hard as 1 struggled I could not get clean away from tho whirlpool. H 1 leaped forward, or crawled a littlo way over the treacherous surface, I found, when I stopped, that I was swiftly slid ing hack again to my old place. It seemed as If I struggled in tills way for hours, yet I accomplished nothing. Tired nnd breathless, I looked around, and felt sure that In less than three minutes I should bo In tho spout, and a dead man. My efforts wero In vain ; there was a certain circle beyond which I could not go. Onco tho thought camo into my mind that, to savo inyseir rrom tho horrors or the death before me, I had better open a vein nnd bleed t( death ; but I could not find my knife, and had I found it, I might not have been able to uso it. Well, I saw every thing plainly. There was no hope for mo; I mut die, nud must look and wait for my death. When hope divert ed me, a kind or resignation to my fato succeeded, ami I closed my eyes weari ly, never thinking to open the"m again. "Gradually my body slid downward. Tho noise of the grain ru-hing through tlio valvo or gate became louder ami louder ; tho stilling dust was thicker and heavier. A thoiiMtid unseen, irre sistible forces were drawing mo to de struction. Suddenly my body fell sev eral feet. I felt the tremendous suction of the whirlpool. Tho grain crept up legs ; it reached nntl pressed heavily up on my breast nnd luck as ir to squeeze (he life out or me; it ascended higher and I cla-pcd my throat. Then I closed my eyes and waited for death, lno longer feared Its tcrrt.rs. "At this nioueut I felt that there wa astraugosllenco; oven in my half-con-scions condition I realized a ehango In my surroundings. Tlio dust began to settle. I realized what had happened. " The ftilrc iron elnted, "At the very gate of death opened to r..ni.!v. im. tln.ro wns nil nh-ltlclo. nnd I . i.. g. , - , - : fainted away with Joy. When 1 became ' conscious again, I heard a voice crying ( out, I " 'Is nnyho.ly down thero ?' said this i voire. That question was twice repeat ed before I could answer, and so faintly that It was but a husky whisper. " 'It's nil humbug, a falsealarm .Urn.' saltl another voice. 'Wo are fooling by traveling up anil down thens twenty storiec. Wo can't strip work for fiich nonsense.' " 'It's not n humbug,' saltl the ono who had llrsit spoken.1 'You saw as well ns I, the shovel, ami hat, and shirt como through the spout. There's a man to follow, this way or that. Uilloo there 1' "It seemed to mo iw If I had tho nightmare, so hard did I try to teak out, but I didn't mako a noise. Yot, when I heard them going twvny, leav ing mo to my horrible death, tho nolso In mo got the better of my throat, and I yelled so that I inyseir was frightened . The men camo back. '"I knew ho was there,' wild Jim, 'Aro you hurt man? Of course he, la, or ho would not bo there. Where tho devil Is theladder? That looksstrnngo It's hanging over the beam. Clivo mu the rope and lantern.' "1 saw the light, a blessed star or ro ller, como slowly down against tho wall or tho bin. A littlo later, I was raised, as tenderly us possible, to tho top or tho bin nnd thence carried to earth. A sur geon was soon obtained. Ho looked ut my nrm that was making mo cry with pain. '"Mortification. Amputation,' wns tlipjudgihont, nnd the arm was cut off. That is nil,' said my guest, drinking bin liquor and raising from his sent. " 'And what has become or Tom Brlnton ?' I asked as he reached tlio door. " 'I'm looking for him,' he answered with the old ugly look about the oyw and mouth, and ho stalked out or tho doorlntotho night." lkadWs Monthly. AETEMU3 WAItD'S THHE9HINQ MACHINE. My wire's n exceedingly practycul woman. I luv her muchly, however. nnd humor her littlo ways. It's n reck less falsehood that sho henpecks rae. and that the young man In our neigh borhood who said to mo ns I was dis tending my diafrmno with a gentlo cocktail at tlio villago tavern who said to mo in these very langwidge, "Go, home, old man, onless you want anoth er tea pot throwed at you by B. J." probly regrets having saltl so. I said, "Betsy Jane is my wife's front nntno, gentlo youth, ai.d I permits no person toallood to her as B. J., outside tlio family circle, of which I nm it princi pally myself. Your other observation I scorn and disgust, and I must polish you off." He was a able-bodied young mnn, nnd removln his coat ho inquired if 1 wanted to be ground to powder T I said yes, if there was a powder grind 1st handy, nothiu' would afford mo greater pleasure, when he struck mo a painful blow into my rigid eye, causiu' me to mako a rapid retreat into the lire place. I hadn't no Idea that the enemy wa so well organized. But I rallied nnd went for him in a rather vigris style for my time of life. His parents lived near by, and I will simply state that fifteen minutes hail only elapsed after tho first hit, when ho was carried home on a shutter. His mammy met the solium procession at the door, and after keer folly lookin' her offspring over, sho said : "-My son, I see how It Is dlstlno ttmlly. You've been foolin' around a thrnshlu' masheen. You went in at the place where they put tho grain Into the thingumajig, and let tho hossw treatl on youl didn't you my son?" Tho pen of no Ilvln orthor could describe that disfortunato young man's sltawa tion moro clearer. Butl was tiory for him, nud missed him till ho got well. His reg'lar original fattier bad been sent to tlio war. I toltl him I would bo a father to him myself. He smiled n sickly smile, and said I'd already been wuss than two fathers to him. Tnr. Miskuiiw ok a BACHKixm. What a pitiful thing nn old bachelor U, with his cheerless liouso and his rueful phiz, nn n bitter colli night, when tho cold winds blow, when tho earth is cov ered with snow. When tho firo is out and in shivering dread, ho slips 'ncath the sheets of his lonely bod. How ho draws up Ills toes, all encased in yarn hose, and ho buries his noso 'noath tho chilly bed clothes; that his nose and his toes still encased In yarn hose, may not clmnco to get froze. Then ho puff and ho blows, and liosayj that ho knows no mortal on earth ever suffered such woes ; and with all's ! anil with oh's 1 with his limbs to dispose, so that neith er his tocfl nor his noso may bo froze, to his slumbers in silenco the bachelor goes. In tho morn when the cock crows, and I ho sun had just rost, from beneath the lied clothes, pops the bache lor's nn-e, nntl as you may "iippose, when ho hears how the wind blows, sro the windows all froze, why back 'ncath tho clothes, pops tlu poor fellow's noso, for full well ho knows, if from that bed ho rose to put on his clothes, that he'd surly be froze. A Di'tciiman out west lately married a second wife, a week after the loss of wifo No. 1. Tho Sabbath following, tha bride nsked her lord to take her riding, nnd was "out up" with the following response: "You link I rldonut mlt nn ruler woman, so soon after the death of mine frau? No.no." Tun Sand tumid, on the 'I'ittbiirg and Conncllsvlllc railroad, is at Inst cut through. Its total length ! 4,700 Tett, being 1,000 feet more than tho long tun nel on tlio Pennsylvania Central rail way through tho Alleghanips, between Altooiin nntl Cre-sson. It U Intruded for n double track, nnd Is twenty-txri feet wide by nlncte? n feot in height.