A SinKC, Editor and Publisher. hb is a prbeman whom the troth makes free, ako am, are uteS beside, - Tms MT . - - . . , . -. Terms, $2 per year In advance. bLUME 4 EBENSBURG, PA., THURSDAY, APRIL 28, 1870. NUMB ER -T4 b. SPRING. 1870. ' . ,..1 4-.-. fT J m now pn-piwtu w unci rpERlOR INDUCEMENTS TO CS POKCITASKRS OF ! aRT-nnW ft CHFPF.R Mil EITHER AT WHOLESALE OR RETAIL. lxi consists in part of every variety of Tin, Sheet-Iron, rrR AND BRASS WARES, ESAMKI.I.KD AND l'l.AIN aucepans. boilers &c , is' IjOL'SF. FURNISHING HARD "VACE OF EVERY KIND. F prat 'a Anli-Ouit Tii; and COOKIMi STOVES, KELS1UR COOKISG S'JVVES. LE 'I'lUUMTH am. PA If LO It COUK- ' ISO STOVES, iir.y Cocking Stove desired I will get a orJerrd at manufacturer's prices. ttove I'lates aiul Grates, &c, fur re- on fur '.he Stoves I sell ; others e ordered when wanted. Particular attftition given to :uting, Valleys and Conductors, f which will be made out of best mato- L, and put up by competent workmen. sp Burners, Wick and Chimneys WHOLESALE OK KETAIL- uM call particular attention to the Light ..tliurrkr, with Glass Gne, for giving t liilit than any other in use. Also, the hiaguii DKrner, fir Crude Oil. GAR KETTLES AND CAULDRONS bf all sizes constantly on Laud. . Special attention given to bbing in Tin, Copper and Sheet-Iron. at lowtfi poibible rates. Wholesale Merchants' Lists jsv ready, and will be sent on application by mail or in persjD- Inpirtj tope all my old customers and ny new unea thi Spring, I return my . . .1 e .i i buicere uianKs mr tne very tioeral pa 1 have already rcceiveu, and will aver to tlas-a.l whuinav call, wiieth- Ley luy vr ujt ... y w FRANCIS W. hay. lhn.-town, March 7. 18C7. SLaT- Rkdictiox in Pkices ! TO CASH It I Y Eh SI tT tiii: i:ki:sri iig Jri IrVll'NIVfl cm iaiulersi.T.td respectfully iniornis the 'st.f EU-usburg and the oullic tener lilt lie has made a great reduction in to CASH KUYEIiS. My stock will ;t.m part, of Cocking, Parlor and UetU of the most popu'ar kinds ; Tin- LI everv CPseriiitinn of mv nwn m.m- . l - v .- ' luau are; Hardware of all kind, such as s.Sc.ews, Butt Hinges, Table Hinges, tT Hinges, Eo'.tF, In n and Nails, Wiu CUU'utty, Table Kuives and Frk?, :T 1'r.iri.i ...1 V U f.. I-. Li n iumo, Dieat tuners, VPrs, Pen and Pocket Knives in f 1 "r.e'.T, Scissors. Shears, Kazors and h. .ixes, lUchets. Hammers. Borine '". Augers, Chissels, Planes, (bm 'VVjiiaw, Files, Hasps. Anvils, Vises, ucnps, ,Tp panei nrlfi --"fS. Grind Stonpa Potnt 'T..l-.0t,o !,'uI :'fta'Urt'R. Lumber Sticks, Horse we Siioes. Cast Steel. RirW Shnt UvuUtr, pistols. Cartridges. Pow !". I-al. Ac, Odd Slove Plates, 7 , 'ire 5"fk. Well ad Cistern ' a,ul Uhinir : Ihll-nr 'wall km.l; Tchnanil Willow Ware Tan.-ty ; Cnrb.ni Oil and Oil Lamps, '. Lard n;i r; ' v' ware, t aicw, v armsn AMILY GROCERIES. 'in.'MJ'M. .VC. .a.'tlft. Sugars, Molasses, Sjr-;-l''cw. Dried Peaches. Driel Apples, : tl-miny, Craokera, Rice and Pearl r-'w; Faint. Whitewash. Scnb. Horse. "t:ng. Varnish. Stove. Clothes and a "rushes. nTI h-xr,ATLJ T...1 nd M;inillf, P,..." the lowest rates for CASH. VAue Spouting made, painted and rut ,f ww rates for cash. A liberal discount country dealers buying Tinware rim -IITT.,mi-n'W r8jfb. 28. 1867.-tf. ;eorgeTv. yeager, WfcM.l. and Uetmll Dealer in MTINS AND COOK STOVES 0P EVERT DESCRIPTION, p. COPPEfl nil mmim mi UUIIUI 1UU13 IIUiAXJ his own manufacture, Gf M FD A I lonnrn nnnn-riim -'-iinL juDoLn in ruu i inu all other work in hi Hue. 'a Street, near Caroline Street, ALTOOXA, PA, - fil l'h. lhe Clv naving the right to rnoned "BARLEY slTEAF c0h. SfOVE. the most perfect cor,ipiet-and Batisfactory .v.e eTer introduced - - - " ' to the public. - ; ' - IitmiKSE. -. Prices Low.' IfACTlON GUARANTEED. k an?iBErER, BEST The best i and v. uo. f 4L L nPe.Bt Tobac "a Cigars m towa - , . VV UV fr . 4c rc r ..ii i r-- i. Kinrts. hhovels. Spaces, Scythes Forks, Sleigh Bells, LWs, Pc;;.,, ',yax RristlPs 1 REAL ESTATE SAVINGS BANK, No. C3 Fourth Avcnne, Adjoiuing new Merchants1 and Manufacturers National Bank, PITTSBURGH, PA. ESTABLISHED I 18C2. ISAAC? JONES. President. -WM. H. SMITH, Vice Presid eot. , S. S. CARRIER. Sec. and Treas. B C. PARKE. Accountaut. E. B. TOUD, Solicitor. " TEl STErS : ' Hon. Thos. M. Howe, Jacob Painter, Hon. J K. Moorhead, C. O. Hussey. Harver Childs, W'm. II. Smith, ' Isaac Jones, P- w- c- Bidwell, Nicholas Voeghtly, Jr. Statement of October 30, 1S69, ASSETS 1 . Bonds and Mortgages, being first liens on Real Estate $502,957 0o U. S lc!l Bond,atpar S"t,0'JQ HO IT- S. 10 40 Boiida. at par 25,000 00 Real Estate 2,720 47 Office Furniture 418 60 Cusdj 51,400 32 x Total $6tl7,4D6 3U LIABILITIES." Amount due Depositors 550, 1C3 71 Interest, Nov. 1.18C9 .... 14.027 79 Contingent Fund : . 43.364 59 Total.,... '; $fi07.4'Jtf 39 INTEREST ALi.OWF.1)" on Deposits, at C1X PER CENT. PER ANNUM, payable to Depositom in M iy ai.d November, which, if not drawn, will be added to the principal, and COMMCSDKn. " ' Open Tor Deposit from 9 A. M. to 3 P. M., daily : also on Saturday Evenings, Irom G to 9 o'clock. 2P"Money loaned on Bund and Mortgage only. Slips for the use of depositors who can not v'sii the city, and copies of Charter and By-law furnished bv mail. " S. S. CARRIER, Secretary and Treasurer, No. 63 Fourth Ave., Pittmbcecii, Pa. November 25, lfcOU. 5m. 5-20 3 AND ssrs B'JVGHT, SOLD AXD EXCIIANOtP OX MOST LIBERAL TERMS. liOCGIIT AND SOLO AT MARKET 1?ATE8. COUPONS CASHED, PACIFIC R. BONDS KOICSIIT AXI SOLD. STOCKS BOUGHT AND SOLD ox coirxissiox oxly. Accounts Receiv'd and Interest ANow'd OX DAILY BALANCES, SUBJECT TO CHECK AT SIGHT. r'. 40 Moxitlx TIIIR D Street, rillLADELPIIIA. OF HAKTFOUD.CONS. Ciaatl S. Ecsrs, Pres't. - - Fraacli 8. Dosglass, Sec'y. rpHIS COMPANY ranks among the first JL class Life Insurance Companies doing bus iness in Massachusetts, and by complying with the laws of that State, insures perlect safety to her Policy Holders. It grants 50 per cent, loan of premium on Life Policies to its Insured, and by applying all the cash collected from its members to Iusurince, gives the largest Insu rance attainable for the amount of money in vested. Its profits are divided among the Pol icy Holders, and its Dividends have never been less than 50 per cent., thus bringing the net cent of the Insurance within the most limited means, and affording the protection of a Policy on terms not excelled by any Company, s Trustworthy and reliable men are wanted to act as agents for this Company in Cambria and adjoining counties, and with such the most liberal arrangements will be made. To those who may be unacquainted with the business, full instructions and aid will be most cheerful ly rendered whenever desirable or available. COPE & JOHNSON, . i Ageuts for Cambria County. ; ; Johnstown, Pa. IIoMt & Norton, General Agents, t4 Fourth Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa. apr.l4.-ly.J Poor women are oft every side, and orphans cry for bread, because husbands and fa thers lived and died uninsured." AMERICAN 1YCI niYliti im)uii.iiu Li vun OF PHILADELPHIA. Organized 185 0. ALfcx.WmiADiJi.Prea.. .Jonx S. Wilsok, Sec. All policies non forfeitable. All policies are payable at death or ou years ot age. Economy in management, Cark :n the selec tion of risks, Promptness in the payment of death claims, and Skcuritt in the investment of its immense funds, are rigidly adhered to and have always characterized this Company. J. FRANK CONDON, Special Ageut. - Nov. 11, 1B69.-1.T. AUDITORS' NOTICE Estate of JankHowxand. The undersiened.' having been appointed Auditar bv the Court of Common Pleas of Cambria county, to make distribution of the money in the hands of the Sheriff arising from the eale of the real estate of Jane Rowland (late Jane Rodgers) and Isaac Rowland, her present husband, ' hereby gives notice that he will attend for that purpose at bia office in Eb ensburg, on Tcxsoy, th 17tb or May, at 2 o'clock, p. if., when and where all persons in terested ccrj atKnd. : . JOHN gMSYy THE GREAT FLOOD. A GUANDMOTUKIt S STORY. How long was it, do you risk, little Benny ? Sixty-one years, if it was a day.. It. is now June. I was eeventy nine the tenth of last April ; and that worst day of lhe Great Flood was on one other tenth of April, exactly sixty-one years before. ' It Was my eighteenth birth day, too ; I remember it as well as any thing else that happened. For that matter I remember it all well enough;, it's not very likely that I shall forget such a time h8 that was until the sods cover me. Come here to my knee, little Kenny, and I'll tell you all about it. : . The country was new then not so new that the Indians or wild animals troubled us much, for there were only a few of the Uelawares. very near us, and they were so much civilized that they cared for nothing but whisky ; and a stray wolf or cata mount was all that troubled our pigs or chickens When I say it was a new country, I mean that it was pretty much all woods, with very few settlements, and not many people in them. They were mostly along the , banks of this river, for almost every one was lumbering or raft ing ; and that was what brought father here from Vermont. My mother died away up among the Green Mountains ; and it always seemed, to me as if he couldn't bear the old homestead after that. He grew very restless and uneasy ; and one day he came home early in the afternoon and said to me : "Daughter, I have a chance to sell fhe place at a bargain." Shalt I do it ? This hasn't been like home to me for two months. I think I'm wanting new scenes and new faces to blunt the grief I have for her that's left. us. Shall we go to Pennsylvania, Hessy t I've a plan to go into the lumber tnfde ; and mayhap I'll make so much money in a year or two that we'll go to Philadelphia, and you'll be a fine lady the rest of your days. Shall we go', liessy V' Poor father! The dear, kind soul lived and died with the wish, nearest his heart to make me a fine lady. I'm thank ful that he never saw it accomplished ; but he did see me become a useful woman, and, I hope and trust, a good wife and mother. How that happened, Benny, is the story that I'm telling you now. Look from the north window, there, boy ; I'd come and look with you, but my rheumatism is bad to-day. No matter. Dj you see that long point of land, a mile up stream, that runs out into the water ? Yes ! well look a little closer at it. Farthest from the shore it spreads out into an acre of good, high land, but the narrow neck that joins that to the shore is commonly almost as low as the bed of the stream. There are great high stepping stones across it now, that father laid there when we first came; and we used to walk dry-shod over them when the spring rains had raised the river. I remember but ono solitary time when the water covered the stepping stones as well as the neck "of land, and that was the time of the great flood. Our little house was built on that high land out in the middle of the river a two story frame affair, with two rooms down stairs and two up ; and, after all, it took all the neighbors to raise the roof. It was an odd notion of father's in putting it there ; l'C u?ed to say that the day would come when he could sell' off valuable water privileges around his acre. That day hasn't come yet, Benny ; but some times, when I think of poor, dear father, and all his plans and schemes for me, and of what happened, I really think that something like Providence put it into his heart to fancy that queer little corner out there in the river, and to build our house there. I am going to tell you what I mean right away. ... After the? little house was built. and fur nished,! I stayed at home and kept it, and father took to the wjpods with the loggers. He led a hard enough life from that time on till he died ; summer and winter he was at woik with his men sometimes at the logger's camp, then hauling the logs to the river and rafting them down to the bay, where he sold them to the contractor. There were weeks' when he wouldn't be at home a day but Sunday ; but when he was rafting I often heard his shout on the river, and could see bun. waving his hat from the: raft as it went slowly down the stream with the currents 1 hopa I was a good "daughter in those days ; I tried my best to do all I' could for bim. I kept the house neat and tidy, and mended bis clothes ;, and regularly once a day I cook ed a great mess which was taken up hot to the logger's camp in a great tin pail that was got from the city. - I was lonesome-like often enough, for there were whole days that I did not see a human being to exchange a word with, but Ben Sample, who almost always came for the dinner. Heigh ho I Its long enough ago that I'm telling you of, and handsome Ben Sample was then hardly twenty-one. I don't know, my boy, but the lads are as handsome and sprightly and as good now as they were threescore years ago ; if I 6ay not, it. may be because I see them through an old woman's eyes. And that I can't see the charm that I could once. However that is, I know I never saw so fine a lad every way as that one was.1 He was not over tali, nor yet short : he. was of middling' height, with i broad, eboalders and. big hands, and was as strong as any two of them so father said. He had curly chestnut hair, and red and white cheeks, like a girl, though ! sunburnt ; and his eyes were great blue eyes, and his teeth shone so when he laughed, (and that was often,) that any body would have liked him." - And then he was so honest and clever, and so kind and obliging, that before I bad seen him many times I came to like him right well ; and one day I happened to say to father that I thought Ben Sample was an excel lent lad, and that I wished I could have more of his company. I never saw father look stern all of a sudden, as he did then ; and I never heard him speak so stern, either. "Better leave him to his place, Bessy," he said, very quick and sharp like. "He's naught but a poor lumberman, after all," and he's not likely to be aught else. So don't be tender with him, daughter ; I bid you naught, ' If you've felt any too kind to him you must check it in time. . Have little to say to him, daughter ; it's your father's wish." Poor Ben I There had been no talk of love between us before this mornincr. and I do not know that I had thought of him at all as a lover ; but by and bv after a few weeks more, when I had tried hard to obey my father's command and treat him colJly, he lingered one day over the great tin pail long enough to press my hand, and whisper bashfully "Dear Bessy!" I snatched my hand away and looked hard at bim, and told him that he must never say or do that again. He left me, looking as grieved as I ever saw another mortal look ; and when he was gone, I went out to the log seat by the river and cried as though my heart would break. I didn't know my feelings till then, but if Ben Sample could have seen me that half hour ! Ben did not come with the great pail after that ; another man took his place, and things went on in the old lonely way all the rest of that winter and through the next spring." It was the first week of March, I think, of that year, that father brought young Mr. Cardie to the house. Young Mr. Cardie was the only son of old Jacob Cardie, the millionaire, who lived in Philadelphia, and was contract ing with father lor all his logs for years to come. The old man meant that youn Jacob should succeed him in business in a few months ; and ha thought it would be an excellent thing to send him up into the logger's country for awhile, to get ac qnainted with the difFetent kinds of lumber and the process of cutting it and getting it to market. Father thought it would be an excellent thing for himself to entertain him at the house while he remained ; and so for the next five weeks they were reg ularly at home morning and night, sleep ing in the house and spending the day in the woods or on the river. But it wasn't hard to see that young Mr. Cardie grew tired of this very soon ; and presently he began to come back to the house in the middle of the day, and fish or shoot in the neighborhood until night. You'll want to.know what kind of man he was. lie was pale and slender ; hand some enough for those that like such beau ty as that in men ; and rather foppish, with Ins diamond ring and his silky mous tache, lie was very polite, too, and be would talk and chatter as city folks can ; but I never thought there was much heart or good feeling in anything he said or did. Yet he seemed to like me from the first, and poor father whispered to me ten times, if he did once : . "Play thy cards shrewdly, Bessy, and thou'lt catch him! He'll make thee a lady, girl, and a rich one !" And stranger things have happened, I know, than my marrying bim would have been ; surely affairs were rapidly drifting towards it, and I had almost succeeded in crushing the thought of Ben Sample out of my heart, and playing the part that my father wished me to play to young Mr. Cardie, (for I never could have persuaded myself to love him,) when that fatal Tenth of April came that brought my eighteenth birthday and the Great Flood together. . The river had been rising slowly for a week before it, and there had been much rain with us. We heard reports of tre mendous rains in the mountains two hun dred miles north of us, which lasted for davs and days ; and the river continued to rise steadily and slowly, though up to that day' it was not over the stepping stones across the neck. ' , On the morning of. the tenth the rain came down at .first steadily, and Mr. Car die thought he would not leave the house. Father went: over to the camp just after breaktast, saying that ho would return as nsual toward night ; and so we two ppent the day alone together. 'I tried to talk with him and interest him, but he was restive and uneasy, and half the time was idly turning over leaves or drumming with bis fingers on the window-panes. - - It was about the middle of the after noon, when I was wondering what I should do next, (and thinking a little of poor Ben Sample, I believe.) that Mr. Cardie turned short around to me and said, very abruptly: "I'm going bask to the city to-morrow, Bessy. I want, to know if I can come back here in ihrea months that'll be the middle of July and make you my wife?" I looked Btraight at him and said not a word, but, oh, my boy, how I did. think of Ben!" ' "I'm rich enough for both of us, and to "pare," he wool on ; "and you're every thing I want in a wife'. .. You know you're nanasome, isessy, ana l suppose you are good. "Will you marry 'me when I come again!" ' - - I never thought of myself or my own feelingB ; I put all thoughts of Ben out of my head, remembering my father, and faid, "Yes !" nothing i more. I don't know whether. Mr. Cardie would, have kissed me or not he had no chance for hardly had I spoken that word when there was a knock at the door, and I open ed it to admit Ben Sample, himself! We were all three of us rather ill at ease for a moment. Mr." Cardie knew Ben, I suppose, and must have heard something about his old feelings for me, for he stepped back to the window' and frowned, never ' speaking or nodding to .Ben, who stood there with his hat twirling in his hand, awkward and abashed. He only found his tongue when I asked him to sit down ; then he said : '" 'Nay, I can't stop. I only came to bring your father's message that he won't be home to-night. : The rise in the river has broken loose the great raft at Logan's Ford, that was to be floated down to morrow morning, and he's gone up with all hands to moor it. He can't be here to-night." ' That was awkward news to me, I had never thought of staying in that lone ly place without father ; and it was little consolation to think of Mr. Cardie as a protector. Just as I had a question on my tongue, Ben Fpoke again: - - i "You don't know how fast the river is rising,'f he said. " "Out on the stones the water is almost to the tops of roy boots, and is rising higher." "Do you think there is any danger in staying here to-night ?" I asked, in some alarm. "Maybe not," he answered doubtfully, "but I never knew the river to be so high before." "Ben, Ben. what shall I do?" I took no notice at all of Mr. Cardie, and felt no safety except from the presence of Beu. 'Didn't father send any other word?" "None at all." "And won't you stay?'' "After what has happened, Bessy? I shouldn't think you'd wish it." . Then he must have seen how grieved and sorry I looked, and how alarmed I felt, for he added, right away: "Yes, I will stay, Bessy; if you wish it, though I trust and believe there's no danger." I. thanked him with a look, and before I could say anything more, Mr. Cardie spoke. "Do you think there's any danger of the river upsetting the house !" he asked. "It surely will if it rises high enough," Ben replied. "Hark, hear that !" Generally, when the door was open, we could hear a faint ripple of current, but it now bad a coarse, loud 60und that was new to me. Ben looked dubious as he heard it. "I don't like that," he said. "Let me go out and see." He was not gone three minute?, and be came back with his face full of trouble. "The water is within twenty feet of the door," he said. 4 'I don't suppose I could wade from here to the bank. We must leave here at once, and when you're safe, I'll come back and save some of the things If the water gains like this, all the floor will be under in an hour." He went out again ; I knew what for. The west foundation wall of .the house was next the river, and father always kept a skiff tied there. I understood from what Ben said, that he. meant to bring the skiff round to the front and take us to the shore. I was putting oh my hood and shawl when he came back. " His face was as pale as ashes," and never noticed me at first, but looked all round the room , and into father's chamber. . ' "Where's that fellow Cardie?" he asked. I had not noticed that he was gone ; he had been standing by the window just be fore Ben went out the last time. "I thought it," Ben cried, and his face looked half sorry, half mad. "Bessy, do you know what has happened ? The skiff is gone ! and that man with it." - I looked terrified into his face, and then followed him to the door and looked out with him. It' was almost night, but what there was of daylight left showed us a mad, white-capped torrent Of. water, rush ing through the channel between us and the shore so near to us that we. could have stepped off the lower step into it, and roaring and whirling, in a manner that was fearful to see. ' The rain had ceased and I'didn't then see how the; river could rise so ; but I understood it ' afterward, when they told me tfiat it was all owing to a sudden thaw up in the mountains that had melted the snow in the gorges and, poured hundreds of new streams into the rivet all at once... We looked a moment, and then came back into the room. I was afraid, I suppose ; but not so much as I thought at ' first. - Somehow I . felt a sense of security with Ben Sample there, that robbed the situation of all the terrors it would have had without him.' ; I hard ly thought of Jacob Cardie, and now mean and heartless be was to abandon us 60 and deprive us of the " means of safety, when Ben warned to save us together. "Ben will save me," was all I could think of; and! suppose I repeated the words to myBelf a hundred times. Once I must have spoken aloud, for he said : "I wiil, Bessy God' willipg. I will pray for strength that I way.". t I He knelt there on the floor and prayed and I knelt beside him ar.d took one of his hands in both of mine.. . When we arose we heard the first low washing f the water against the east FidVVf'.the house, mingled with the louder rushing and brawling of the torrent beyond, When it grew so dark that T could not see Ben's face, I lit a candle ; and we sat Ihere together in silence, I holding his hand. My heart was too full for speech, and Ben said nothing but a word of com fort now and then, c: ;;:..-. ' . , There's nothing foj. us;!o do but to stay here and hope for tUe best," he told me once. And then added, "While there is life there's hope; and when there's none, I'll not leave, Bessy." Dear, noble' Ben I ' T wanted tn ilmw myselt on his breast and tell him my se cret, but something prevented I" don't know what and I only pressed the hand that I held. There was no slackening to the river ; it rose higher and higher every moment, and by ten o'clock . the water was over the floor where we stood. Ben had carried the trpnks and the things I cared most for up ptairs ; and then we took to the second story. Here we stayed for two hours more, I .listening all the time for the sound of oars and voices, for I hoped that father would come and take us off. Midnight came, and I 'grew im patient, and complainingly asked 'Ben if he could tell why father did not come-and 'rescue ns. . : - ..... . .''I'm afraid I can, Bessy," he answer ed with a grave face. "The great. raft went down the river two. hours ago; I heard the voices of men shouting, .and I don't doubt your father is carried away with the rest. But don't be afraid ihey are all safe, I hope, and they'll get to shore when morning comes." I couldn't help crying when he 'told me that, and I nestled up to him as if I had been a child, and he put his strong arm around me. It was not long after this that we felt the house settling and tipping, and not much longer wheait ca reened half-way over, and was whirled away into the river, by the torrent that had been undermining the foundation. That was an awful hour my 1ad ! Ben held one hand around me, and with the other hand grasped the window sill, while he braced his feet in the corner of" the room ; and the rising and the falling of the poor wreck under us, a3 the heavy current swept us along, gave me at first the feeling that we were going first to the bottom. The wind moaned outside, the water beat against the planks,, and the beams cracked and gaped as though tho poor old bouse was falling apart. Lonsc Uelore dayligut we both saw it was set tling down deeper and deeper into the water, which rose over the upper floor ; and when Ben had succeeded in knocking out the skuttle, he dragged me out on the roof how, I don't know. I only know that he did it, aud but for him my drowns ed body would have floated there in that old wrecked house when morning came. And 1 don't know much about the rest of how that dreadful night passed. Ben sat upon the ridgepole, and held me on by main strength ; and in the cold and dark ness I believe I slept ; certainly I forgot where I was for a long time, and forgot I was cold too. But then I didn't know, until I woke up at broad daylight, that Ben had taken his coat off and put it around my shoulders. The house had sunk so low that one of the eaves was tipped clear out of the water, and the other was three feet under. We were drifting slowly down the centre of tho stream ; the shore was almost a mile off on either side, and there was not a sail nor sign of help in sight. I looked at Ben perfectly hopeless und calm in my despair, and he looked back with hope and course- "There's one hope yet, Bessy," he said, cheerily ; and his finger pointed to an ob ject floating ten rods behind us an object the sight of which filled my heart with gratitude to God, that He had heard and had answered our prayers. It was my father's skiff, with the oars lying in the bottom of it, following along in our tracks as if to save us from destruction. I un derstood at once how it was : Jacob Car die had drawn it up on the shore after deserting us, and the rise of the flood had carried it out ; and falling into the strong current of the neck, which set towards the middle of the stream, it had followed us all night. Ben looked wistfully ,at it, and measured with his eye the distance to it. The roof to which we clung was alter nately sinking and swaying, and the .water sucked and eddied ominously 'Afou'rid it. 'This old thing can't swim many min utes longer," he said. Can you hold on here alone, Bessy, while I swim out to the skiff and bring it to you?" He did not wait for me to reply, but lifted me to the place where he had sat, and showed me how to grasp the ; bare rafter," where the boards had been strained off. When he had done' this, he stopped, just as he wasgoing to let himself into the water, and looking at me with a tenders mourn ful look that I can never forget no, not jf I should live to be twice fourscore ha said . -.-: . You'll be safe in ten minutes I hopie; may God speed me for your sake I Yet if anything should happen to either of us, that we shouldn't meet again in this world, I must tell you now, Bes.y, that nobody has loved vo as T - have that nobodv loves you now as I do. Believe me dear, for it is true. : iff ."I know it, IJen--I know it !' I soWiedj, and I put my, face up tobis. He benv over and kissed ne,"with such a loko mighty surprise arid oVer whelming joy a dou't ;belie,ve any man ytjrfbad Leere ; and crying out, -"Hold hardBi'Sfy-rlioLi fast girl V". he jumped into the rjyer jvnd, struck out for the 6kitF. , "' , iV."- I did not tell liim when he Jeftihat my rVands were fold,' almost iiumb'; and held tight' to The Vaftef.'hdSvatdied" film while "the Wm in Vy hands innd' arfiisval destressing!-me"aorelyrc Psaw Turn" raeli the pkiffj arxl balance himself, and" ltibor rareflilly. over its side to get in withoai everturning it ; aid when ha had accom plished- this ny"sfre"ngtK"vaTImost.gooe. My hands were giving,' slipoing Tzuade one last spasmcoic euorl to retain my hold, and shobted wildly to Ben. "1 heard the splash of oars, and his" loud;4 cheer voice encouraging me; darkness overtook me as roy hands -slipped their ' grasp -Clutching aL the. shingles,--1 'slid down ward, down, but not to my watery grave. The skiff shot past me..,.-Ben-Sample's arm snatchod me from my peril, and 1 lay safely in the bottom of the bo at while his stout arms rowed me toward the shore. "Look there," ' ho exclaimed, "and ' I looked my "fast at the poor old Lou.e. The roof heaved and settled, the waters wash ed np over it, and it sank in a wild whirl pool that sucked it down. ' -- "That was the last of our danger.'-'-AVte .go: to the shore and found a.", house; and before night we had a chance te take 4 schooner up the river.- In a day nr two father came up with most of 'his' mern; and such a meeting as we had! tho 'raft had beerTcarried off by the flood, as Ben thought, and two of the men had perished by drowning. And when I had fold hi&i the true story cf our night in the house afloaft he "took Ben by'the jiaiid, wi(h tears in his eyes,, and-beggU Li a pardon fur thinking that anybody cop Id be better than such a brave, noble fellow as he had proved himself. ;- ' .."And especially that cowardly sneak, Cardie,"- father added, with a savage slap of his hand on his knees.. -"Plague., take me ! what a fool I would be, sometimes, if I had my own way.'.. 4 ,j As for Jacob Cardlt, J never, heard a syllable more of him, I never wanted to. I am not 'sorry "that I met him, for ho served to show me the difference between Ben Sample "and the little creatures the world of fashion4 and wealth calls men. Well a day - It's many a long year that I have lived as the happy .wife, of that same Ben Sample, and its- not many sinco God look him before tne. How old are you, little Benny J Nine, indeed! Then he died just nine years ago ; you were named for him, boy, for you "were born the morning that he died. He wa your own grand-father, little Hen ; and I can give you no better wish than you may be as brave, as strong and as good a man as was he. L'pphuotf s Mugazhte. t The Newspapek A child beginning to read becomes delighted with newspa pers because he reads names which are very familiar, and ho will progress accord ingly. A uewepaper in one year is worth a quarter's schooling to a child and every father most consider that substantial infor mation is connected with this advancement. The mother of a family being one of tho heads and having more immediate char" 3 of the children should herself be instructed. A roindoccupied becomes fortified against the ills of life, and is braced for any emer gency. Children amused" by reading or study are of course considerate and more easily Governed. How many thoughtless young men have spent their earnings in a tavern or grog shop, who ought to have been reading? How many parents who never spent twenty dollars for books for their families would gladly have give,n thousands to reclaim a son or daughter who had ignorantly or thoughtlessly fallen into temptation. Ex. A lady writer in the Chicago Journal is severe upon cruelty to horses. She says : "A thousand shames upon the brute who would lash the terrified horse ! Go whip your wife you and fully capa ble of it. Tt ll me a young man will make a good husband if he will abue a dumb beast ! I tell you I would rather marry a Sepoy! Take my advice, ye o'oofl; maidens contemplating matrimony never marry a man who is impudeot ? to.tus mother, snubs his sister,, helps himself to the largest piece of cake, or Jakes the under flapjack at table, or beats las Tiorsa causelessly in sudden temper." Oxk of the hours each day' wasted on trifles or indolence, saved and daily devo ted to improvement, is enough to make an ignorant man wise in ten years to pro vide the loxury of intelligence to a mind torpid from laek of thought to brighten up and strengthen-faculties perishing wilh rust to -make life, a fruitful, field,-' ad death a harvester of glorious deeds, - ': 1 , ,,A ci.fcjBQYMAX, ' in a, recent sermon, Jn NTcw Xpk, quoted an anecdote of an oJJ merchant who instructed bis clerks ;- VWbeo a man couaesjnto a t,ore and talks of his" honesty "watch! bin ; tf bo talks of hiswealth. donit't'ry" W".efl him ; fif he talks of tis religion; don-rnigf liirrv a dollar: " " ' is!;-.-- " ' . - -- ? 'PE contented- with-your lot eecUfU . I u us on tne corner. . 'ir-r