2 THE TIMES NEW BLOOM FIELD, l'A., MAY 10, 1881, the tangled mass of lialr flying about her fuco. ' Now for the ferns," snld Deli, after reallng fur a few minutes. And oir she ran, now gathering a fine fernjUiid now rejecting it for a finer fine, and going Into transports of delight over each new discovery. " What beautiful moss on that old log!" suddenly exclaimed Deb. "I'll have some of it !" And oir she ran toward the log, and was kneeling clown beside It, when, without a moment's warning, except a faint crackling of breaking logs, down went Deb, disappearing so suddenly and noiselessly from mortal view that the ground seemed to have opened and swallowed her up, which it really had ione, since she had fallen into an opeii ing in the earth, which had been made years before by some parties who were prospecting for coal on the bind', and the logs and boards with which they had eovered the treacherous hole had become so decayed and rotten,and withal so moss-grown, that they hid from view the trap under them, and Deb's hundred and twenty pounds avoirdupois had been too much for the weak timbers, and down, she went Into a hole at least twenty feet deep, iu about twelve inches of water. She was slightly stunned, but not in the least injured, the boards and logs under her having lessened the force of her descent, but the pretty white apron and cleau dress were sadly smeared with the dirty, stagnant water that had splashed up alt around and over her, and one of her pretty "Oxford ties" was missing, and was lying at the bottom of the pit in mud and water. Deb's first move was to get out of the water; and, fortunately for her, she succeeded in getting on a log that had fallen in such shape that one end was above the water. Bhe saw that it was utterly impossible to get out of the pit without assistance from abave, and when she remembered she had not told a soul where she was going, and might have lo remain all night in her uncom fortable quarters, she felt like crying, but was too philosophical a young lady to cry when it could do no earthly good to do so. , And now we will leave Deb to her own reflections, while we return to Aunt Nancy, who is wondering why Deb don't bring her the eggs, but finally come to the conclusion that she has failed to find any, and is romping iu the barn, and therefore goes about her work unconcerned about her darling's absence, when, had she known where she was, we do not think we exaggerate in the least when we say that she would have gone at once into hysterics. Three, four, and five o'clock come and go, and it is nearly six now, and no Deb ; when Miss Naucy remarks to grandma that Deb 1b gone an unusually long time, and she thinks it possible that she has fallen asleep under some tree in the orchard ; she will go and see. But neither searching nor loud cries of " D-e e b," or "Deb.o-r-a-h B-a-a-r-lo w 1 " brings to light the truant girl, and Miss Nancy returns to the house slightly alarmed now, for the Bun is nearly down, and she feels confident Deb would not remain willingly away so loug when there are so many things she intended doing before night. As soon as Nathan comes from work he is told of Deb's unusually lone absence, and he and MIsb Nancy at once begin a thorough search of the premises, all the while calling loudly for Deb ; but no reply comes to them from barn or orchard, from garret or cellar, and poor .Nancy comes to the horrible conclusion that she has been kidnapped by two tramps whom she saw pass the house in the afternoon, which conclusion, having been reached incapacitates poor Miss Nancy for doing anything but getting belli ml the kitchen door with her aprou over ner neau and sobbing ptteously while poor grandma takes to her bed in a paroxysm of grief. And now it is long after dark, and the young folks come in, merry and laugh ing, to the party, and are informed of Deb's absence, and Miss Nancy's sur mises, and all the young men provide hem selves with lanterns and join In the search, while the young ladies do all they can to comfort grandma and Nancy, the latter, however, being quite inconsolable. First and foremost in the search is Tommy Deane, his young mind filled with fearful forbodlngs, and must I tell it V his eyes with tears. He seizes a lantern, and goes out alone, and, by mere accident, for so excited was he that he knew not where to go, he goes in the region of the bluff, vowing fearful ven geance on the wretches who have stolen or killed "his Deb," and then and there consecrating his life to the accomplish, ment of the aforesaid revenge. Deb is still sitting on the log, silent and anxious. She has hallooed herself quite hoarse, and could scarcely utter a 9 I 1 I . . souna, wueo sun lmugiues sue nears a uoite above her head, and, had not her disordered Imagination construed the noise into the tread of a bear, she would have made a desperate efTort to cry out, and while she is thus perplexed with doubts and fears, she hears the voice of Tommy Deane, who, wearied and excit ed, is seated on a stump at the very mouth of the pit, and Iu a very dolorous and romantic toue, indulges in the fol lowing soliloquy, every word of which Deb hears : " Khali I ever see her again, my lost one! my Deb 5"' 'Yes, Tom, if you can invent some kind of 'a hoisting apparatus that will support the weight of a young lady who weighs one hundred and twenty, you can again gaze upon your Deb," gasps out the young lady from the pit, her doubts and fears all dispelled, and her love of fun restored at once. " Why why Deb, where are you V" cries Tom. " Twenty feet under ground, in twelve luches of water, the hungriest victim of Fate ever heard of. Get me out as quick as you cau, and I'll promise you faith fully that I wou't make you marry me, as the rescued heroines always do in novels." But all of Tom's inventive genius can not devise a method of getting her out of the pit until her returns to the house for assistance, and ropes or ladders. Therefore he leaves Deb his lantern, which he lowers with a string, and re turns to the house, meeting a party of searchers on the road, and together they return and rescue Deb from the pit; and she is escorted home iu triumph, on a hastily constructed platform, borne on the shoulders of half a dozen young gallants, which honor, Deb declared, compensated her for all her distress in the pit. As it was nearly midnight before Deb was found, there could be no party that night, but Deb promised them that if they would only return the following evening she would surely be there to welcome them, and she was, aud a jolly time they had; but Deb kept poor Tommy Deane in an annoying state of blushing all the evening by eyeing him in an extremely comical manner, and occasionally asking him in a sly whisper if he had found his "lost one" yet; but fickle girl that she was, she broke her promise given to Tommy, for she mar ried that young man Just five years afterward, and we are therefore enabled to bring our story to a close in really novel and romantic style. Swiftness of Birds on the Wing. PKOFESSOIl NEWTON considered that were sea fowls satellites revolv ing around the earth, their arrival could hardly be more surely calculated by an astronomer. Foul weather or fair, hot or cold, the puffins repair to some of their stations punctually on a given day, as if their movements were regu lated by clock-work. The swiftness of flight which characterizes most birds enables them to cover a vast distance in a brief space of time. The common black swift can fly 270 miles an hour, a speed which, if it could be maintained for less than half a day, would carry the bird from its winter to its summer quar ters. The large purple swift of America is capable of even greater feats on the wing. The chimney swallow ninety miles per hour being about the limit of its power; but the passenger pigeon of the United States can accomplish a lourney of 1000 miles between Bunrlse aud sunset. It is also true, as the in genious Ilerr Palmen has attempted to show, that migrants during loug flights may be directed by an experience partly inherited and partly acquired by the individual bird. They often follow the coast line of the Continent, and invarla bly take on their passage over the Medi terranean one of the three routes. But this they will not explain, how they pilot themselves across broad oceans and is invalidated by the fact, familiar to every ornithologist, that the old and young birds do not journey in company, Invariably the young broods travel together, then come, after another inter val, the parents, and finally the rear is brought up by the weakly, Infirm, moulting and broken-winged. This is the rule in autumn. The return jour ney is accomplished in the reversed order. The distance travelled seems, moreover, to have no relation to the traveller. The Swedish blue throat per forms its maternal functions among the Laps, and enjoys its winter holidays among the negroes of theSoudon, while the tiny, ruby-throated hummingbird proceeds annually from Mexico to New foundland and back again, though one would imagine that so delicate a little fairy would be more at home among the cacti and agaves of the Tlerre Callente than among the firs and fogs of the north. t The man who is accused unjustly can afford to maintain silence, but the man who is justly accused must make as great a pother as possible In order to throw people off the track. SUNDAY READIN3. How to be Happy. Married people would be happier if home trials were never told to neigh bors. If they kissed and made up after every quarrel. If household expenses were propor tioned to receipts. If they tried to be as agreeable as in courtship days. If each would try to be a support and comfort to the other. If each remembered the other was a human being, not an angel. If women were as kind to their hus bands as they were to their lovers. If fuel aud provisions were laid In during the high tide of bu miner work. If both parties remembered that tuey married for worse as well as for better. If men were as thoughtful for their wives as they were for their sweet hearts. If there were fewer silk aud velvet street costumes aud more plain, tidy house dresses. If there were fewer " please darlings," in public, and more common manners in private. If wives and husbands would take some pleasure as they go along and not degenerate into mere tolling machines, ltecrealiou Is necessary to keep the heart in its place, and to get along with out it is a big mistake. If meu would remember that a woman cau't be always smiling who has to cook the dinner, answer the door-hell half a dozen times, aud get rid of a neighbor who has dropped in, tend to a sickly ba by, tie up the finger of a two-year-old, gather up the play-things of a four-year- old, tie up the head of a six-year-old on skates., and get an eight-year-old ready for school, to say nothing of sweeping, cleaning, etc. A woman with all this to contend with may claim it as a priv elege to look and feel a little tired some times, and a word of sympathy would nut be too much to expect from the man who during the honeymoon wouldn't let her carry as much as a Bun-shade. So Say We All. The President of the Limekiln Club stated that he was in receipt of a com munlcatlon from St Louis, asking the club how it stood on the Bob Ingersol question of Ood or no God. He would ask Sir Isaao Walpole to answer it for himelf and all his fellow members. He was willing to abide by what the good old man said, and he believed all others would be. The white-headed old man, old aud wrinkled, and burdened with the weight of seventy years, arose in his seat, look ed around him and quietly began : " If dar am nu God, den dar am no fuchur. When we close our eyes In death, de bou! dies wid us, an' we moul der to dust de same as de brutes. It has been a long journey to me. In my heart am de mem'ry of wife an' chil'en. My days have been cloudy an' full of woe, My nights have been dark an' full of sor row. I have beeu robbed, cheated,abus ed, au' made to feel my wretchedness; but neber, not eveu in de darkest hour did I doubt dar was a God, nor did I lose faith in Him. Take away dat faith to-night make me belleb dat dar am no heaben tell me dat I won't meet my poor Chloe, an' de blessed chil'en up dar 'mong de angels, an' you would crush me down an' break my ole heart. Dat's all I 'pear to he llbln' for to wait de Master's call to close de ledger oh life and go home, home ! I am old, an' poor an' lowly ; hut here In my breast is a feelin' dat I wouldn't sell for all de gold in de world dat all de arguments ob a million Ingersols could not change; a feelin' dat poor as I are, an' lowly as I am.de grave will not be de las' ob me. During his remarks the hall was qui et as the grave. When he had finished it was full a minute before anyone mov ed, then Brother Gardner softly said " As says Sir Isaac, so say we all." A Darkey Preacher's Advice. " De man dat knows dat he am mean tricky, dishonest or degraded an' jit who sots down to wait for any 'tlcular day on which to vow dat he will do bet ter, won't be apt to make any change in his system dat his naburs will notice Ebery day should be a day for sw'arin off from whateber am mean or often slve. Ebery day should be a day for resolvln' ondoin' a leetle better dan de day befo'. If you do wrong doan wait for de special day, but do right at once. If you feel dat you am mean au' low lived, doau' lib a day waitln' fur de new y'ar, but ax some one to kick yer right ort." 0"Vhen we are iu prosperity we are ready to think our mountain will never be brought low, so when we are in ad versity we are ready to think our valley will never be filled up. 0"Most men keep on hand a large as sortment of evils, while their stock of excellencies is ruinously low. fon Tim Timkj. Great Floods In the North-West. During the last month or mnm. mini of the North. Western States and Terri tories nave sustained many heavy losses, caused by the great floods that have occurred. Diirlnir the winter the ninnn. tain sides and plains were covered with a great mass of enow, and as the snrluir 1 tl.M ....I.I II I .. iiiicmcu me Biiuueii maws caused the streams to swell to overflowing. The heavy ice together with the Immense seas of water lias done much dumage to that section of the country. A short distance below Yankton, the capltol of iJRKota,tue .Missouri river llows through a pass between two ridges. Here a great Ice gorge formed Itself, miles iu length, appearing as firm as the hills it connect ed, and caused all that section of the Territory north of It to become flooded. Thousands of acres were Inundated and all through large sections the farmers lout ail they possessed in this newlv settled country. The floods became so great mat a portion or them sought au outlet across the country to the Big Sioux river, thirty miles east. All mall communications with Yankton and many oilier towns were suspended on account of all the railroads being under water. The farmers' cattle were drown ed, their graneries and the contents destroyed, farming implements, every thing except the land itseir. was either washed away or destroyed. Hundreds of settlers lost all they had and are now in great distress. Many of the destitute farmers and villagers were fed by Gov ernment rations issued in pursuance of au order from the President. This relief was necessarily very temporary aud It will take a large sum of money and much time before those ruined homes can be rebuilt, after the water has re ceded. Besides those settlers have noth ing to support themselves with until their crops can be harvested. Aid has been solicited and our large cities are responding liberally by sending money and provisions. It is feared that all the submerged grain is a total loss. Enorm ous floods have beeu reported all over that part of the country. Iowa, Minne sota and portions of Nebraska, Illinois and other States, have met with the same misfortune. Much damage has been done all along the banks of the Missouri. Many large cities together with hundreds of smaller places have been flooded. Omaha and Kansas city were inundated. At Omaha the water rose twenty feet above low water mark and put out the fires of the smelting works there. Atchison, Kansas, was also flooded. Many washouts have oc curred and bridges washed away. Miles of railroad were under water aud much of the traveling has been suspended The railroads used each others tracks indiscriminately so as to keep up com munication. Along tne kock river lu Illinois much damage has been done. Many iron manufactures met with seri ous losses by the floods putting out the tires. The streams in Minnesota have all overflown their banks and carried destruction In their way. Special dis patches from tne interior or Wisconsin report alarming floods. At Fond du Lao the water flooded the city, and lum her yards became floating wood yards Many washouts and serious accidents have been reported. Never before in the hUtory of thai section of the country have such great floods occurred and so much damage been done. The waters are now abating slowly. A. F. M. gF Mrs. Adam Grubb, 231 Walnut street, bus beeu a great sullerer for a number or years from extreme pain la tne leet, sometning line rheumatism. She was also very much troubled with corns and bunions. It was with great difficulty that she could walk, and some times when she would visit her husband's shoe store or any of her children, she could not get home again without assist ance, and often when she was walking along the streets she would be seized with such acute pain that she was com pelled to stop in at the neighbors on the way until she got better. Some two weeks ago she heard of the wonderful cures St. Jacobs Oil was effecting and she at once commenced to use it and ex perienced great relief immediately. The painshave left her feet and ankles and the iniiammatlon nas left the corns and bunions. She is now tripping up to her husband's shoe store and out to see her children without experiencing any pain, Wilmington, (Del.) Daily llejmblican, Worth Remembering. Now that good times are again upon us, before indulging in extravagant show, it is worth remembering that no one can enjoy tne pieasaniest surroun dings if in bad health. There are hun dreds of miserable people going about to-day with disordered stomach, liver or kidneys, or a dry, backing cough and one foot In the grave, when a 60 ct bottle of Parker's Ginger Tonlo would do them more good than all the expen sive doctors aud quack medicines tuey have ever tried. It always makes the blood pure and rich, and will build you up and give you good health at little cost. J tend of it in another column. 8-tt Cured of Drinking. "A young friend of mine was cured of an insatiable thirst for liquor, which had so prostrated him that be was una ble to do any business. He was entirely cured by the use or nop Hitters. J t al layed that burning thirst; took away the appetite for liquor; made his nerves steady, and he has remained a sober aud steady man for more than two years, and he has no desire to return to his cups ; I know of a number of others that have beeu cured of rirlking by it." From a leading It. It. Official, Chicago, HI. Times. 11) 2w tSDrugglsts say that Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound is the best remedy for female weaknes that they ever heard of, for it gives universal sat isfaction. Send to Mrs. Lydia E. Pink ham, 233 Western Avenue, Lynn, Muss., for pamphlets. 19 2t C?Men should not think too much of themselves, and yet a man should be careful not to forget himself. llEDBSBIf THEGREAT grt IWEMEDl. RKEUGaATISffl Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swellings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. No Preparation on earth equals Pt. Jacobs Ort, as a " u, mlmple and chrnp External Keniedy. A trial entails but the comparatively trilling outlay of BO Cents, and every one mifterino; with aia can have cheap and positive proof of iu claims. Directions In Eleven Languages. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS IN MEDIOIHE. A.VOGELER & CO., lUiltimorr, Md., V. 8. A, May 3. 1881-ly jypssER & allenT CENTRAL STORE NEWPORT, PENN'A. New offer the public A HARK AND ELEGANT ASSORTMENT OF DRESS GOODS Consisting of all shades suitable for the season, BLACK ALP AC CAS AND Mourning Goods A SPECIALITY. BLEACHED AND UNBLEACHED MUSLINS, AT VARIOUS PRICES. AN ENDLESS SELECTION OF PRINTS' We sell and do keep a good quality of SUGARS, COFFEES & SYRUPS And everything under the head of GROCERIES I Machine needles and oil for all makes ol Machines. To be convinced that our goods are CHEAP AS THE CHEAPEST, IS TO CALL AND EXAMINE STOCK. W No trouble to show goods. Don't forget the CENTRAL STORE, Newport, Perry Connty, Pa. If Tonnramnn -M by t::o strui.i t f u4 J'iUr i.ul Moid Fj cthiiulintaanrl una tU-riifo.lir.uoTeriiii;, nifri.t wuik, i. res " hop Uittors. wftous, uo hop B. sufTPTine from nny ln tion i it yo.t i.ro mRi- i u iira.it i.c: rr nnd n It yon arc younT rw.d 61 ! iHcretiuii or uipiia EJ or K.mrlo. clil or yoausr, suiteriinf from nntr on r, Lwl iok- jKwriioaltii or lantruinJi iicm, rWy cn Hop Bittars. Whor-Yer yon are. whenever you UU fty Thousand rio an nually li t. i.i Home form of KirJnoy d.sM'tti'o th.it liiifcJ.t have benprovKiuid tun. yimr ryvwut fiit or timulatiiur. vlUiOUt intoxiciiiittu, nop Bitters. riopcitters paa, Ktanry or urinary com' plaint, (Unease; D. I. C. I au r.hfoirt of th nomacJi, nu irre.-w. ta ble eu re f lrun'.ct;nnf u , use ot . oiui, tobneeo, ar uarcutic Vtricriv. iwn. You will be cured If you use Hop Bittr Ifyouftretlm- f))y weak aud owinlritril.try It I It may avtyour to? crrrxHS PQ CO.. Rofhepr, . T i its u nae aved hun dred 17 it HELP Ymirwilvfs by maklnur money when a troldeu L-tlnuce In uttered. thrabv &1wvm ktwDinif itovrrty from your door. Those who hIwhym tatktt advantage, of the irood chances for makinir mouv that are offered, generally bsoome wealthy, while thorn, who do not Improve such chances remain In tverry. We want many meu, women, boy and teirln to work for ua riKUt In their own looalitiea. Th huainena will pay more thau ten timen ordinary waea. We ftiruirth au exiienaive outht and all that you need, free. Mo out. who euRaifna faile u make money very rapidly. Yoa cau devote your whole time to the work, or ou.y your aitare ninmente. Full information and all that ia needed aeut 1". Addreaa BTI.NHON CO., Portland, Maine Canvataers In everv county In this Rtate lis take ordure for Nursery titock. Hleady and de. liable hinuUivnient at iCiooil Wanos. peri ence lu the business not ,, . . . required. Nurseries widely and favorably known. For term! address C. L. VAN DL'MKN. Geneva, N.Y. . Van Ihnen Nurxerlea, established 1839. Also Stock at Wholesale. 16BUI 1 t1 i i r J NEVER j FA 1 1 b lira Me