January. THE WEST SHORE. 5 who could go to labor on shore had to cut wood to make steam for another day. Il was obtained with hardship and of indiffer ent quality, but anything that would burn was the motto and quest, and at last, as the day was nearly spent, enough had been cut and brought and stowed awav. All day the blinding snow storm continued, and it required the incessant labor of the passcn gers and crew to clear it from the steam er's decks. Another start was made for Cathlamet, however, and again the attempt was ineffectual; and the same cheerless landing place sought for a third time. The situation now began to have its depressing influence upon the very few who up to that time had maintained their spirits unbroken and stood faithfully by Cat. Hoyt without the manifestation of either anxiety or alarm. The condition of all was really alarming. The deep snow and the remote ness of the nearest habitation that could possibly be reached from the landing, ren dered the prospector hope of aid or succor from that quarter almost impracticable and futile; and upon the river they could neither return nor push ahead to any habi- laoie point, me weather was growing colder rather than moderating; the ice was freezing thicker and firmer; and the chances were that the boat would be frozen in the solid ice just where she was. With these gloomy facts and these disheartening and terrifying forebodings, it is not to be wondered at that the little band so peril ously ice and storm-bound began to show tokens of grave alarm and despair. They could brave all that must be borne; but they could not control or overcome the elements, and if they perished they would have, added to the terrors of death, the agonizing appreciation of the fact that they must perish so near and yet so utterly cut on irom rescue and from those who would risk their own lives to save them. And orrow, and with barely a ray of hope to encourage or sustain them, on the night of that memorable 8th of January those on board the Multnomah early sought the blessed unconsciousness to surrounding or impending dangers which sound sleep assures. GLADNESS DISPELS GLOOM. With a resolution inflexibly adhered to. on the sixth day Capt. Hoyt steamed away from the port of refuge and despair, and again headed for Cathlamet. He would either make that landing or seek some other; but he declared he would not again return to the inhospitable haven to which he had three times been forced. He made good his word. That afternoon Cathlamet was reached; but the successful effort had been made only by .the most prodigious and exhausting labors of every man on board and by the extraordinary energy and masterly skill of Capt. Hoyt himself. No other steamboat at that day in Oregon waters could have withstood what the staunch Multnomah on that short but most difficult trip encountered; nor did she come out of it without bruises and severe injuries. Her wheels were nearly battered into use- lessness, and not a paddle or bucket in either was whole, while most of them were entirely broken away; and her bow and sides were cut into, torn and shivered. At Cathlamet the passengers and crew were welcomed to the hospitable home and abundant store of the late James Birnie, of the Hudson's Bay Company, one of nature's noblemen and by all the old pioneers of Oregon remembered with great respect, and he entertained them in his generous manner during their protracted detention there a period of about three weeks until the condition of the weather and of the river warranted Capt. Hoyt in resuming his remarkable trip, or voyage, as it might be appropriately termed. A FRESH START AS HOUR OF IMMINENT PKII. At the earliest prospect of an opening in the river to Astoria, Capt Hoyt again re turned his onward way. But it wit not until two or three unsuccessful efforts that, at last (Feb. d), he made his departure from Cathlamet. But just as he got well out in the bay a little below that point, his steamer was forced into an ice pack, and in a short time was frozen in the centre of a great floe and carried with it down the river at the full speed of an unusually strong and swift ebb tide. This was a gratifying assistance in one respect; but in another, it came laden with the fear of deadly danger. Yet, viewed as it might or could be, there was no help for them. The steamer could not be extricated from the icy grip, and thus her living freight must submit to whatever destiny there was in store for them, bright or dark, joyous or fatal. In order that readers may more clearly comprehend the situation and appreciate the peril the steamer was in, we will explain that at that time there were two distinctive currents, which branched off from Tongue Point the one into the ship channel, which leads to Astoria; the other diagonally across to the Chinook shore, on the Wash ington Territory side, and thence out over the Columbia bar to the ocean. Were the floe of ice in which the steamer was tight and fast to go with the ship channel current, there would be no fear of her reaching Astoria safely; but if it took the other, the danger was imminent, lot. either the steamer might be wrecked upon the bar or lost outside at sea, with little chance or hope for the safety of any on board. It can readily be conjectured, then, how anx iously and with what painfully intense inter est the whole party waited and watched for that most critical moment of their very tedious, wearisome and exhausting trip from Portland. At length, the exact place was reached. Nervous with the terrible the thinness of a shaving, and jt was won derful she had not gone to the bottom at the lime she was extraicatcd from the floe when in deep water ami so was it Provi dential. THE RKTVRX TRIP COXCI.I'SIOX There remains little more to relate of the narrative as we have received it. It was not until twenty days had elapsed that the ice in the river had sufficiently dis appeared to permit the resumption of nav igation. Meantime, there had been three or four arrivals of steamships from San rrancisco, with about 100 passengers in all, who were detained at Astoria, and anxious to get to Portland. The last week of Feb ruary, taking advantage of the first favor able indication that he could proceed on up the river, Capt. Hoyt started from Astoria on the return trip, with about forty passen gers. After he got above Tongue Point he encountered a good deal of floating ice, and it was difficult to make headway through the narrow openings. He could get no farther than Cathlamet the first day, and remained there that night. The night of the second day he got to St. Helen's, and was then full of hope that he would find the river clear all the way to Portland, by way of the Willamette Slough, which rarely freezes over. But he was doomed to-disappointment. On the way up, the morning of the third day from Astoria, when about throe miles up the Slough, an impassable barrier of thick solid ice was encountered. Either the boat had to return to St. Helen's and stop there until the river should be open, or to be run ashore where she was and the passengers to proceed to Portland in the deep snow. A consultation was held and the latter I. in a moment he acted as if he wanted to shout for a boat, and was afraid he was miner tn 111 hnnirrv T t.ni lt.tU o D i .ti, a unit: llltil.lSM'S 1 ...:..l. t tt.. . lsl- Auy came uunrusoc wasnt hungry for flies just then. He was home sick for his web in the comer of the wnnd- exuicment, tremulous with unutterable course agreed upon. Accordingly the emotion, and with gaze intently fixed upon steamer was safely shored on Sauvie's the action of the diverging currents which then held as in a balance their very lives, they watched and waited. The floe swerved to the right; It deflected toward Island, a guide was engaged to pilot the passengers, and on the evening of the second day the fifth from Astoria Capt. Hoyt and his passengers reached Portland. He u.c urcaueu vmnoon snore; ii rogvau ojl flltT been gone nearly two months, and he into ih rhannpl tumrli liwl i li: v. . .1 . .. . .. .. , . Drougiu to mis ciiy me nrst and only news the sea, to their peril, to almost certain death I There seemed little chance for rescue small ground for hope; and yet hope sur vived, and it inspired the undaunted com mander and all on board to the perform ance of the most dcsierate and almost superhuman exertions to extricate the steamer. Her rudder was next to useless, her wheels were wanting in arms and pad dles both, and the stock of fuel was barely sufficient for the exigency and it might be required for another momentous crisis upon the bar or out at sea. But the moment was critical, and the chance, though rail, must be instantly taken for the rescue. With all the steam that could be carried ready at the captain's command, the attempt was made. The ice was cut away astern to give her room to back, and then, with all her power and force, under full head of steam, she was driven to break her way through the floe. By the tremendous exertions of the whole nartv, and more by Divine interposition, this last and saving effort resulted successfully, and in an hour or two more the Multnomah REACHED ASTORIA, And, with scarcely the use of her wheels and without her rudder on, the steamer hauled into her wharf, and there landed her precious freight, all full of praise to God and thankful and grateful to Ca. Hoyt for his untiring sen-ices and indomit able pluck in their behalf. They had been nearly one month on the way from Portland. MlRACt'LOl'SLT SAVED. And now we have to add an incident which causes the rescue of the steamboat from the ice floe to appear actually mirac ulous. While she was lying in her slip at Astoria in perfectly smooth water a few days after her arrival there, she suddenly sunk. Fortunately the water was quite shoal, and she grounded with her upper works all clear. An examination showed that the ice had cut away her planking to from California and the outside world which had been received for that length of time, and after the most eventful and extra ordinary round trip between Portland and Astoria that has ever been made a trip few could have withstood. Nor did the gallant old Captain withstand it. It was the last he ever made. The trials and hardships and exposure he had so willingly, fearlessly and bravely met and surmounted, without com plaint and without immediate apiarcnt affect upon his robust nature, had been too severe, and had drawn enormously upon a vitality which could not lie restored; and in a short time the earthly tenement gave up the immortal spirit which had shown to the world a strong, good, honest man, Cod-fearing and God-loving, to wing its flight to the Great Giver, and the mortal clay was followed to the grave, where earth to earth and dust to dust returns, by dis consolate relatives and mourning friends, who revere his memory and with undimin ished honor regard his name. It is these who hold in firmest and tenderest recollec tion "Captain Richard Hoyt'i last trip." A SPIDER S BRIDGE. "One chilly day I was left at home alone, and after I was tired of reading Robinson Crusoe, I caught a spider and brought him into the house to play with. Funny kind of playmate, wasn't it Well I took a wash-basin and fastened up a stick in it like a liberty pole or a vessel's mast, and then poured in water enough to turn the mast into an island for my spider, whom I named Crusoe and put on the mast. As soon as he was fairly cast away he anxiously commenced running round to find road to the mainland. He'd scamper down the mast to the water, stick out one foot, get it wet, shake it, run round the au'ck, and 17 the other side and then run back up to the lop again. Pretty toon it became a serious matter with Mr. Robin ton, and he set down to think it over. At 1 I shed. He went slowly down the pole to me water anu touched it all around, slak ing his feet like pussy when she wets her stockings in the grass, and suddenly a thought appeared to strike him. Up he went like a rockel to the top and coiiiiiicii.eU playing circus. He held one foot in the air, then another, and turned around two or three times. I I e got excited and nearly stood on his head before I found out what he knew, and that was this, that the draft air made by the fire would carry a line ashoro on which he could escape from his desert island. He pushed out a web that went floating in the air until it caught on the table. Then he hauled on the rope until it was tight, struck it several limes to sec if it was strong enough to hold him, and walked ashore. I thought he had earned his lib erty, so I put him kick in his wood-shed again." A frirn-d furnishes the followino-- M sweet "sprig of geranium" has a fashion, when speaking of her beaux durirar their alsence, of styling them "my swains." Her pa heard her speak thus. I went to see Jennie one evening, and was met at tho aoor Dy the "old man." After the custom ary " How do vou do?" and comment n the weather, he blurted out, "I suppose you want to see Jennie r 1 nodded affirma tively. He then called her ; and from up stairs, over the balusters, sweetest accents replied, "Wliat do you want, par" "Come down at once, daughter, here's one of your miiul" Imagine my sensations amidst her ringing laughter after the old bov'i exitl A sick man was telling his svmntoms which appeared to himself, of dreadful to a medical friend, who, at each new item of the disorder, exclaimed, "Charming I delightful I Prav iro on I" and when he had finished, the doctor said, with the utmost pleasure. " Do vou Itnnur. . ' J 1 my dear sir, you have got a complaint wiucn has Decn or some time supposed to be extinct f" Young America will out. Mr. Panlie. or some one of his nrofession. wan nil. dressing a large assembly of Sunday- school children: " Now, my little hoyt ami girls," he said. " I want vou to be vorv still so still that you can hear a pin drop." 1 ncy were all silent for a moment, when one cried out at the top of her little voice, ' Let her dropl" A traveler, in relating his adventum told his listeners that he and his servant had made fifty Indians run. Observing the looks of incredulity which erected this astonishing narration, he added that there was no great matter in il, " for," said ho, " we ran, and they ran after us I" A very intelligent ladr. ridiiur btelv in the rear car of a long train, remarked 10 her companion that the train teemed to move very slowly ; and a moment after added, with a most Partingtonian uncon sciousness : " But pcrhans it's because wa arc in the hiltarf A FRIEVD Who had Silent the ffrMilr tart of the day in writing invitationt to a funeral undertook, In his nrcoccunied mux of mind, to ask a blessing at table, and com menced" fritnJt, rtlalivit, and aiquainl anatr A suppressed titter brought him to hit tenses. A man not a thousand miles from hero once asked another whom he liked tho best to hear preach. "Why," said he, " I like Mr. Johnson best, because I don't like any preaching, and his comet the nearest to nothing of any tliat I ever head." The bent bill or fare in a rood nppetight. Mice verr seldum cum out ov & bole that iz cluwlr watcjied.