THE SCRANTON TBDJtji-S-ATirRbAT MOEIirnSG . JANTTABY - 25, .1890. v. frithe ' Wohderland ; u Of t-North Americao -.-Twenty-third Letter 'of Northwestern Trave!. . Puget Sound and Its Adjacent Timbef Land. By (or the most Interesting feature of the Pacific coast to me Is 'the match less inland sea, Puget Souud, and the Stupendous forest which surrounds Its shores. This archipelago extends from Olympla in the south to British Colum bia in the north, one immense harbor --.running; into the very heart of the state, the basin covering an area of 100 by 150 miles In extent, with innumer able bays, inlets and canals, their com bined areas having a shore line with- - .'. in the state of about 1,600 miles and a surface of about 2,000 square miles, washed by the ebb and flow of the tides, which rise 'and fall here twice a day "J. from twelve to twenty feet. Puget , . Bound includes the straight of Juan de Fuca, the gateway to the Paclflc ocean, which Is ninety-five miles long and about eleven miles wide, and In many places of almost unfathomable depth. The shores are usually so bold that a Bhlp's bow can strike shore be fore' the keel touches the bottom. , Nature has indeed been lavish to this favored region. Here are nearly 6.000.- 000 acres of the finest fir, cedar, spruce, hemlock and. other varieties of timber growing "upon boIIs of the greatest depth and richness in the known world. 1 repeat, there Is nothing on this earth like Puget Sound. On either side of this beautiful -sheet of water are per ennial snow-capped mountains the serrated ridge of the unexplored Olym pic range on the peninsula to the west ward, on the opposite Bide, eastward, '"' the Cascades, stretching north and . south like two great guardians of the Sound basin, its waters ebbing and flowing between them, each lifting their snow-capped peaks to the clouds and presenting views ever changing, ever .leasing, . sublime and unexcelled. .. Its Wonderful Rssonrsss. i y Just thlnkof these Islands, bays and Inlets being lined with the native giants of these evergreen forests, whose tim bered ' spires are lost In the snow crowned peaks above and surrounding them. The average traveler has but a '"faint idea of the wonderful resources or this great Inland sea. As a harbor, when compared with San Francisco, New Tork or any found on the Atlan tic coast, it is far more commodious. .'. In mid-channel it has an average depth of 100 fathom. . This extraordin ary depth of water Is maintained in all the channels and branches, enabling ,the largest vessels of any nation to ride safely and anchor most anywhere along Its shores. The combined fleets of all the nations of the world, I might say, -xan cast anchor here, and not one of them be In sight of the other. The . . depth of water over Sandy Hook en trance Into New York harbor at low water Is only twenty-one feet in the South channel and twenty-two feet In the Qedney channel. Unlike thut of . .New- York, or the Columbia river, the entrance to Puget Sound Is without a bar, the strait la a magnificent gate way from the Pacific ocean to the Sound, 100 fathoms deep, . where no pilot Is required and no danger to ship ping Is found. Admiral Wllkeson says: ''On the Atlantic slope, where It was 4 Jny jnisfqrtuna. to ba born, and ftvhere ' , for fifty-seven years! have been cheat ed by circumstances out of a sight of the real America, there are no woods. East of the Rocky mountains trees are brush. They may do for brooms; pieces for, ships .are got out of them and ' splinters for bouses, but the Atlantic slope, soil and climate eould not In .ages' produce a continu ous . plank .which would reach from stem to stern of a thousand ton clipper ship. ' Puget Sound, -anywhere . . and everywhere, will give you for the cutting (If you are equal to such a crime with an axe) trees that will He straight on the ground and cover 230 feet of length, and measure 25 feet around above two men's height from ; the ground, (they are cut from stag- ." ings) and that will yield ISO lineal feet of clear solid wood below the branches. They are monarchs, to whom all wor shipful men Inevitably lift their hats." ' It la easy to share the enthusiasm of ,f the writer, who says: "Puget Sound - scenery is the grandest scenery on earth. One has here in combination the sublimity, of Switzerland, the pic turesqueness of the Rhine, the rugged beauty of Norway, .the breezy variety of the Thousand Islands of the St -Law- ; rence, or the Hebrides of the North Ben, the' soft rich-toned skies of Italy, " the pastoral landscape of England with velvet meadows and magnificent groves, massed with floral bloom and , the blending tints and bold cojor of the New England Indian summer.' Fea tures with which nothing within the Vision of another city can be placed in comparison are the Olympic range of mountains in frorit of Seattle, and the v sublime snow peaks of. the Rainier, Baker, Adams and St. Helen's, : with 7'., their glaciers, and robes of eternal ir-.,'. white.? ' , , . American MedtWrsasso. " ' Paget' Sound is called the "American ,j Mediterranean." A ride over Its placid Vr . waters In and out, around rocky .head lands, among woody mountains, along Its beauUlful beaches and velyety mea- - dows, atl beneath the shadows of tower . t. . ' ing snow-clad peaks Is a delight worth f days of travel and much expense to ex perlence. It Is no exaggeration to say rthat justice can never be done In de j, ' scribing Its scenic glories particularly ! '- the "Great White Throne," that Chris tians have dubbed Mount Rainier, but more melodious is its Indian name, vVTfMwm.a,'; to. me. . So much has al ,' J81 been said lit this and former let ;..' tot this ."King of Peaks" that it . . ' .TPM eem that the subject might be ( : - somewhat overdone, but I am sure our - 7: readers will bear another reference to f thin "royal gem." -v ' LTh Vlfw of lhl nlthty monaVch as ..... , seen Srom the steamer In crossing the .' .' Sound from. different points impresses ' ?ou " mnTe torclMy with its sublime grandeur, than from any position on . land. Rising grandly and alone, as from the level of the Sound, to a ner . pendteular height of nearly three miles fiv Pact- ".444 feet From its tow , ,-?; rbiT , summit, where, the steam of a alum be ring volcano hovers aver the tfV crown, forming what is called "Liberty Cap," down for nearly two miles or , . 10,009 feet) It Is covered with a com ,J., Jlet robe of perpetual snow, even down thelitis of the green foothills. Think f It! - This scenery is an every day af ''; fair with the eltlsens of Tacoma and ; ' Seattle, who may look from his door r , r or window upon an expanse of water, if" Itf-strrfap covered with steam and , sailing vessels that traverse the waters of Mm globe and at the same moment feast his eyes upon the regions of eter- al snow. It Is a favored moment In , our live when we- can witness these great sights In "this my own, my na tive land." Prior to the purchase ot Alaska, Id 1867, Washington was the extreme northwest territory of the United States, although now comparatively a new state, it has already achieved a prominence throughout the world that many of the older states envy. The chief Industry of Washington is lum bering. Statistics show this to be the greatest lumber section on earth. The Puget Sound Lumberman Journal says: "This immense forest belt comprises 133,089.142 acres of timber land, the. most remarkable timber body in existence. The government estimates the standing timber In Western Washington alone at 303,303,294,000 feet on 11,971,192 acres, while Eastern Washington has 11.618. 720 acres, with 100.878.041,000 feet, a total of 410.333,335.000 feet of standing timber, 35.339 feet on an average to an acre, valued at $269,561.3:9. No estimate has ever been made of the standing timber of British Columbia, but as the timber area is larger than Washington and Oregon, the amount must be still larger. Add to this the forests of Alaska, those of Montana, Idaho, Utah, Nevada and the red wood forests of California, and It aan readily be seen that the most valuable heritage a bounteous Provi dence has bestowed upon the Pacific coast, consists of her timber wealth." When compared with Washington the nine Southern timber states are not to be mentioned. The census reports give them only 280,000,000,000 feet. Neither are the White Pine states of Michigan. Minnesota and Wisconsin, which contain, according to the same report, less than 75,000.000.000 feet of stumpage. Oh; hat timber! These forests are so vast that although the saw mills have been ripping from 4,000,00,000 to 6,000,000,000 feet of lum ber, out of them every year for the last fifteen or more years, the space made by these inroads seems no more than garden patches, and there is left a thousand years' supply, even at the enormous rate tha timber is now being felled. No one who has not seen a primeval forest, where trees of gigantic size have grown and fallen undisturbed for ages, can form any Idea of the col lection of timber, or the, impenetrable character of such a region. This local ity, so Inexhaustibly rich In lumber and coal. Is called the Pennsylvania of the Paclflc coast. Some Big Western Trees. - The trees on Puget Sound are noted not only for size, but strength. They are mainly fir-spruce and cedar the latter 'produces the best shingles In the world, that will outlast pine two to one under any and all circumstances. The bulk of the fir is red Douglass, though yellow, noble and white fir is found on higher ground and in the mountains. The pro portion of fir Is about flve-elgths of the forest growth of Western Washington and grows on low lands jften to the height of 300 feet. It is, quite equal to the white pine of Michigan and Penn sylvania for ease of working, yet stronger In grain than oak and. ex ceedingly rich in grain and finish. The Puget Sound Lumberman says: "In 'order to grasp the magnitude of these figures, 'let the reader, in his mind's eye, imagine a solid train, 15,000 feet ot lumber to the car, stretching 164,000 miles, or six times around the earth, and then enough cars left to make a train stretching from Puget Sound across the continent to the middle of the Atlantic. Or, taking twenty-five cars for a train, it would take 1,085.600 trains to transport the standing timber of Washington alone. Out of the Stan Ing timber In Washington, 41,300,000 cot tages could be erected. Say every cot tage occupied a frontage of twenty five feet, the cottages would make a street 97,500 miles, both sides ot which would be a solid row of cottages." Hon. S. Garflelde, of Washington, says: "The size of the fir tree and the number growing upon given areas, in good lumber districts, are almost incred ible to residents upon the Atlantic slope. Here trees often measure 320 feet In length, and more than three fourths of which are free from limbs. Fifty, sixty and sometimes eighty of these great timber trees grow on an acre of ground."" One "berth"' of timber, so called, covering about 3,000 acres, was carefully examined, and found to con tain on an average eighty such trees to the acre throughout this berth. Our loggers work no berth of timber pro ducing less than 30,000 feet to the acre; from 60,000 to 120,000 feet being the common yield,, and over 'hundreds of square miles of area does this un cqualed timber exist." , , " On tha British Boundary. Through the courtesy of the general passenger agent of the Seattle, Lake Shore and Eastern. railroad, a branch of tha Northern Pacific we took a ride up the coast to Sumas, at the British Columbian boundary line, a distance of 115 miles. . The route la not much more than an iron'trall cut through the for est, but it gives one a Just apprecia tion of the extensive area of" tree land on the -coast -line. - What we see in our wanderings through these dense and almost unbroken forests may be If In terest to our readers, especially those who are acquainted with and Interest ed In timber. The railroad. Instead of a logging road that we expected to And, was first-class In all respects, and as we whirled- through small clearings and many little parks, and around love ly lakes and the dense forests of these giant trees, standing In their grandeur to the height often of 300 feet, waiting for the harvester; also through miles of stumps and fallen rfibnsters going to decay, which, the ruthless lumberman had left behind, our appreciation of these wonders of the forest can be bet ter Imagined than described; and to see them fall under blows of steel or under the ravages of fire, Is to experience" a pang of sorrow. After a fifty-mile run. Mount Baker looms up to the height of 10,850 feet and - Is kept in view more or less during the balance of the trip. Not so prodigious a piece of mountain chiseling, not so overpowering to the senses as old Ta- coma, yet there is a charm to Baker that la all Ita own; It seems .to get closer to us, as if on the same planet withourselves than does tha King of Peak Tacoma. MssMoth Giants of the Forest.. -' Think of what was said to us: "Fre quently a single tree Is fallen here, which Is worth alongside of the vessel, ready for shipment as much money as would pay for two hundred acres of the governmnt land on which. It grew," "A cub was cut from one of tha these Or trees that measured eight feet and nine Inches each . way."- From that stump yonder, six saw logs were taken, each thirty feet long;" this tree was five feat In diameter at the bass and the Drat limb, was on hundred and seventy feet 170 feet.), from the ground." "Here is a taw log forty inches in diameter and on , hundred feet lopg." "Th average. saw-ioga range, though,, from two to ten feet through." "A tree was cut the other day from which seven logs were taken, without a knot, their combined length being (179) one hun dred and seventy-nin feet" "This tree scaled 48,000 feet" "A hollow ce dar tree near this lake (Sumas) Is twenty-three feet In the clear on the ground and fifteen feet In diameter, ten feet above the ground." "In one of the Seattle lumber yards, there were recently several sawed sticks two by two feet and one hundred feet long." We also saw and photographed a spruce tree growing over a cedar log, six feet In diameter and 200 feet high; also a cedar stump, 60 feet In circumfer ence 10 feet above the ground; . a photo graph of this we have also. . Near Ocosta, the southern extremity ot the Sound, an enormous cedar was felled that was 467 feet high and 70 feet In cir cumference at the base. 1 confess it is painful to see thes mighty monarchs of the forest so ruthlessly laid low, and we shore the feelings, of the Scientlflo American of July, 1S95, where it says: "It Is a pity that aH such great giants of the forest, whose age Is counted by centuries, cannot be preserved from destruction." - . Nor Is this all for In company with Colonel Charles W. Saunders, of Se attlea recent visitor In Honesdale w visited the famous Port Blakeley lumber mills, located twelve miles across the Sound from Seattle, and wlt nesesd there what would astound an ordinary Eastern lumberman. In the tnaner of handling lumber for shipment. This is one of the largest lumber mills In the world, none exceeding It in ca pacity, which is over (600.000 feet) six hundred thousand feet of lumber, and (200,000) two hundred thousand' lath per day. It gives employment directly to four hundred and fifty men and In directly to hundreds of others. The area covered by this plant exceeds ten acres and fourteen ships can be loaded at once. The saw-mill proper . Is a mammoth two-story building 450 by 100 feet in size, filled with the latest im proved machinery. This plant was erected In 1888 and cost $300,000. It is a most Interesting sight, to witness the plant In operation. Statistics fall to convey an adequate account of the magnitude of the work carried on. We see carload after car load of finished lumber, fresh from the saws, dumped from the elevated railway tracks upon a chute Inclined towarus the waiting ships. Into whose .gap ing portholes these timbers are rolled by an array of longshoremen, bounu for foreign ports. These sticks, many of them were 100 feet long 18 by 18 Inches and 24 by 24 inches square, with out a particle of. sap, a rent or check, perfectly sotind and straight Often these timbers are 150 feet long and 2 to 3 feet square. . This plant Is run night and day, being Illuminated by 450 in candescent, electric, lamps. This com pany Is adding 62,000 square feet of new wharfing ..and 1,400 feet of elevated double track railway.-' Much more can be said of .this monster mill,. Its big logs, Its Immense saws, fuvnaces, boil ers, etc., would time and space permit, which Is only one of' a dozen large mills the tourist can see. - What would these old eastern sawyers think of" a mill that turns out material, enough In . one day to build forty houses, or. enough in one year for 8,200 , cottages, more than enough : to build a cltyi. which this Blakely plant does? ..Ot a. shingle mill capable of turning out enough shingles In a yar tb s.hlhgle 6,700. houses as the Stimson mill does? , . Shipments Of Spsrs. They claim the red and yellow fir Is In greater lemand for ship timber, bridges, trestles, etc.. owing to Its strength, flexibility, lightness, tenacity and evenness of fibre, nall-holdlng qualities and freedom from knots and defects than any in the world. The whole world Is drawing Its supply of ship masts and spars from here. It Is here the Great Eastern came for her masts, and later the Puritan, Defender, Valkyrie, Thistle, Mayflower, Volunteer, and Vigilant. On Windsor castle Is a flagstaff brought from Puget Sound. Many cargoes of spars for UBe In the French, navy have been sent from here. The standard size for that market is 120 feet In length and four feet In di ameter, one-third of the distance up from the foot all this after being hewn Into octagonal shape. Vast quantities of lumber and shingles are sent to, for eign lands thirty different countries from Australia In the' far South to Eng land in the North. The monste ship Oltve Bank took last summer a cargo of lumber from Hastings' mills' for South Africa of large and heavy timbers com prising over two million feet, to be ex act, 2,323.624 feet, and had she taken smaller timbers she. could have carried a half million more. This Is the largest vessel ever loaded with lumber from Puget Bound. ' , ' An official report says! There ore 250 saw mills In the state, with a combined capacity of over 10,000,000 feet per day. There are. 234 shingle' mills on Puget Sound that produced 12,000,000 shlngjes per day; think of It. a yearly output of 3,000,000,000 cedar shingles. The capital Invested In lumbering and woodwork ing plants Is over $30,000,000; the num TIMOTHY" HEALY, BRILLIAnY frost tt Chisago Ttinea-HtriJoV . fey thi Courtesy of H. H. Kobltsat) ber of men employed! 11000, and the wasjes paid yearly, $7,000.000. , . . ' J. E, Richmond. - THE FETE CHAllPETBE. Sosnathttr orth Oaaees and Daaaers to B Prtssnud' Ktxt 'Month ta the Ps-othlsgbaa Tbcstsr. . - . , .Preparations and rehearsals fof the Fete Champetr to be given . next month ta th Frothlngham. theater for the benefit of the Home for the Friend less are progressing with an earnest ness and smoothness which argues well that' the promises of the managers will be fulfilled. In that the affair will eclipse dven last year's Klrmess. The list of ,dances, tableaux, chaper ones and dancers is as follows; where the names of dancers do not appear, the list Is not complete, but may bo ex pec ted to be made public within a few days. : . . Troubadour dance Chaperones, Mrs. H. J. Anderson. Mrs. C. It. Welles and Mrs. W., T. emith: dancers. Misses Frcderlka Derman, Helen Stevens, Qraee.and Anna Roae.. Ruth Dale, Margaret Turrey ana Adda.. Bane,, and Mesam. .Dunn, Burson Sevan, Arthur Thompson, Jennings, Har ry Fterce and Dr. Peel. - Qrand tableaux of Napoleon and court. ' Tyrolean (Swiss) dance Chaperones, Mrs. F. Vt. Ounster and. Mrs. Emanuel Zttselman; dancers. Mines lizzie Hlltz. Emma Koch, Josephine Rohrwasser, Ls vlna. Schnell,' Una Slsienberger, Mamie Fenner. Uinnle Woelkers. Louise Echlot- terbach, Jennie Noth, Aseline, Rosa Rnhr- waaaervnd Lydla Flchsl, and.uessrs. ku ward : Klssle, - William WtiJchel. Charles Center,. Emtl -Schimpff,. Peter Zurnun, John Scheuer, Leo Sohlmpft. John Shoti. George DeWilde, Worth, Nelson Teets ana Louis Lange. The Court Minuet. Court minuet Chaperones, Mrs. H. M. Boles. Mrs. F;. N. Wlllard. Mrs.- N. Y. Leet and Mrs. T. II. Watkins. The SaltoreilaJ-Chapetones, 'Mrs. E. h. Fuller nd Airs. F. ,H. Jermyn; dancer, Misses Alice Matthews, Florence Voor hees. Oraoe Spencer, Louise Seybolt, Mary Blssell, Annie Buck.' Lillian Oenrhart. Caroline Bourdman. Mary Foster,- Torrey and Phillips, and Messrs. W. W. Wharton, Campbell, Be van, Dlckhard, ' Gearhart, Wolfe. Nettleton, Robert Snyder, George Dtmmlck, Harry Klrkpatrlck, Wallace Ruth,.-Sharps, Percy Mott. Tambourine dance--Chaperorieg, Mrs. L. R. Marcki and Mrs. J. K. Cohen. Gondolier dance Chaperones, Mrs. Hen ry Melin, jr., and Mrs, James ArchbaM; dancers, Misses ArchbaM, Augusta Archibald.-AUIs Dale, Flora Matthews, Frances Win ton, Clara Simpson, Lulu Welles, Skinner, Jessie Coursen, francos Hunt, Susan Jermyn, Alice Belln", and. Messrs. Frank, Thoodore and Lawrence Fuller, Hunt. . K. Chase, Merrill, James Blnlr, Jr.,- John Brooks, J. H. S. Lynde, Bliss, Russell Dlmmlck, B. E. Watson. Folly dance Chaperones, .Mrs. H. 51. Streeter and Mrs. C. H. Shryer. Military danoe Chaperones, Mrs. J. A. Fritz, Mrs. Schuyler Gernon and Mrs. L. 8. Barnes. . ' ; . Spanish dance Chaperones, Mrs. R. W. Arc ribald and) Mrs. . M. W. Lowry. Napoleon Guards Chaperones, Mrs. Lu ther -Keller, Mrs. T. F. Penman and Miss Lizzie Howell. Will lie Seen in Hornpipe Dnnce. ' liornblue dancer-Mrs. W. W Scranton, Mrs. C. S. Weston and Miss Anna Matthews; dancers. Katie - Steele, - May nianchard. Mary and Kllzabeth Dickson, Ruth Archbald,t Qertrudo Coursen, .Anna McAnulty, Laura urown' Heien roweii, Helen Jones, Eleanor Moffat, Klolse Phelps, Hugh Archbald, Walter Stevens. DoukIoss, Moffat, Harry ' Jones, Paul Welles; Walter Coursen, Frank McOowan, Majc Jessup, Harry Williams, Harold Nor jon." X.awrence Watres, Randolph Froth lngham. . . Flowers and Bees Chaperones, Mrs. V. M. Spencer and Mrs. George M. Hallstead; dancers, Annie Henwood, Beatrice Morris, Cora Noyba. Myrtle Williams, Trystlne Morris, Jennie Donegan, Helen Simpson, Annie Archers-Edna CaVyl, Vivian Bur nett. JWody Moir, "Mary Hallstead, Joseph Brovyo, Wllford Moir, William Vernoy, Taylor Foster, Bert Mercereau, " Ortn Christian, Rodney Theiss. Joseph Alexan der, Franklin Vernoy. Glenwood Pierce, John. Burnett. 'Reyburn Watres. Japanese dance Chaperones,- Mrs. J. X Connell and Mrs. 8. H. Stevens. Skirt dance Chaperone, Mrs. Wlllard Matthews! dancers. Freda Kann, Kittle Pratt, Mamie' Gearhart, Annie Edwards, Louise Davenport. Jessie Peck, Candace Watson, Mabel Fritz, Annie Henwood, Mary Greeley. Carnival dance-Chaperones, Mrs. R. M. Scranton, Mrs. C. R. Parke. Rehearsals for the fete champetre will be held, beginning Monday, In the Scran ton Bicycle club house instead of .In the W. "W. Scranton house, corner of Mon roe avenue and Linden street. The rooms of the latter have been found too small to'nronerly drill the larger classes, A souv.enlr programme of the fote Is beln ft prepared, the profit of which will go to the -Home.- Business men are urged to give -it to their patronage. . . ThsTainple. From the Detroit Tribune. ... The queen of Sheba was deeply Im pressed. . , "Or eat head," she exclaimed, In admira tion. ' , ' "Ah; 'yes," rejoined th'e wise monarch, "the temple of Solomon is not unjustly celebrated, If 1 do say it myself.". , With which he touched his brow. signi ficantly. - Orrapes fur Coughs and for Singers. ' . Auntie Ra,chei; a Hollnnd hurse, has discovered a novel and effective way of using- grapes in combination with Ele campane Hoot and-Horehound for the purpose of ' curing coughs, colds and sore, throat It is called Aunt Rachel's Elecampane and Horehound Cordial and it is said that physicians are rec ommending it freely In the Kast.. Sing ers anil lecturers carry a. bottle with thorn. ' ' IRISH , PARUAMENTARIAN, Welsh jWipIog v.;.;-. Written for The Tribune. Of course, It was a foolhardy thing to uo, out times were hard. Four hundred men had been temporarily discharged from the Victoria pit, pending more raers ior coal. . Managers Edwards & Thomas, of the Caegarw and Onohoi Gwmpo Pits, had taken in as many of the men as they could, especially those who were known- as good workmen, for whom shrewd managers are always on the lookout ... To make room for these men some or the stalls were worked on-the double strt plan; and in this way'Will Acha Wew, '. whose name In Glamorgan Welsh was descriptive of his chief per sonal mark,, a wabbling gait, secured the night shift in the stall of Dal Selthws ''l Oot' (David Who Shot His Coat in mistake for a . burglar), off Cardl. Mawr's "heading." Will was not allowed a partner, as Dal objected to the breaking of the alignment of the stalls, which would re sult from overdoing, the doublershlf t plan, for,, as -miners know, the stalls are worked very much like a piece of painting no single part Is to -be de veloped very far In advance of all the other parts. The fool-hardiness of Will's action on that Sunday night appears from the rapt that, the people of Cwmcoed were as strict Sabbatarians oa South Wales mining villagers could be. Every ap parent breach of the fourth command ment, committed under the cognisance of the cojllery managers, who were themselves respected office bearers In the churches of the village, was covered by the saying olause of necessity. The night shift colliers respected the Puduo sentiment, and abstained from work on Sunday nights, though many of them held no decided opinion on the matter. ;io increase the output of coal when the market was already clutted could not by any means be construed as necessary. , ' , But Will was hard up. He had been Idle for some weeks, and had at home eight mouths to feed. There was no difficulty, he thought. In applying the rule of necessity to his case, and that Sunday night he went down the pit with the repairers. Around the ' little' Punch-and-Judy structure at ' the bottom of the pit, where the fireman sat In state to lock the lamps and Issue orders, jokes, and cautions', and where smokers puffed complacently before separating for re gions where pipes were more strictly prohibited than In the 'Women's Chris tian' Temperance .Union; the men llng- gered longer than usual that night. talking in-a quiet Sabbath manner as the day of rest drew' to a peaceful close. ; - Though- warned by the fireman that no human being would be within half- a-mlle of Kim that night. Will wabbled alone to his distant stall. But he felt uneasy all the way. He would now and then stop and listen, thinking that the echoes of his footsteps proceeded from feet other than his own. The glimmerings, ot rotten timber In the darkness ahead of him were Strikingly "suggestive of Jacks-wtth-a-lantern and corpse-candles. , , After finding some empty trams In the heading: he reached the stall, and began a hard night's work. After pound ing away at the stubborn. two-feet-nine seam with Indifferent success for some hours, he sat down to rest and to munch some crusts from his food-box. He be gan to feel ' dreadfully lonesome. He was growing unusually sensitive to the creaking of timber, the crunching of the side-walls, and the falling of stones In distant stalls. The far-away reports of the coal fell on his ears as If a Ro man legion 'had brought Its famous ramS to bear on the other side. He felt strangely Indisposed to start work again. The coal had stubbornly resisted his attacks. - There was a spell of "cussedness," as he would say, resting on everything. ' He began to look Into himself for the cause of his failure. His mind, agatnst hlo will, reverted to the Sunday question, a sense of the super natural and of duty neglected came upon him, for Will was religious in a way. ' Prom the point where the stall parted from the heading, sixty yards away from Will, came the sound of a horse's feet. Probably a syslaror passing by with his horse, thought Will, though he thought it Btrange, after the warn ing the fireman had given him, that he would have no neighbors that night. His first Intention was to hail the passer-by, but he noticed the sound coming nearer.- Soon the braddish door would open and disclose the visitor's light.- But Will missed the sound and the slight concussion of the air which wotild accompany the closing of the do'or. Neither could he see any light, but the sound came nearer and more distinct, clatter-chatter, thurrtp-a-thump, until at length he descried the form of a man, a very strange-looking man, the like of whom ho had never seen. Will blinked and stared. - "Surely," he thought, "I must be oft the rails tonight. The sound of horse's feet, dopr unopened, no light, and a strange man standing before me, wait ing for me. to talk." But before Will would utter any of his thoughts, the stranger rpoke to him. M've come to see you." "Yes?" answered Will, with blinking eyes and mouth a-gape; "You are alone." "Yes.". ' ' ' ' ' "May I help you?" ' ' "Thank you very much, sir. Indeed; but you are a stranger here, are you not?" "No,-1 know every place here." 'iWelL let us sit down for a while." Uoib .sat down on' their .heels for a time, the stranger doing most of the, talking.' Just as Will was revolving In his mind a few leading questions to put to the stranger, the latter said: "Now,, then, let me. have a pull at your coal. We'll push this full tram out and fetch an empty one, and you may cart the coal Into it." . . When they had exchanged the trams, the stranger made for the "face" of th coal. . , ' "What Shall we do about light?" asked. Will. r . , "Never mind me. Keep your lamp with you. 1 can manage all right." More mystified than eyer. Will be gan to cart' Into the tram' some coal he had piled together before the coming of the stranger. Soon he heard the pleasant falling and rolling of coal, and muttered to himself with a smile that the stranger could work as well as talk. In a very short time the space between Will and the stranger was piled up with coal, completely hiding the latter. Will heard the Incessant roiling of coal, but not a sound of a tool could be heard more than.. at -.toe building jot .Solomon's temple. Shovels, mandrels, crow-bars, Life, Will Acha Wew's Ghostly Partner, wedges, hammers were to this work man either unknown or obsolete Inven tions; In any case, unnecessary. In spite ot his bewilderment, how ever, Will kept his eye on the main chance of things, and cartes' the coal without asking any questions.. It was the bread and raiment of his wife and children, and he felt It criminal to look on idly like a dolt. After he had piled a ton of coal on the train, he resolved before doing any thing further to take a peep at his mate.who was on such good terms with the stubborn team. Veteran as he was In coal-breaking his mate had evident ly a thing or two to teach him. At first there was no possible Ingress to the - stranger In sight, but after some scraping Will made an air-hole along the top. and thrust himself head foremost In quest of his 'mute. To his great horror, he soon placed his tiands on an unshod pair ot hoots. He stood stock-still. ..-."''' , "Hello! are you there?" remarked his mate pleasantly "Yes, I have fitted the train, and I wanted to take a Bqulnt at you work ing. How do you do It?" "Oh, just like this," and his hoofed mate thrust his hands into the solid "face" and drew forth a solid block ot coal, almost square, like the pieces pre served in' museums.' ' ' ' "That's all,", sold he, "And now I think we had better cart all this coal and clear the. stall for Dal Selthews '1 Got the rodneyt I 'know Dal well. He tried to shoot me one night, and shot his coa instead." ' ' Both squeezed themselves back over the pile' of coal. ; The full train was pushed out of the stall and an empty one was brought In. The operation was repeated several times before the stall was clear. In pushing the last tram, the strang er's hand, or whatever it was, came into contact with Will's, and made a gash on the back of his hand. Another thing puzaled Will. The stranger not only avoided every took but was particularly careful In placing his hands on the coal while pushing a full tram, and suffered Will to push back the empty Iron ones. Though the "turn" was scarcely half over, the stranger suggested to strike work, asked "Win ; not to tell anyone who had helped hlrri,, and said he would help him again the following night. Will reached his home with the early dawn, with a crazed look; but he held his peace, 'and had no difficulty In ex plaining to his wife the cause of his early -return. ' . During the day Will did a deal of thinking about his ministering angel. There was now little doubt In his mind that the subject of many a tale he had heard, when a boy at the foot of Plln Ummon, had materialised before his sight, and had rendered him material service.. Had he riot. heard how pros pectors for lead-ore were attracted to certain anotS on' -the hillsides by loud kn'ocklngs heard under the turs, and how, after a little digging, they struck veritable bonanzas? Had he not heard how two brothers were guided by a dream to the ruins ot Gwrnerth castle in quest of hidden treasures? ' After rolling aside a pile 6f stones one of the brothers struck an Iron chest with his pick, when the other brother shouted, "Two hundred pounds for the chance, Tom!" whereupon they set to hlrgllnff arid quarreling over the price, and were on the point of fighting, when they heard a noise underneath,' and caught' a glimpse ot the chest disappearing Into the ruins. They worked for hours In sullen silence, but could find no trace of 'the chest.' Then they fought each other black and blue in rifrht earnest.. But why should he. Will Acha Wew, of all hls'fello'w-workmen, he skcted for the special favor of this berioflcent being? could It be horrible thought!- nis t-aDDam-Dreaklng? No, he could not entertain It. A good week's earn ings In a single night wis not the kind of favors usually bestowed on the wicked. . ' ' Had he better seek the spiritual ad vice of Rev. James Hughes, minister of Calvary Uuptlst chapel? No, he was In Mr. Hughes' black book. He dis approved of his method of forcing peo ple to become members of hts church by the scruff of their necks, and Mr. Hughes knew it. Besides, he had failed to pay his yearly subscription towards clearing the chapel debt. Mr, Hughes, also, was hard on people who believed In' ghosts. No, he would keep tryst with his hoofed friend. He went to work again that night, and his hoofed friend clattered up to him. Night after night 'they met and worked together. . , , The men of the day shift could not understand how Will had so many full trains to his account every morning. There was no way apparent by which he might put his chalk-marks on-other people's trains, even If he was thought capable ot such exceptional sneakish ness. Dal Seithws'i Got's stall had Btolen a march on the' neighbors, and Dal swore loud and. long In English that-his coal was dead-locked. At the end of a fortnight, Wlll ex tracted a promise from his partner to meet him at the top of the pit on pay flay. His friend kept to his promise, and met Will as he came from the ofttre, clad In a decent suit of clothes, with his hands In his trowser's pockr-ts. a felt hat pressed over his ears, and his feet enclosed hi shoes of a strange make. They walked together to the village and entered the Black Lion to divide their earnings over a quart of beer. Will threw the money on the table and pro ceeded to divide it into two piles. An equal division was made, but a six pence stood over which Will could not break. He tossed It to his friend's pile. "What Is that you are doing?" ex claimed his partner. " : "I can t divide It. You take, ft. Ton ougnt to' take much more.'"' " '' "Not a penny will I take over my share. Change It at the bar." .'.'Nonsense, you must take It." "And I say I won't take It." : 1 - "By G you must." His partner rose, trembling 'through his whole body. "Good-bye Will. Yon should not'Ua.ve mentioned that nam here." ' ". . Then with an unearthly shrle.k and fl hdlse like a clap of thunder, he disap peared through the open window. The Inrriates of the Block Lirm rushed Into the room nnd found .Wilt, staring at tho piles of money. He got up a dazed-man, pocketed the money, paid for the beer, and went home-w-lthout offering a word of explanation to the startled people. ' .The following week work resumed at the Victoria Pit, and Will secured his old-stall; ' -, . He was truly .a "sadder" min after his experience wltlr-ttr-BrfoStty "paTt ner, and possibly he became a "wiser" man, for whenever he met a rcklss youngster, 'he had a Strang advlc ta give him: . "Never offer the devil more than his due." n Rhys Wynne. A New I'se for the Hon. ' - In regard to auto-mobile carriages, electric railroads and electrlo bicycles Professor Bell says: -"These develop ments have led me to Jhlnk of what la to become of the horse. Man has li ven tvd the-btcycle to Increase his pow ers ot propulsion, and while I do not say that a horse could ride a bicycle, I am confident that a machine could be built whereby the horse could be taken -off the ETound and used as a motor power. With a proper system of gear ing great speed could In this why ba attained." - MDIVAY'S Always Reliably Purely Vegetal MILD BUT EFFECTIVE. arly vegetable, act wittoat pain, laias ly coated, tastalua, (thall aad May to Usa Badwar's rtU alit aatara, atimnlatlsi to bMltbtnl activity tta Htm-, bonis and tbM' dlgmtlr organi. Uartoi the bowels in a ssW oral conditio without say bat after ) Cure Sick Headacho, Biliousness. Constipation, Pilos AND All Liver Disorders. RADWAY'S PILL! are purely vefstabU tail and reliable. Cause perfsat DIc-stiM, soaW plate ahaorptloa and aaalthr ul ngatarity. SS ota. a box. At DrngtUta, r by bm& "Book of Advtoa" fraa by mail. RAOWAY A CO,, V. O. Box M&, Vw Yu. Uanufsstarsn of tat Calibrates PILSEIIER LAGER BEER CAPACITYl 00,000 Barrels per Annua? MANSFIELD STATE NORflAL, SCHOOL. Intellectual and practical trafhlng for teachers. Three courses of study besides preparatory. Special attention given t preparation for college. Students ad mitted to best colleges on certificate. Thirty graduates pursuing further studies last year. Great advantages for specll studies In art and music. Model school of three hundred pupils. Corps of sixteen teachers. Beautiful grounds. Magnificent buildings, I.arpfl grounds for athletics. Klevator and infirmary with attendant nurse. Flno gymnasium. Everything furnished at An average cost to normal students of $143 a year. Fall term, Aug. 28. Winter term, Dec. 2. eprlns term. March 16. Students admitted to classes at any time. For catalogue, containing full Information, apply to S. II. ALBRO, Principal, Mansfield, Pa. BLANK BOOKS Of all kinds, manufactured at ihtft oticc at The Tribune Office Vitality A Restored. Faillnff Rf-TlJUl Rtmnvth In nM nr mm, ma mm twqulckly and rrmntly cured L,oaotal ta ly.vHlutousit.it. HuDtrars from.... NERVOUS DEBILITY, .VABICOCCLE, mSHT LOSSES, . AND ALT, WAST1XO niSEASEKshould xvrit to me for advice. I bax-e town a clnut student fof nmny years ot tlie subjert uf weakness In nioa, tb fm-t Is. I was nnrvr mjmit. Too htifrj towot the alt) ofoMvr mennr riMxitnhlnphvulvlaiM I lnv Mated loeaiiblectnVcply nnddlirovered vltnpl bat most remarkably sun-maral remedy that-roav rlftely cured ine ami fully enlard froa nruujinMiuriim eorrainun to natural trnin an lie. I minl-evrry yonucorold uiii u know abtwi It. I take a personal intermt In sorb oaaea and re, ofr,eHdhMlite to write uieaa all communications are beld strictly confidential, t nrndtha recipe of till nn.rtw nltfnlm.i. . . T. . . .1 ... ... ........ ......,, w,,j t,wm vi vJVb un mm put II ytrbiit write rn; fully nt nnos, yuu will always bless tb day uu did u. Addrna, THOMAS SLATER, Box 3038, fibJMer of Fanimi KalamuoA CaUrr. KALAMAZOO, MICM. t m LAGER BEER BREWERY-