rV"' THE SOTtANTON TRTBUNE-.a,nURSDAY MORNING, JUNE !M, 1897. K t. i Ok Rome Reading Circle 4t4fiH - THE WHITE THREAD, 1 By ALLEN UPWARD. I Author of "Secrets of 4 Copyright, 1800, by SNYorsia. Tho story Is toM to a friend by a Frenih diplomat, erstwhllo chargo d'urtalrea lit ona of the petty principalities of tno U.xU Uan, wlilch, whllo scarcely free from Turkish VHsnalPKe. In torn asunder by Austrian and Husslnn Jealousy. In Ihla Instance ltelBnlnfr l'rlnco George Inclines to Allah la, while l'rlnci-ss Catherine Is by birth and sympathy attached to lltis sla. rho French charge d'affaires Is en trusted by his Russian colleague with the interests of Russia durlntr tho latter's temporary absence. Shortly after this, at n banquet at. tho palace whero the tri umph of the Austrian party I announced and celebrnted, II. Stnrovltch, tho prlino minister whoso sympathies arc Russian, stealthily passes to the representative of France a scaled packet, of value to the Russian pnr,ty.' I'rfncesB Catherine", who iiippeajTB to know of the transaction warns him- to leave with his precious document at once. While preparing to obey a servant notices a lonjr white thread nttachqd to his overcoat. It Is removed. On tho vr.y homo the charge d'affaires meets a crippled berjKar who seeki to de tain htm, iyt shalclng tho mna oft he pro ceeds .(of his house and. locks the mystc llous pacltc,t up. In n. few minutes thero Is a flrelifjcommotlbn-ln the street and It Is learned that M. Starovltch hns been nssasilnated. Proceeding at once to the minister's houso tho Fienchman gains admittance and notices that on tho vic tim's coat Is a white thread exactly like tho one that had been removed fiom his own. Tho dying man iecognlzes tho am bassador, beckons him to his side. Is Just able to whisper: "The cripple tho pa pers," and cxpltep. Thoronhly alarmed, the charge d'affaires orders a shirt of mall to bo worn for protection. PAIIT III. "The fun words uttered by Staro vltch before lie expired,' continued the ambassador, "had been sufficient to reveal; to me the frightful plot to which I hnil narrowly escaped fallms a victim. There could no longer be a qmstlon that the white thread which I had twice come across on this night llrst on my own clothes, itnd then on those of the unfortunate minister, was a signal of tho most terrible kind. It was not for nothing that I had found mwy path so obstinately blocked by that cripple, till his confederate had time to' catch me up from behind. Ilut for the aclcdtnt of the equerry's having drawn my attention to It, the assasblu I could not doubt, would have found on my back the token whK'h ho sought, and I should have shared the fate of the man whom I had Just seen breathe his last. "To the motives of the r.ssaslns, Starovltch had also given me a clew. It was evident htat he had connected has mmdercr with the mysterious pac ket which he had confided to me dur ing the banquet. It was possible to resist the IdeA that this packet con tained something which rendered It fa tal to Its possesor and In my excite ment I even went so far as to accuse Baron Dourenskl In my own mind of having forseent his danger and pur posely escaped It by a diplomatic re treat "In the meantime 1 saw myself con fronted by nn unseen peril, at whose nature 1 could only vaguely guess. You will have recognized, of course, my motives for saying nothing to tho po lice olllclals. "Where political consid erations are Involved, the police are not to be depended upon. If the crime which had been Just committed were the work of private Individuals, on the other hand, I had no doubt that the police would prove equal to the task of bringing them to justice." "You did' not llnd it necessary to open the prime minister's envelope'." I ventured to interpose, as his excel lency allowed a few minutes to pass without speaking" "By no means, my friend. Recollect, If you please that this envelope wus sealed, and that its safety had excited the Interest of the Princess Cathar ine. All this time I had not forgotten h tlreremarknble warning which she had l given me, and this element In tho affair W alone would have restrained me from 1 Placing my imprudent confidence In the ofilelalu. "AH I did waa to dispatch a telegram I to Dourenskl, In the cipher which he had requested mo to employ, Informing Vilm o what had occurred, and urging hlin to return Immediately. I "Tho news of the tragedy must In Iny case have reached him within a few hours. The most profound Impres kjon waa created all over Europe by tils assassination of a statesman whose nnis was ns familiar to the public as t:tal of Plincfi George himself. The vews taken of th event by tho news pijiers wer conUictlng, some hinting that the Austrian faction had had a hund In II, upmo attributing it to the secret influence of Russia, and others again affeotlntr to consider It a matter of some private revenge. For my own part, I remained in doubt, and anxious, ly waited fpr Doureuskl's return for an explanation. "It Is needless for me to describe the sensation produced In the principality Itself. So great was. the agitation and alarm In the capital that the govern ment eatfe orders that the funeral of the murdered premier should take place at night, and should bo .attended by no one except a few public functionaries and the Immediate relatives and friends of the deceased. HUMORS Jnatant relief for skin-tortured halites and rest for tired mothers In a warm bath with Cuticl'ha Hear, and A single application of Cpticuba (ointment), the great skin euro. Tlio only epeotly and economical treatment for itching, burning, bleeding, scaly, and pimply humor of tho sklu, scalp, and blood. (u tic lira iKMthruttiootthworlJ. PorrDt(H)AXDCaiii tril. CoaroeATiua, B' 1'roprlctor. Uocton. OH-" Uow In Cur. ! Jiibr Uuroor,"m!ldlru, BABY BLEMISHES &&' BABY H - H - H4f4 - - Ht the Courts of Europe." Allen Upward.! 44-H-4 -M--K4 : "The funeral was fixed for the second night after tho murder, and It was tho boat, I saw Harry Mason swimming and cried out to him. He paddled up to the boat, leisurely, It seemed to me. llu was on the leeward side, and for a minute or more he kept clear of tins boat, swimming backward as she drift ed on, and sheltered by her from the breaking sea. "Will she float us all, Frank?" he asked, calmly enough. "Yes," was the answer; "the air tanks will carry us. Get hold here." When the next wave ewept us toward him, Harry flung his arm across the boat's keel near the bow, and clung there. I was next to him. Miss Wood ward was between Shirley nnd me. At first we hoped that Steve might come to our relief, and we wasted our scanty tyreath 'n shouting; but the wind by this time was blowing so hard that the sound of a human voice wus assimilated Into It instantly, and be came tho gale's voice, wild and Inar ticulate. 'c soon gave up all Idea of rescue at our friend's hands, and faced the chances that remained. There was one chance that we should be able to cling to the boat till she should drift across the bay; and there were ten thousand against It. The hay Is about ten miles wide from Ogdon's Island to the head of the cape. SOme small Islands and a multitude of ledges lay between; but even should we en counter any of them, the odds were that It would prove our destruction. I believe that, had Alice Woodward not been there, I should have given up the struggle, and have Blld oft the slip pery hull of that boat Into Davy Jones' locker. Helping; to hold her on kept me In good heart about holding myself on. I should have felt myself to be the weakest, but for her, and should not have waited for anyone else to give out first. Harry Mason was a stronger boy than I, but he became exhausted eailler, taking care of himself alone, than I did, being by my position on tho boat constrained to help another. The girl had splendid courage, but her strength nnd physical endurance were unequal to the strain. It was an cideal that any human creature might shrink from. Though the night was the warmest that ever I saw In that part of th-s world, we were all chilled to the marrow of our bones. The water of the Maine coast is by nature so cold that you cannot warm it In a kettle over a flr. Before I had been on the lottom of that boat ton minutes I was so numb below the waist that I should not have known It If a dogfish had bit ten me In two. 'So much of my body as was out of water part of the time was freezing; the remainder had ceased to suffer; It was dead. At first our minds directed us; we tried to do this and that. Then our strength failed; then our minds failed; and at last there was nothing left but dogged, Instinctive resistance. I knew nothing except that I would not let go of the keel of that boat, nor suffer my stiffening fingers to relinquish their grip on Alice Woodward's arm. Shirley must have been In a little better condition. He at least could see and hear, after those faculties seemed to have suspended operations for me. It was Shirley who discovered that we wero drifting Into breakers; it was he who waked me with a last appeal when we were dashed against something black that towered above us, and frightened more than It cheered me. After that I remember fighting my way up an Interminable slope of rock covered with seaweed, while the waves pursued us und tried to drag the bur den that wos between us back Into the sea. One last effort, and I saw that we were all together on solid lang again, and It flashed across my mind that we wero safe. Then all the nerves and muscles In my body gave way at once, and I fell; hut I have no recollection of any shock when I struck the hard surface- of the ledge. For an Intel vol I was as destitute of consciousness as, In the absence of evi dence to the contrary, I would have held tho rock on which I lay to be. And to the rock, I suppose, the period since it was created does not differ from a second. I awoks to llnd my threi com panions busy with me. My first senta Hon was of cold; then I felt the others around me; and Immediately a dash of water struck mo In the face. I sup posed that some one had thrown It on me to revive me. "Never mind that," said I, as cheer fully aa might be; "I'm wet enough as It is." I sat up and again the -water struck me. This time I saw that It was the spray of tho wave that had broken on the rocks In front of me. "Why don't we go up higher?" I asked. "We can't," replied Shirley, gloom ily. "Wo'er on top of the ledge now." I stiuggled to my feet. All around mo was a darkness so intense that I could see nothing but tho foam cf breaking waves. To windward was a great patch of white whero the water was churning over a rough floor of rock, Just awash. By this tho waves were broken before they reached the edge of the upper ledge where we had found a rspite front the storm, and only the largest of them flung their spray up to us. Yet our elevation above the water was not more than three feet. "In tho name of heaven, Frank," I said, "how Is the tide?" "Rising," said Shirley. "Bert, It's all over with us. We're on Gull rock or one of the other ledges In that bunch, and they're all covered at high water." - "Frank, uro you sure?" "We capsized a mile and a half duo east of Spruce Head, with the wind southwest and the tide Just beglnrlns to lun In," said he. "You can figure It out for yourself, You remember the course wo laid out yesterday from Spruce Head across tho Bay between the Gull Rock ledges and the Round Islands? East northeast, a half east." "Frank, we're lost I" "Stpadyl" he cried, clutching my arm and wheeling me around till I faced the spot whero the others crouched upon the ledge. "She knows, and she Is not afraid. I won't let ydu go to I-lercs. I can't savo your life, and that's a short thing, anyway. You've got to die Bometlme, and If you die. you wiU Hvo again. But it you're a coward hero, eternity won't be long enough for you to get over It." PART III. In my native town, some years be fore 1 Haw the light, there was a man who had a salmon wclr almost direct ly Jn front of his house. A weir, as everyone knows, Is a fence, mado of long poles bearing a net, that extends fnr out Into tho water and terminates In an Inclosuro where fish am en snared. Tho man of whom I am speaking went out one morning to mend hla weir; and he was ut work at tho far end of It when a peculiarly frightful thing happened. He had tied his boat to a pole, and was climbing along tho side of the salmon trap when ho lost his hold and fell. His feet were bare, and ono of them struck upon a broken polo under tho water. The wood was sharp as a speer, and It was shaped like a barbed hook. It pierced his foot, and the barb held him fast. The tide must have been about breast high upon him as ho clung to tho wclr, Impaled as I have described. What cries he sent toward his own home, standing before his eyes upon the sun ny slope, Imagine If you can. No mor tal heard them. And tho tide rose steadily, no faster and no slower than on other days, and drowned him. That story was the horror of my boyhood. It came to me with the vividness of a picture, on that ledge at night, with the same death before mo as he had faced. Yet I was not so de solate as he had been for there were those who could hear my voice though they could not help me. "Wo lay along the rock and discussed one slender chance of. rescue Alice1 might be misted, and a searching party might be sent out. On the other hand, she told us that her absence would probably not be noticed till mornlnir, as she had gone to her room with tho declared Intention of remalng there A single consideration was enough to destroy our hope of assistance on her account. Her absence would have been discovered much earlier In tho even ing. If at all, and the searching party would be already embarked upon the bay carrying so many and so bright lights that we could not fall to see them. Yet nut a single bleam could wc perceive. Darkness was al around us like a wall. AVe could not even make out the lighthouse on the lower end of Ogdeh's Island, though on an ordinary night it should have been plainly vis ible. The same argument proved to us that Steve had not succeeded In reaching the Island. The squall must have blown him off shore. If he had crossed the bay nnd landed on the head of the cape, It would be morning before he could get a searching party under way. Tho situation was utterly hopeless, and we did not pretend to regard It In any other light. "If we only knew Just what time it was." said Shirley, "It would be some consolation. But my watch has stopped, and so has Miss AVoodward'il." "I have a watch," said I. "It'o a lit tle gold ono belonging to my mother. She let me take It. You know mine ls being repaired. The watch is going, but I can't &ee the face of It. Can we tell the time by feeling of the hands?" "I've got matches," said Harry. "They're In a metal case; they're dry. Let's all gat together and shut off the wind while I light one. Hold your watch, Bert." The first match was Instantly extin guished; the second broke In Harry's nervous Angers, the third flared up, and by Its light I saw the hands upon the dial. They were almost together at eleven. Harry saw the watch as well as I did, and he groaned as If he had been stabbed. "Five minutes of eleven," he cried, "and tho tide turned at eight. It's only half flood. I give up. Before this I couldn't quite believe that wo were lost. It seemed to me that there must be some mistake. But there Is not get ting out of It row. "One chance only remains, so far as I can sec." said Frank, "and If that's to be tried, I'm glad It's earlier than we thought." We asked him what he meant, nnd he told us his plan, which was to swim to Compass Island, the nearest land where anybody lived, and return for us In a boat. "Compass Island Is over a mile from here," said Harry. "You can no more swim there In this sea than you can fly." "I shall have the wind and the sea with me," replied Frank. "It Is worth trying." But it was not. The feat was entire ly Impossible. Frank was bigger and stronger and of greater endurance than most men, but he was only a fair swimmer. Under the most favorable conditions I don't believe he could have swam a mile. Chilled as he was by long exposure, and exhausted by previous efforts, he would do well If he should swim a hundred yards. He would piobably drown within the range of our voices. Yet ha could not be prevented from making the attempt. Harry arid I said what we could, and Alice besought him In such words as I felt I could have given my life for, If I had at that time a llfo that was not as good as lost already. She could not stay him. "I'm responsible for this," said he. "Listen, Alice; when I missed your boat the first time I did it on purpose. I wanted to fix It with Steve so that I could row you ashore In your boat. AVe gambled for the privilege and he won. Then, when you Insisted on staying In my boat, I mado him pull away In yours, though there was no need for It- If I had run alongside of you tho first time, there would have been no collision. If I hadn't sent Steve away because I was Jealous of hlm.we should have had the rowboat with us, and even If the squall had upset us we could have got ashore. So It's all my fault, and I don't deserve to come, out of It alive, f'erhaps after I am out of the way, something will happen to save you, who aro not to blame." She told him In effect that ho was despeiately expiating a wholly pardon able offense; and then she clung to him, but ho disengaged himself from her hands. In a moment he had flung oft coat and shoes, and was ready to start. "Good-by," he said. "I'll bring you help If I can. At any rate, don't give up till the last possible moment. Res cue ,muy come." I nearly lost my' wits' with horror as he went down Into tho black water beyond tho ledge. He seemed to take Our courage with him, arid for a tlmo wo lay huddled together like fright ened children In tho dark. Tho tide was rislrrg over tho level rock In front of us, and the waves were beginning to dash against the upper bulwark of the ledge, sending the pray hipping over us. AVe crouched close to tho rocks and clutched them hard, pre paring for tho time when wo must make our last resistance. "Heavens! How fast It riscsl" grasped Harry In my ear. "What time Is It now, I wonder?" Again wo looked at my watch In tho sudden flaro of a match. It was only a few minutes after twelve. Two more houru of flood tide, and already tho water wan breaking clear over us. It was lmposslbjo that wo should survlvo another hour, for wo wero too weak to stand. ' "Not even God himself can eavo us now," said Harry In my ear. Ho did not mean to bo profane. It was merely tho Involuntary reaction from a dream of supernatural rescue. "Ood can eave us now," said Alice, "as easily as at any other time. Do you believe that the tide which Ho mado has ceased to obey Him?" "I believe that for a. million years the tldo has covered Gull Rock twice every twenty-four hours," said I, an swering for him; "and It will not stop for us." I spoke earnestly. It seemed to me weak to trust In miracles. It was like giving up. "It will stop If God tells It to," said tho ctrl. Men and women too have engaged In theological controversy whllo the flamesofmartyrdom were rising around them, and have forgotten tho pangs of mortal agony. So I suppose It was not altogether unnatural that Alice Bhould defend the doctrine of God's omnip otence at such a time. Perhaps It Is stranger that wo two boys should have had the hardihood to deny supernat ural Interference at a time when our own lives depended on Its reality. Be that as It may, the fact Is that we debated the question with an earnest ness that-rso far as I was concerned drove out all fear. AVlth a natural ex aggeration of our own Importance we tncltly accepted the present as a test case. If there had been anyone to lis ten to use ho would have supposed that the validity of sacred history depended upon the question whether the tldo would wait upon the moon as usual In Penobscot Bay that night. AA'o lay In tho shelter of a little ridge of rock that wc had found, and our physical discomfort was less than might have been supposed. The wind that swept over us was positively warm and the chill of tho spray had ceased to strike through our clothing. A wave, taller than Its fellows, burst In front of us and sent green water clear across the ledge. It was the first that had done so the beginning of the end. AVe started up to our knees, and. bending forward, with our heads upon the edge of rock, started out across the water. AVave after wave rolled In and broke, and flung Its spray over our heads; but no other reached the level of that which had alarmed us. It mav have been ten minutes that we waited thus. Then Alice leaped to her feet. "You may deny God's power. If you will," she said, "but It has saved us all. I tell you that the tide has stopped ris ing!" It was true, though by the closest cal culation I could make, it lacked an hour and fifty minutes of the tlmo of high waer. PART IV. Before Frank Shirley had swam a stone's throw from the Hedge he felt his strength failing. He knew that ho would never cover half the distance between Gull Rock and Compass Is land. If only his own life had been at stake he would have ceased to struggle. But for the sake of the girl whom his folly had led Into deadly peril, ho re- .solved that he wouldpngvef yield while I nis power to move on nanu or loot re mained with him. The time had come when he, too, looked beyond the visible laws of tide and wave to Him who had made them. Had he fought for his own' life only he might not have dared expect mercy from the sea, which Is the most cruel of God's creatures. But In an effort which he know was good, he felt that there should be a power on his side, liven within the ordinary course of things It would be possible that he bhould find some bit of driftwood that would sustain him while he struggled on. But his hands encountered noth ing but the water, and from the top of each succeeding wave his eager ees saw nothing but white crests and Jet black billows. Ho lost account of time and distance. He knew only that the time seemed long to memory and short to hope. AVhether he had won a hundred yards of a half mill was a mere guess. His course he directed vaguely by the wind and sea, but what did it matter? Still he knew that It was besst to work a little to the right of the direct line of the waves, for Compass Island was not quite truly leeweard of Gull Rock. It Is wonderful how many strokes a swimmer can take after that one which seems the very fast of which he is capable. Shirley swam on and on, though his arms had come to such a degree of weariness and cold that ho had no feeling of where they were. The effort of each stroke was made In hla brain, and he had no sensation of com pliance with the impulses of his own will. Then suddenly he was conscious of something vast and black towering be side him. A warning in his ears took a definite form. He recognized tho noise of waves dashing upon rocks. His hand touched a smooth wall, and ho was hurled along It by the send of the sea. Again and ngaln! He could get no hold. Then a blgr streamer of sea weed entangled Itself In his hand. He closed upon It with the drowning man's frantic clutch. It was wrenched from the rock. The reaction threw him upon his side. A wave rolled him over and over, and he Bank, believing In his soul that he would rise no more. In terminable moments passed. Then ho felt liU foot shoot up In tho air. The waves, no longer broke around him. Swlmlng was easy there. He took a great stroke, nnd another. He saw In front of him a faint white crescent, and he knew what It was. A moment later he was sprawllnij on a smooth sand beach, out of the waves and sheltered from the wind. Shirley needed only a moment of rest. The Joy of triumph revived him. He had accomplished the Impossible. He whispered to tho beach on wtych ho lay hurriedly, over and over again "I have dono It! I have dono It!" In his excited fancy the long struggle with the waves was condensed into a single effort. Ho did not doubt that thero was ample time to return and save his friends. Springing to his feet, ho looked eag erly around. Tho llttlo sand beach lay In a niche between steep rocks fifty feet or more In height. At the. head of the beach there was a crumbling wall of rock which Shirley presently scaled. Straggling spruce trees fringed the low cliff, and beyond them tho lund seemed to slope gently downward. ' Though Shirley did not rc'cognlzo.tho spot, ho Judged that It must be about midway of the north shore of Com pass Island, The two houses on tho irland stood close together at tho head of a cove In the eastern shore. Two brothers named Rodman, with their families, lived there, farming tho rocky soil of the Island, and fishing In tho al most deserted WQters round about. Shirley supposed that a run of a quirter of a mile would bring him to the houses; eo, with a good will he plunged among the trees, reckless of tho rough ground and the darkness. It seemed to htm that at a slnglo bound ho passed through the fringe of cpruces, nnd came upon a houso so suddenly that ho almost ran ngalnst It. In nil respects It resembled Sam Rod man's dwelling, but how he hnd en countered It so soon, unless It had como to meet him, was more than Shirley could understand. Kven though the houso had walked across the Island for his convenience, It would not have added greatly, In his estimation, to tho wonder of his being there, when he should have been forty fathoms deep In tho bay. Ho gave but tho briefest recognition to this new evidence of Heaven's favor. Running around the corner of tho house, he found Its prin cipal door and began to beat upon It. A window almost over his head came up ns if he had touched tho spring that controlled It. A man appeared, ana called out heartily: "Who's thero?" "I've Bwum hero from Gull Hock," Shirley answered. "There arc some people on tho ledge and they will drown If we don't reach them. A'e wore In a boat and she upset. AVo drifted across tho bay." "You swum hero from Gull Rock!" exclaimed the man. "Why It's inore'n three miles!" "No it isn't," cried Shirley; "hut never mind that. Come alonp. AVo must get back there before high tide. You'vo got a boat, of course?" Tho man did not answer. He had vanished from the window. Thero was a heart-breaking delay, and then Shir ley heard the rattle of bars and locks. Tho door swung open, and the master of tho house appeared bearing a lamp. "Come In," he said; and Shirley fol lowed him along a short hall and Into what Beemed to be the dining-room of the house. The man set the lamp on tho mantel piece beside tho clock. The white dial Beemed to start suddenly forward and confront Shirley. Tho young man pointed at It. He could not speak. "That's right," Bald his host. "It's five minutes of two." "High tide!" groaned Shirley. They're lost." "Look here, young feller," said the man, slowly. "There must bo some thing wrong about this. "You haven't swum from Gull Rock down here. The man doesn't live that could do It. You've lost your bearings somehow." "I hope to heaven I have," rejoined Shirley. "Indeed, I knowi it's true. This Isn't Compass Island." "Not by a Jug full. It's Little Green, and I'm BUI Green." "How did I get here?" "God knows," was the answer. "Tell me your story again. AVe'll go along while you talk. "We'll take these lan terns along, for I guess you've got some friends marooned somewhere, though they ain't on Gull Rock." He picked up a small boat lantern, and another that was a powerful affair with a big reflector behind Its lamp. Shirley told his story as they walked down to the cove, where tho Islander kept his boat. His companion did not Interrupt him once. AVhen Shirley had finished, he said: "Your friends are all right. They're off here on Black Ledge, not a quar ter of a mile from this island." "It can't be," said Shirley. "AVo couldn't havo drifted way down here. The wind was southwest "Till the squall struck," interrupted the islander; "then It came off to tho west'ard. You was too busy gettln' upset to notice It: but the fact Is that the wind shifted four points In a blast ed second. I never see It act Jest that way afore. That's .where you made your mistake. You drifted way to the south'nrd o the Gull Rock ledges." "And Black Lege is out at high tide? You're sure of it?" "Certain. On, a high run o' tides It's ,iust wash, but It'll stick up like a sore thumb tonight. Don't you worry, my boy. In an hour from now your friends will be warm and dry and comfortable In my house." His words proved true. Alice, and Harry and I had scarcely convinced ourselves that the seeming miracle of the tide had actually happened, when a sudden, bright light flashed upon us. The boat In which Shirley nnd Bill Green were coming to our rescue, had rounded the rocky northern end of the Island. A moment later come the friendly hall. The boat drew near rap Idly. AVo could see only the bright light In the bay, but presently those In the boat could see us plainly and they had no need to ask after our safety. And when we heard Shirley's voice and knew for a certainty that It waa he, we danced and shouted for Joy danced on the slippery rocks with the little strength that remained to us, nnd bhouted with throats that were rouch with salt spray that had beaten in our faced all the fearful night. Tho mystery of the tide and of Shir ley's coming to land were explained to us In a word. It was all In the shift of Never Too vv.v Late been an onlooker while the Tribune "Wants" were bringing results, and preferred to see what others would do, the time has come to get in line with the army of "Want" advertisers and use the Tribune .ciuwo. xxuoauuo icau mem every day! A good opportunity will never be overlooked. "Want" adver tising costs less in the Tribune than in any other first-class medium. It is never too late to - - - - the wind. And when I compnred my watch with tho trusty old clock Jn Bill Green's house, nnd found a dis crepancy of nearly two nouns, I bow through a few more things that had puzzled me. "That Is alwaya tho way With mira cles," said I, almost disappointed by tho simplicity of tho matter. "You don't understand it, that's nil," rejoined Harry. "It was milly much simpler to take us off Gull Rock und put us on to Black Ledge, than to stop tho tldo and Interfere with tho calcu lations of everybody in the bay." Htevo turned up the next day on tne head of tho cape. He had, been blown off shore ns we had supposed, but hav ing n stnunch boat under him, ho had weathered tho blow. Ho had no Idea what had happened to us, but believed that wc had managed to get up under tho loa of the Island, despite tho squall. Yes, he had drifted to leeward, and ho never worked., back to the point whero he stood when ho and Frank up pealed to chanco on the question of Alice Woodward and her boat, Frank had the weather-gauge after the ad venture of Black Ledge, and Steve soon sheered off nnd sailed for another prize. (The End.) The Finest Line of BELT BUCKLES Ever seen in Scranton. Silver Gilt and Silver set with Ame thysts, Carbuncles. Garnets and Turquoise, mounted on Silk, Leather and the latest Thing, Leather covered Avith Silk. May be found at MERCEREMJ & CONNELL'S, (GENTS FOR REGINA MUSIC BOXES, 130 Wyoming Ave, L OF SCRANTON, Special Mention Given lo Busl ncss and 1 rjnal Accounts. Liberal Accommodations Ex tended According to Valances and Responsibility. 3 Per Cent. Interest Allowed on Interest Deposits. Capital, -Surplus, -Undivided ProGts, $200,000 320,000 88,000 WM. CONNELL, President. HENRY KELIN, Jr., Vice Prcs. WILLIAM II. PECK, Cashier. SPECIAL THROUGH OARS Dally (except Sunday) via ' Central Railroaj of New Jersey Beginning June 'J8, 1807, leaving Scran ton at 8.20 il m. for long: branch. OCliAN OROVL'. DBLMAR (Ocean Beach, ASBV RK. SPRINd LAKE, SEA aiRT, ETC. This will bo kept up for the cntlro season especially for tho accommodation of families, an It will enable passengers to secure and re turn comioriHoie seats tne entirejourney. J. II. OUIAU.SEN. II. T. IIAIiDWIX, Gen'l Tuss. Agt. OenernlSupt. BANK To learn the worth of THE SCRAN TON TRIBUNE'S "Want" Columns. If you have merely Try Tribune Wants HOTELS. wwwwvwvwwwvhvwivvvivwwmiMmA nn UN HALL, H 1 111 CRYSTAL LAKE, PA. The opening of this famous resort un dcr naw management will tako place early In June. Situated in the southern corner of i Susquehanna county on the shores o't beautiful Crystal Lake, Fern Hall Is ono of the most attractive places In the State of Pennsylvania to spend a few weeks during tho heated term. Every facility Is affordtd for the en tertainment of Us guests. BEST OF Purs Mountain Air, Beautiful Scenery, - -Culsihs Unsurpassed. the tablo being supplied from Fern Hall ' farm. ' ' Postal Telegraph and Long Distance Telephone service in the hotel.- 'r ,l,w Tally-Ho coaches make two strips , dally from Carbondale. , ,,,., , r , ' i"tfV: Write for Terms, Etc.,' to C. E. it Crystal Lake, Dundaff, Pa. THE MURRAY HILL MURRAY HILL PARK, -THOUSAND ISLANDS, The best located and best furnished hotel on the St. LaAV.reuce river. Accommo dations for 300 guests. Opens June 25th, 18o7. F. R. WHITE, Prop. Glen Mountain House. WATKINS, HCIIUYI.KR COUNTY, N. Y. On .Sen oca Lake. On lino of Now York Con trul, Pennsylvania, nnrt Lehigh Valley Hall. ronds. 1,100 feet above sea. No malaria. New water works, supplying mountain spring wuter. Sanitary plumbing. Entirely now management. Splendid fishing. (100 acres. Including tho famous Watklns Glen. Popular price. Special rates for excursion parties. J. It. KKENAN, formerly Hotel Chamberlain, Mgr. Address W. li UOIIIN SON, Prop. HOTEL ALBERT, Cor. 11th Street nnd University Place. NKW YORK. Ono block west of Jlroadwny. Nottd for tno things, COMFORTand CUISINE First-classrooms at 81. 00 u doy and up ward, on tho European plan. L. &. E. FRENKLE. W v" An cstabltihed Lotel under new manaeunent and thoroughly abreast of tho times, Visitors to sit New York wll rill Una the Everett In the very heart TV 9t the shopping dtrtrlct, convenient to places of r dlrtr amusement anil readlijr accessible from all parts IT -( tne cltT. EUUOl'EAN PLAN, WESTMINSTER HOTEL, Cor. Sixteenth St. and Irving Place, NEW YORK. AMERICAN PLAN, Day and Upwards. EUROPEAN PLAN, Day and Upwards. $3.50 Pc $1.50 Vet !E0, MURRAY, Proprietor, The St. Denis Broadway and Eleventh St., New York. Opp. draco Church. European Plan. Rooms $1.00 a Day and Upwards. In a modest and unobtrusive way thero ar few butter conductud hotels in tho metropolis. man tne m. uoms. The great popularity It bos acquired oau tadlly bo tracsd to Its unlnuo location, ita Tho readily bo tracsd to Its unlnuo location. IU homelike, ntmosnhere. the peculiar toxcellonoa' UK of Its cuisine and sorvlco, and Its very moder" ute prices. WILLIAM TAYLOR AND SON. Peaches, Cherries, Pineapples, Plums. Also fancy lionie. grown Strawberries. V. E PIERCE, PE1 1. Ill MADE ME A MAM AJAX TABLETS POSITIVELY COIHJ Jir-JiVmiui nueatt Fairing Hem orr,Impotencr.HlettpleianoBa.ete.. oae4 by Abtiaa nr nthni. Kxrji.Ma anif India. XjL cretjoQi. fhti quickly ami turtiu rutore Lett Vital llr la old or joonir. anl 111 b man lor aiuar, on'meis or man-iaga. PreTnt lnunltr anl (YimuEODtlon if taknn la tima. Their ute ahowa in. mediate fraproTO. meat and enVU a CUUE where .all other fall In. lit upon liming the genuine AJai Tablets. Ther bsTe cured thorn audi and will euro rou. We sir a po ltliewrltteniruaranteetooirectacure Kfi PTQ 'a each cou or refund the tnoner Price W Ulvi pec packani or (U pkaes (lull treatment) Sot tlGO, pr mall, in plain wrapper, upon receipt or rrioe. Circular "" AJAX REMEDY CO., "tfisfrfig- For tale in Bcrantou, Fa., by Matthew Droa. nnd Morgan b Co. rrSrgVn' i. O ftqwnw . tV . -? -rf&awjr i v V . MW5 " V IVM. VI. BATES. wJsJ,:W " U M BATU hit . -