WEST SHORE. like a silent offering of thanks that my curious adven ture had, after all, terminated so harmlessly. " Following the ledge with careful steps it soon led me upward to level ground, and when I emerged from a willow thicket I found myself on theispot at which I had halted the previous evening. Pedro was quietly grazing ndt'far off and "my provisions were intact where I had left them. " It was while sitting on the bank of the stream taking my much-needed breakfast that a strange and startling idea suggested itself to me. I was thinking of the arrow carved upon the sandstone slab, wonder ing if it had been wrought by the man whose bones had found sepulture in the dug-out ; and, if so, what purpose it was meant to serve. Suddenly the curious words of my twice-dreamt dream recurred to me " ' At the arrow's point I ' " A shudder ran over me as I saw again in fancy the hollow, burning eyes of my dream visitant and heard the anguished tones in which the words were wailed out. Of course it was all a phantasm of my troubled sleep, but " Perhaps it was the wild loneliness of the locality that set my brain teeming with weird and restless fan cies ; I can not say; I only know that ere long I re solved to re-enter the dug-out and try to decipher the characters upon the stone. " Finding my way back along the ledge into my darksome prison of the previous night, I was soon 1 kneeling before the stone rubbing away the loose sand and making out the letters ' D-I-G.' As they were large capitals my first impression naturally was1 that they were the initials of a name. But suddenly it flashed upon me that they spelled a word' dig.' In another instant I had connected the word with those mysterious ones of my dream " ' Dig at the arrow's point I ' . " I began trembling with excitement, and instinct ively glanced over my shoulder at the poor, lifeless bones in the corner. Had I received a message from the dead ? ' " Replacing the stone before the entrance, that I might determine the exact spot at which the arrow pointed when in that position, I drew a stout butcher knife from my belt and began to dig. " The sandy soil was easily removed to a depth of eight or ten inches j then I struck a flat stone that re quired some time and effort to dislodge. When it was finally lifted and tossed aside, my heart bounded with the queerest emotion imaginable, for there, in a cavity beneath the stone, lay a tin canteen, such as soldiers, huntsmen and miners are wont to use to carry bever ages somewhat stronger than the mouatain streams afford. It was red with rust that fell off in great scales as I lifted it. Moreover, it was heavy. " ' Gold I ' I muttered, nervously; and true enough, when I removed the bit of rotten cork and emptied the contents into my hat, it was a stream of yellow , gold I saw, dust and nuggets varying in size from a pea to a hazel nut a whole pint of it. , " When I thought I had emptied the canteen, I found there was yet something inside that rattled but would not be shaken out. Thinking of a nugget still larger than any of its fellows, I twisted the rusty tin asunder and found, not a nugget, but a painted bit of tin folded two or three times. I unfolded it, and start ed to my feet with a hoarse cry - of mingled amaze ment and joy. What I held in my hand was a tin type picture of Helen Poindexter." " As I turned it in my trembling grasp I found, scratched with some sharp-pointed instrument on tho reverse side, these words " Boys, I am dying here in the old dug-out all alone, wounded by cursed Shoshones. If you ever come back and find this, I know you will send the gold to my poor wife Helen, at Leavenworth, Kansas. Good-bye, POINDBXTEH. " For a moment I stood gazing alternately at the beautiful, beloved features and the words that meant life, hope, joy for me ; then I sank down and gave way to the first tears my manhood had knowntears born of a happiness and gratitude that could find no other expression. In recollection I had gone back to that May morning four years in tho past, whon a pair of sweet lips, with my kisses warm upon them, had said to me " ' No, no ; I want no Enoch Ardcn tragedy enact ed in my life. We must part, dear Henry, and you must never come to me again, unless it be to prove to me that my husband no longer lives.' " I had never sought nor hoped for uch proof, and now, here it was, placed in my hands by shall I say Providence? Could any earthly chance havo wrought such a miracle? " That is all of my story, Bronson, except that I gave a tender and solemn burial to all that remained of the man who had been Helen's husband, and then I hastened back to Leavenworth as fast as available traveling facilities could carry me, and you know the rest. I leave you to decide whether or not I have rea son to believe in ' love at first sight,' and in " A divinity that nhapes our ends, Hough-hew thun how w will." Carrie Bi.akk Moroan. A neatly printed invitation has been received from the Hoquiam board of trade to attend the celebration in that city on tho Fourth of July. This shows the enterprising nature of the citizens and accounts pome what for the rapid growth Hoquiam is enjoying.