01
T H'
PILLA
LIGHT
Indeecf. flie pVotecTTon "of "the stout
plate plass, so thick and tough that
Bea birds on a stormy night dashed
themselves to painless death against It,
was very welcome. Moreover, though
neither of he girls -would admit it,
there was .a sense of security here
which was strangely absent when they
looked Into the abyss beneath the stone
gallery. Constance, balancing a tele
scope, and nid, peering through the
fleldglasses, followed the progress of
the Daisy in silence, but Brand's eyes
wandered uneasily from the barometer,
which had fallen rapidly during the
past hour, to the cyclonic nimbus
spreading its dark mass beyond the
Seven Stones lightship. The sun had
vanished seemingly for the day, and
the indicator attached to the base of
the wind vane overhead pointed now
eou'west by west. It would not re
quire much further variation to bring
about a strong blow from the true
southwest, a quarter responsible for
most of the fierce gales that sweep the
English channel.
Nevertheless this quick darting about
of the fickle breeze did not usually be
token lasting bad weather. At the
worst the girls might be compelled to
pass the night on the rock. He knew
that the tug with the two relief men
would make a valiant effort to reach
the lighthouse at the earliest possible
moment. When the men joined him
the girls caulil embark. As it was the
affair was spiced with adventure.
Were it not for the mishap to the as
sistant keepers the young people would
have enjoyed themselves throughly.
The new airt of the wind. tt?j, would
scud the Daisy speedily back to port.
Thij in itself justified the course he
had taken. On the whole a doubtful
situatio was greatly relieved. His
face Iv'.gh toned. With a grave humor
not altogether artificial he cried:
"Now, Constance, I did not take you
aboard as a visitor. Between us we
ouf.'ht to muster a good appetite. Come
with mo to the storeroom. I will get
you anything you want and leave you
In charge of the kitchen."
"And poor me!" chimed in Enid.
"Oh, you, miss, are appointed upper
housemaid, and, mind you, no follow
ers." "Mercy! I nearly lost my situation
before I got it."
"How?"
"Wo met Jack Stanhope and asked
him to come with us."
"You asked him, you mean," said
Constance.
"And you met him, I meant," said
Enid.
"I don't care a pin how you treated
Stanhope so long as you didn't bring
him," said Brand, "though, indeed, he
would have been useful as it turned
out"
When lunch was ready they summon
ed him by the electric bells he had put
tip throughout the building. It gave
them great joy to discover in the living
room a code of signals which covered
a variety of messages. They rang him
downstairs by the . correct call for
"Meal served."
It was a hasty repast, as Brand could
not remain long away from the glass
covered observatory, but they all en
joyed it Immensely. He left them, as
he said, "to gabble up the remains,"
but snon he shouted down the stairs
to toil them that the Daisy had round
ed Carn du. He could not tell them,
not knowing it. that at that precise mo
ment eld Bon Bollard was frantically
slgmiling to Lieutenant Stanhope to
change the course of the small steam
y,i, J,,, i,ni (.omrinndeered as soon
n.-. ..; r. v.r r;.:i I'-.rorga the town
that the Gulf Rock was flying the "help
wanted" signal.
The officials did not know that Brand
was fo:vne!Ied by the snowstorm to
nse r M-kets. All the information they
pusfossed was the message from
Land's End and its time of dispatch.
Jack Stanhope's easy going face be
came very strenuous indeed when he
heard the news.
The hour statod was precisely the
time the Daisy was due at the rock if
she made a good trip. Without allow
ing for any possible contingency save
disaster to the girls and their escort,
he rushed to the mooring place of the
ten ton steam yacht Lapwing, im
pounded a couple of lounging sailors,
fired up, stoked and steered the craft
himself and was off across the bay in
a quarter of the time that the owner
of the Lapwing could have achieved
the same result.
His amazement was complete when
he encountered the redoubtable Daisy
bowling home before a seven knot
breeze. He instantly came round and
ranged up to speaking distance. When
he learned what had occurred he read
ily agreed to return to Penzance in
order Jto pick up the relief lighthouse
keepers and thus save time in trans
ferrins them to the rock.
: In a word, aa Enid Trevlllion was
fSafe, he was delighted at the prospect
of bringing her back that evening,
when the real skipper of the Lapwing
would probably, have charge of his
own boat. There was no hurry at all
now.
If they left the harbor at 3 o'clock,
there would stW.be plenty of light to
reach the Gulf Bock.. Ben Pollard,
cUac!affOYer blsboeUer th DftUy
need toward .Peangace side ty U
.with tbajXaoviiue. m not nn of
By ...
Louis Tracy,
9f
Author of
"The
Wings
of the
Morning
Copyright. 1904. by
Edward J. Clode
mis. iiut tne arrangement he had sug
gested was the best possible one, and
he was only an old fisherman who
knew the coast, whereas Master Stan
hope pinned his faith to the Nautical
Almanac and the rules.
The people most concerned knew
nothing of these proceedings.
When Constance and Enid had sol
emnly decided on the menu for dinner,
when they had inspected the kitchen
and commended the cleanliness of the
cook, Jackson; when they had washed
the dishes and discovered the where
abouts of the "tea things," they sud
denly determined that it was much
nicer aloft in the sky parlor than in
these dim little rooms.
"I don't see why they don't have
decent windows," said Enid. "Of
course it blows hard here in a gale,
but just look at that tiny ventilator, no
bigger than a ship's porthole, with a
double storm shutter to secure It if
you please, for all the world as if the
sea rose so high!" .
Constance took thought for awhile.
"I suppose the sea never does reach
this height," she said.
Enid, in order to look out, had to
thrust her head and shoulders through
an aperture two feet square and three
feet in depth. They were in the living
room at that moment full seventy feet
above the spring tide high water mark.
Sixty feet higher the cornice of the
gallery was given its graceful outer
slope to shoot the climbing wave crests
of an Atlantic gale away from the lan
tern. The girls could not realize this
stupendous fact. Brand had never told
them. He wished them to sleep peace
fully on stormy nights when he was
away from home. They laughed now
at the fanciful notion that the sea
could ever so much as toss its spray
at the window of the living room.
They passed into the narrow stair
way. Their voices and footsteps
sounded hollow. It was to the floor
beneath that Bates had fallen. .
"I don't think I like living in a light
house," cried Enid. "It gives one the
creeps."
"Surely there are neither ghosts nor
ghouls , here," , said Constance. "It is
modern, scientific, utilitarian In every
atom of its solid granite." u
But Enid was silent as they climbed
the steep stairs.
Once she stopped and peeped into
her father's bedroom.
"That 13 where they brought me
when I first came to the rock," she
whispered. "It used to be Mr. Jones'
room. I remember dad saying so."
Constance, on whose shoulders the
reassuring cloak of science hung some
what loosely, placed her arm around
her sister waisTin a suddeiTaccessdl
tenderness.
"You have improved in appearanct
since then, Enid," she said.
"What a wizened little chip I musl
have looked. I wonder who I am."
"I know who you soon will be if you
don't take care."
Enid blushed prettily. She glanced
at herself in a small mirror on the
wall.' Trust a woman to find a mirror
In any apartment.
"I suppose Jack will ask me to mar
ry him," she mused."
"And what will you reply?"
The girl's Hp parted. Her eyes shone
for an instant; then she buried her
face against her sister's bosom.
"Oh, Connie," she wailed, "I shall
! hate to leave you and dad. Why hasn't
! Jack got a brother as nice as him
i self?"
j Whereupon Constance laughed loud
l and long.
The relief was grateful to both.
Enid's idea of a happy solution of the
domestic difficulty appealed to their
easily stirred sense of humor.
"Never mind, dear," gasped Con
stance at last. "You shall marry your
Jack and invite all the nice men to
dinner. Good gracious! I will have
the pick of the navy. Perhaps the ad
miral may be a widower."
With flushed faces they reached the
region of light. Brand was writing at
a small desk In the service room.
"Something seems to have amused
you." he said. "I have heard weird
peals ascending from the depths."
"Connie is going to splice the ad
miral." explained Enid.
"What admiral?"
"Any old admiral."
"Indeed 1 will not take an old ad
miral," protested the elder.
"Then you had better take him when
he is a lieutenant," said Brand.
This offered too gooJ an opening to
be resisted.
"Enid has already secured the lieu
tenant." she murmured, with a swift
glance at the other.
Brand looked up quizzically.
"Dear uie." he cried, "if my con
gratulations are not belated"
Enid was blushing again. Qfce threw
her arms about his neck.
"Don't believe her, dad," she said.
"She's jealous!"
Constance saw a book lying on the
table, "Regulations For the Lighthouse
Service." She opened it Brand stroked
Enid's hair gently and resumed the
writing of his daily journal.
"The Elder Brethren!" whispered
Constance. "Do they wear long white
beards 7
"And oarry. wands?" added the re
covered 33nid. ..:
fijtem ha Tet cloaks
R
uuojmsi isnoes i " --And"
"And say boo to naughty little girls
t who won't let nie complete my diary,"
'shouted Brand. "Be off, both of you.
Keep a lookout for the next ten min
utes. If you see any signals from the
mainland or catch silit of the Lance
lot, call me." .
They climbed to the trimming stage
of the lantern, which was level witiii
the external gallery. Obedient to in
structions, they searched the Land's
End and the wide reach of Mount's
bay beyond Carn du. Save a scudding
sail or two beating in from the Lizard
and a couple of big steamers hurrying
from the east one a traiisatlantic
transport liner from London there
. was nothing visible. In the far dis
tance the sea loolied smooth enough.
though they needed no explanation of
the reality when they saw the irregular
white patches glistening against the
hull of a Penzance fishing smack.
"Oh, Connie, the reef!" said Enid
suddenly in a low voice.
They glanced at the turbid retreat
of the tide over the submerged rocks.
The sea was heavier, the noise louder,
now that they listened to it than when
they arrived in the Daisy, little more
than an hour earlier. Some giant force
seemed to be wrestling there, raging
against its bonds, striving feverishly
to tear, rend, utterly destroy its invisi
ble fetteis. Sometimes, after an un
usually impetuous surge, a dark shape,
trailing witch tresses of weed, showed
for an instant in the pit of the cal
dron. Then a mad whirl of water
would pounce on it with a fearsome
spring and the fang of rock would be
smothered ten feet deep.
For some reason they did not talk.
They were fascinated by the power,
the grandeur, the untamed energy of
the spectacle. The voice of the reef
held them spellbound. They listened
mutely.
Beneath Brand wrote with scholarly
ease:
"Therefore I decided, that it would
best serve the interests of the board
if I sent Bates and Jackson to Pen
zance in the boat in which my daugh
ter" he paused an instant and added
an "&" to the word "fortunately hap
pened to visit me. As I would be alone
on the rock, and the two girls might be
helpful until the relief came, I retained
them." . .
He glanced at the weather glass in
front of him and made a note:
"Barometer failing. Temperature
higher."
In another book he entered the exact
records. A column headed '.'Wind di
rection and force" caused him to look
up at the wind vanel He whistled
softly. -
"S." WV," he wrote, and after-a-sees
ond's thought inserted the . figure - 6.
The sailor's scale, ye landsman, differs
from yours.,: What you tern a gale at
sea he joyfully halls as a fresh breeze.
No. 6 is a point above this limit when
a well conditioned clipper ship can car
ry single reefs and topgallant; sails in
chase full and by. No. 12 is a duu
rlcane. "Bare poles," says the scale.
Slowly mounting the Iron ladder, he
stood beside the silent watchers. The
bay was nearly deserted. No sturdy
tugboat was pouring smoke from her
funnel and staggering toward the rock.
Northwest and west the darkness was
spreading and lowering.
He did not trouble to examine the
reef. Its signs and tokens were too
familiar to him. Its definite bellow or
muttered threat was part of the pre
vailing influence of the hour or day.
He had heard its voice too often to find
an omen in it now.
"This time I must congratulate both
of you," he said quietly.
"On what?" they cried in unison,
shrill with unacknowledged excitement.
: "Ladies seldom If ever pass a night
on a rock lighthouse. You will have
tli at rare privilege."
. Enid clapped her hands.
"I am delighted," she exclaimed.
"Will there be a storm, father?" ask
ed Constance.
"I think so. At any rate, only a
miracle will enable the tug to reach us
before tomorrow, and miracles are not
frequent occurrences at sea."
' I know of one," was HIJ'3 com
ment, with great seriousness for her.
He read her thought.
"I was younger then," he smiled.
"Now I am fifty, and the world has
aged."
CHAPTER V.
HEY descended into the service
room.
"Let me see," said Enid. "It
will be nineteen years on the
22d of next June since you found me
floating serenely toward the Gulf Rock
in a deserted boat?"
"Yes, if you insist on accuracy as to
the date. I might cavil at your se
renity." "And I was 'estimated' as a year old
then? Isn't it a weird thing that a
year old baby should be sent adrift on
the Atlantic in an open boat and never
a word of inquiry made subsequently
as to her fate? I fear I could not have
been of much account in those days."
"My dear child, I have always told
you that the boat had been in collision
during the fog which had prevailed for
several days previously. Those who
were caring for you were probably
knocked overboard and drowned."
"But alone, utterly alone! That is
the strangeness of it I must be an
American. Americans start out to hus
tle for themselves early in life, don't
they?" '
"Certainly in that respect you might
claim the record."
Brand had. not told her all the facts
of that memorable June morning. Why
should he? They were not pleasant
memories, to him. Why cumber ber
also with them? For the rest he bad
drawn up and read to her long' ago a
carefully compiled account 'of her (res
cue and the step tafcettToltocorer Iter
MtntKy. - . ; :: ,."
I g?Bterad on aottee. andmatef
career with no such "halo 'of "siory,"
broke In Constance. "J am just plain
English, born in Brighton, of parents
not poor, but respectable. Mother died
a year after my birth, didn't sho, dad?"
"You were thirteen months old when
we lost her," he answered, bending
over the clockwork attachment of the
fog bell to wipe off an invisible speck
of dust. Since his first term of service
on the rock the light had changed from
an occulting to -a fixed one.
"She is buried there, isn't she?" the
girl went on. "How strange that amid
our journeying we have never visited
Brighton."
"If I were able to take you to her
graveside, I would not do it," said
Brand. "I do not encourage morbid
sentiments even of that perfectly nat
ural kind. Your mother to you, Con
stance, is like Enid's to her a dear but
visionary legend. In a degree it is al
ways so between loved ones lost and
those who are left. Truth, honor, work
these are the highest ideals for ttie
individual. They satisfy increasingly.
Happy as I am in your companionship,
you must not be vexed when I tell you
that the most truly joyful moment of
my life was conferred when my little
friend here first responded accurately
to external influences."
He laid his hand on an object resting
on a table by itself. It looked like an
aneroid barometer, but the others knew
it was the marine auriscope to which
he had devoted so many patient hours.
"Is it in working order now?" asked
Constance instantly, and Enid came
nearer. Together they examined the
small dial. It was equipped with an
arrow headed pointer and marked with
the divisions of the compass, but with
out the distinguishing letters.
These three understood each other
exactly. By inadvertence the conver
sation had touched on a topic concern
ing which Brand was always either
vague or silent. Both girls were quick
witted enough to know that Con
stance's mother was never willingly
alluded ' to either by the lighthouse
keeper or by the elderly Mrs. Shep
pard, who looked after them in in
fancy and was now the housekeeper
6f Laburnum cottage.
Constance was annoyed. How could
she have been so thoughtless as tc
cause her father a moment's suffering
by bringing up painful reminiscences!
But he helped her, being master oi
himself.
He adjusted a switch in the instru
ment. "J had no difficulty in constructing a
diaphragm which wxuld intercept . all
sounds," he said. "The struggle cam6
when I wanted an agent which would
distinguish and register a particular
set of sounds, no matter what addi
tional din might be prevalent at th
same time. My hopes were wrecked sc
often ,that I began to despair, until 1
chanced to read one day how the high
tension induction coil could: be tuned
to disregard electrical influences other
than' those issued at the same pitch.
My anxiety, until I had procured and
experimented with ,.a v properly con
structed coil, was very trying, I assure
yout" ,
"I remember wondering what oe
earth it was," volunteered Enid." "U
sounded like a mathematical snake."
"And I am sorry to say that even yel
I am profoundly ignorant as to its true
Inwardness," smiled Constance.
"Yet you girls delight in ., poets. who
bid you hearken to the music of the
spheres. I suppose you will admit that
the ear of, say, Ben Pollard is not tun
ed to such a celestial harmony. How
ever, I will explain my auriscope in a
sentence. It only listens to and indi
cates the direction of fog horns, sirens
and ships' bells. A shrill steam whistle
excites it, but the breaking of seas
aboard ship, the loud flapping of a pro
peller, the noise of the engines, of a
gale, or all these in combination, leave
it unmoved."
"I remen.ber once, when we were
going from Falmouth to Porthalla in a
fog, how dreadfully difficult it was to
discover the whereabouts of another
steamer we passed en route," said his
daughter.
"Well, with this little chap on the
bridge, the pointer would have told
the captain uuerrinsly. I don't suppose
it will be thick while you are here, or
you would see it pick up the distant
blasts of a steamer long before we can
hear them and follow her course right
round the arc of her passage. It is
most interesting to watch its activity
when there are several ships using
their sirens. I have never had an op
portunity of testing it on more than
three vessels at once, but as soon as I
could deduce a regular sequence in the
seemingly erratic movements of the in
dicator I marked the approach and
passing of each with the utmost ease."
"Would that stop collisions at sea?"
"Nothing will do that, because some
ships' officers refuse at times to exer
cise due care, but with my instrument
on board two ships, and a time chart
attached to the drums, there would be
no need for a board of trade inquiry
to determine whether or not the proper
warning was given. To the vast ma
jority of navigators it will prove an ab
solute blessing."
"You clever old thing!" cried Enid.
"I suppose you will make heaps of
money out of it."
"The inventor is the last man to
make money out of his inventions, as
a rule," said Brand. "I suppose I differ
from the ordinary poor fellow inas
much as I ara not dependent for a live
lihood on tl'.e success of my discovery."
"There's not the least bit of chance
of there being a fog tonight?" queried
Enid so earnestly that a wave of mer
riment rippled through the room.
"Not the least In any event you
two girls will be In bed and sound
asleep at 10 o'clock."
,Petish! the ; thought!" cried .Con
stance. "Bed at 10, during our first
andmry,nighrtoalItlou8er'
1 "Boa wm ft.trbeea&ber. ITaa
cannot Imagine how'tlie clcOk tTi wdles
in this circumscribed area. Work alone
conquers it Otherwise, men would
quit the service after a mouth's experi
ence." "Ship ahoy!" screamed Enid. "Here
coines the Lapwing round Cam du.
Mr. Lawton must have lent her to
bring the relief. How kind of him."
"The Lapwing cannot approach the
rock," said Brand. ' "I will signal
'Landing impossible today.' It will
save them a useless journey."
He selected the requisite flags from
a locker, the piirase he needed being
coded. Soon tha strong breeze was
trying to tear the bunting from the
cordage, and though they could not
hear the three whistles with which the
little yacht acknowledged the signal,
they could easily see the jets of steam
through their glasses.
Constance happened to overlook the
table on which stood the auriscope.
"This thing has actually recorded
those whistles," she cried in wonder.
"What sort of whistle has the Lap
wing?" asked Brand.
"A loud and deep one, worthy of a
leviathan. It was a fad of Mr. Law
ton's. They say his siren consumes
more steam than his engines."
Her father laughed.
"Anyhow, he is sticking to his
course," he announced. "I may as
well take in. the daontii-in".". ,
The Kind Xou Have Always
in use for over SO years,
and
TyTy' r.. sonal
All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good are but
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hat is CASTOR I A
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S7
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He KM You Haie Always Bought
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THC CEWTAUR OOMfHWY, TT MURRAf OTWirT,; W tW VOWW OITV. v
sfrfiB To sg-js
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Undauntedly, but much hurried by a
sea ever iacreasing la strength, as the
force; of the ebl tide encountered the
resistance of the wind, the Lapwing
held on. With wind and sea against
her she would ha-e made slow work off
it. As it was, there was help forth
coming for both journeys unless the
wind went back to the north again a
rapidly as it had veered to the south
west She would not be abreast the rock:
for nearly an hour, so Brand left the
girls in charge of the lookout while he
visited the oil room. A wild night such
alie anticipated demanded full pres
sure at the lamp. If the air became
supersaturated, breakage of the glass
chimneys might take place, and he must
have a good stock on hand. Water and
coal, too, were needed. The double ac
cident to Bates and Jackson had
thrown into arrears all the ordinary
duties of the afternoon watch.
Naturally the pair in the lantern
found the progress of the yacht exas
peratingly slow.
"A nice Lapwing," said Enid scorn
fully. "I will tell Mr. Lawton he ought
to rechristen her the Bantam. All her
power is in her crow."
When Brand joined them matters be
came livelier. More accustomed than
they to the use of a telescope, he made
ajfoveries..
(To be Continued)
Bought, and which has been,
nas borne the signature of
lias been made under bis per-
supervision since its infancy.
ALWAYS
Signature of
PER ACRE.
That's what a Spreader will do if
used as it should be.
lanura Spreader
balanced on front and rear axles. The team is
as near the load as it can work. Front and rear
axles are the same length and wheels track;
beater shaft runs in ball and socket bearings,
therefore no friction. Beater is 23 inches in di
ameter, seat turns over when loading. Machine
turns in its own length.
Simplicity. There are only two levers on our
machine. One which raises the hood, locks it
and throws the nu.chine in gear at the same time.
It can then be thrown in and out of gear without
lowering the hood. One lever which changes
feed to spread thick or thin, making it so simple
that a boy who can drive a team can handle it.
Strength and Durability is one of the most
important points to be considered in a manure
i spreader. The Great Western has a good, strong,
durable wheel. Extra strong spoke and rim,
heavy steel tires. Strong, well braced box with
heavy oak sill- Oak tongue, hickory doubletrees,
malleable castings, gears and ttrockett all keyed
on. . Galvanised hood. Every part is made extra
strong, regardless of Co-1. It is made for tie man
mho wants tht best, made in four sizes, 3s, so,
yo and too bushel capacity.
Guarantee Should any part break, wear out or
get out of order withi" one year we replace free
of charge. Send for free catalog, showing latest
improvements. It tells how to apply manure to
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