Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909, August 10, 1906, Page 4, Image 4

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    !
LIGHT
"i . two supernumeraries are tnere,"
be announced, "but I cannot see Law-
ton. Indeed, so far as I can make out,
she is commanded by Stanhope, dress
ed in Ben Pollard's oilskins."
"He bas left Lady Margaret!" cried
Constance.
"He never went home!" essayed
Enid.
"Poor chap! He was going to take
us for a drive tomorrow," said Con
stance. "To llorvah," explained Enid, with
a syllabic emphasis meant for one pair
of ears.
"It is very nice of him to struggle on
and have a look at us," said Brand,
"lie can come close enough to see us,
but that is all. Our small megaphone
will be useless."
Indeed the Lapwing dared not ap
proach nearer than the Trinity moor-,
ing buoy. By that time the three, pro
tected from the biting wind by oilskin
coats, were standing on the gallery.
The reef was bellowing up at them
with a continuous roar. A couple of
acres of its surface consisted of noth
ing more tangible than white foam and
driving spray.
Stanhope, resigning the wheel to a
sailor, braced himself firmly against
' the little vessel's foremast and began
to strike a series of extraordinary at
. titudes with bis arms and head.
"Yhy is he behaving in that idiotic
manner?" screamed Enid.
"Capital idea semaphore clever fel
low, Jack," shouted Brand.
Abashed, Enid held her peace.
The lighthouse keeper,' signaling in
turn that he was receiving the mes
sage, spelled out the following:
"Is all well?"
"Yes," he answered.
"Bates and Jackson reached hospital.
Bates compound fracture. If weather
moderates will be with you next tide."
"All right," waved Brand.
The distant figure starte again:
"L-o-v-e t-o E-n-i-d"
Enid indulged in an extraordinary
arm flourish. .
"A-n-d C-o-n-s-t-a-n-c-e."
"That spoils it," she screamed. "It
ought to be only kind regards to you,
Connie. I believe you are a serpent,
a"
"Do stop your chatter," shouted
Brand, and he continued the message:
"Weather looks very bad. Little hope
for tonight. Lancelot due at 6. Will
see personally that no chance is lost.
Goodby."
"Goodhy," was the response.
The Lapwing fell away astern from
the vicinity of the buoy.
"Why is he doing that?" asked Con
stance, close to her father's ear.
"He is too good a sailor to risk turn
ing her in that broken water. A little
farther out there is greater depth and
more regular seas."
They watched the yacht in silence.
At last her head swung round toward
the coast. When broadside on a wave
hit her, and the spray leaped over her
masts.
"That gave them a wetting," cried
Brand, and his calm tone stilled their
ready fear. Indeed, there was greater
danger than he wanted them to know,
but the Lapwing reappeared, shaking
herself and still turning.
"Good little boat!" said Brand. The
crisis had passed. She was headed, at
full speed, for the bay. And not too
soon. Ere she reached the comparative
shelter of Clement's island she was
swept three times by green water. j
Inside the lantern, their faces ruddy
with the exposure, their eyes dancing
vrltli e.ci;?:ror.t. the rirls vrere voluble
with delight. Could anything be more
thrilling than their experiences that
day!
"That semaphore dodge Is too pre
o;ot:s to be lost," cried Enid. "Connie,
you and I must learn th alphabet.
You shall teach us this very evening,
dad. Fancy me signaling you the
whole length of the promenade: 'Just
look at Mrs. Wilson's bonnet,' or 'Here
come the Taylor-Smiths. Scoot!' Oh,
it's fine!"
She whirled her arms In stiff jointed
rigidity and mimicked Stanhope's fan
tastic posing.
"Why should you scoot when you
meet the Taylor-Smiths?" askedBrand. !
"Because Mrs. T.-S. hauls us off to
tea and gives us a gallon of gossip
with every cup."
"I thought your sex regarded gossip
as the cream?"
"Sex, indeed! Old Smith Is worse
than his wife. He doesn't say much,
but he winks. One of his winks, at the
end of a story, turns an episode into a
three volume novel."
"It seems to me I must teach you
the code in my own self defense," he
replied. "And now for tea. Let us
have it served here."
I hPT T-Afwl Tnla n n nfimirflnlA nnrmn
The girls enlivened the meal by relat
ing to him the doings and sayings of
current Interest ashore during tie past
two months. By aftreer coincidence,
,muvu xxv utu uvii uicuuvu, ma icu
was again due within a week, just as
on the occasion of Enid's first appear
ance on the rock. The fact struck him
as singular. In all probability he
would not return to duty. He bad
completed twenty-one years of active
service. Now he would retire, and
when the commercial arrangements
for the aurlscope were completed be
wjsnJdJtakeWs jfrngbtwen.fc 3ac
I
i
mmm By
Louis Tracy,
Author of
"The
Wings
of the
Morning"
Copyright. 1904. by
Edward J. Clode
promised continental "tour ' unless, in
deed, matters progressed between
Stanhope and Enid to the point of an
early marriage.
He had foreseen that Stanhope would
probably ask Enid to be his wife. He
knew the youngster well and liked
him. For the opposition that Lady
Margaret might offer he cared not a
jot. He smiled inwardly as the con
venient phrase has it when he re
viewed the certain outcome of any
dispute between himself and her lady
ship. He would surprise her.
Brand the lighthouse keeper and
Brand urging the claims of his adopted
daughter would be two very different
persons.
Of course all Penzance knew that he
was a gentleman, a scientist in a small
way and a man of means. Otherwise
Constance and Enid would not have oc
cupied the position they held in locaso
ciety. Those unacquainted with Eng
lish ways ofttimes make the mistake
of rating a man's social status by the
means he possesses or the manner of
his life in Loncon. No greater error
could be committed. The small, exclu
sive county town, the community
which registers the family connections
of many generations, is the only jre-
liable Index. Here to be of gentle
birth and breeding not bad credentials
even in the court of King Demos con
fers Brahmanical rank, no matter what
the personal' fortunes of ,the individual.
Brand, it is true, did not belong to a
Cornish county family, but there were
those who conned him shrewdly. They
regarded him-as a well meaning crank,
yet the edict went forth that his daugh
ters were to be "received," and received
they were, with pleasure and admira
tion, by all save such startled elderly
mammas as Lady Margaret Stanhope,
who expected her good looking son to
contract a marriage which would re
store the failing fortunes of the house.
All unconscious of the thoughts flit
ting through his brain, for Brand was
busy trimming a spare lamp, the two
girls amused themselves by learning
the semaphore alphabet from a little
handbook which he found for them.
When the night fell, dark and lower
ing, the lamp was lighted. They had
never before seen an eight wicked con
centric burner in use. The shore light
houses with which they were acquaint
ed were illuminated by electricity or
on the catoptric principle, wherein a
large number of small Argand lamps,
with reflectors, are grouped together.
To interest them, to keep their eyes
and ears away from the low water
orgy of the reef, he explained to them
the capillary action of the oiL Al
though they had learned these things In
school, they had not realized the ex
actness of the statement thasil does
not burn, but must first be converted
into gas by the application of heat.
On the Gulf Rock there were nearly
3,000 gallons of colza oil stored in the
tanks beneath, colza being used in
preference to paraffin because It was
safer, and there was no storage accom
modation apart from the lighthouse.
Requiring much greater heat than
mineral oil to produce inflammable gas,
the colza had to be forced by heavy
pressure in the cistern right up to the
edge of the wicks and made to flow
evenly over the rims of the burner,
else the fierce flame would eat the met
al disks as well.
He read them a little lecture on the
rival claims of gas and electricity and
They were cheerful as cTlgs over it.
demonstrated how dazzlingly brilliant
the latter could be on a dark, clear
night by showing them the fine light on
the Lizard.
"But in hazy weather the oil wins,"
he said, with the proper pride of every
man in his own engine. "Fishermen
sailing into Penzance along a course
equidistant from the two points tell
me that if they can see anything at all
on a foggy night they invariably catch
a dull yellow radiance from the rock,
while the Lizard is invisible. The oil
has more penetrative power. Its chem
ical combination is nearer the mean of
nature's resources."
At the proper time he banished them
to the kitchen to prepare dinner, a
feast diverted' from x the bom? of noon
by tlcttencesof tbeday. He-adopted
every expedient to keep them bnac& to
rentier "tnetn Bo exnansxea mat tney
would sleep in blissful calm through
the ordeal to come. .
As he could not leave the .lamp, and
they refused to eat apart from him,
the dinner, in three courses, was a
breathless affair. Going up and down
Sv? C'srM of strirs with soup, "joint
and pv.'l&'.wz. yrhile one carried the
tray and tre other swung a hand lan
tern la front, required time and exer
tion. They were cheerful as grigs
over it.
Enid, whose turn it was to bring up
the platers cf tnpioer.. pleaded guilty tc
a slight pensaticu of nervousness.
"I cor.!J not help reraenibermg," she
said, fwhat an awfr.l let of dark iron
steps there were boneath me. I felt
as if S3ra?t!il" were creeping up
quickly behind to grab me by tha
ankles."
"You should go up and down three
times in the dark." was Brand's recipe.
"When you quitted the door level for
the third ascent you would cease to
worry about impossible grabs."
Constance looked at her watch.
"Only 8 o'clock! What a long day it
has been!" she commented.
"You must go to bed early. Sleep In
my room. You will soon forget where
you are. Each of the bunks is com
fortable. Now I will leave you in
charge of the lamp while I go and lock
up."
They laughed. It sounded so home
like. "Any fear of burglars?" cried Enid.
"Yes; most expert cracksmen wind
and rain and sleet," he added quietly.
"I must fasten all the storm shutters
and make everything snug. Don't stir
until I wake you in the morning."
"Poor old dad!" sighed Constance.
"What a vigil!"
He was making new entries In the
weather report when she remarked
thoughtfully:
"It is high water about half past 1,
I think?" "
He nodded, pretending to treat the
question as of no special import.
"From all appearances there will be
a heavy sea," she went on.
"Just an ordinary bad night," he said
coolly. . .
"Do the waves reach far up the light
house in a gale?" she persisted.
Then Brand grasped the situation
firmly.
"So that your slumbers may',' be
peaceful," he said, "I will call your
kind attention to the fact that 'the
Gulf Rock light has appeared every
night during, the past., .twenty-five
years, or ,slnce a date, some four years
before you were born, Constance. . It
contains 4,000 tons of granite ahdT is
practically, monolithic, as if it were
carved out of a quarry. Indeedj'r;l
think Its builder went one better than
nature. Here are no cracks or fissures
or undetected flaws. The Io,west course
is bolted to the rock with wrpiight
iron clamps. Every stone is . jtovfe:
tailed to its neighbors and clasped to
them with Iron, above, below and at
the sides. If you understand conic sec
tions I could make clearer the scien
tific aspect of the structure, but you
can take it from me you are far safer
here than on a natural rock many
times the dimensions of this column."
"That sounds very . satisfactory,"
murmured Enid, sleepily.
"I am overwhelmed," said Constance,
who grasped the essential fact that he
had not answered her question.
Soon after 0 o'clock he kissed them
good night. They promised not to sit
up talking. As a guarantee of good be
hayior, Enid said she would ring the
electric bell just before she climbed
Into her bunk.
The signal came soon and he was
glad. He trusted to the fatigue, the
fresh air, the confidence of the knowl
edge' that he was on guard, to lull
them into the security of unconscious
ness. The behavior of the mercury puzzled
him. In the barometer it fell, in the
thermometer it rose. Increasing tem
perature combined with low pressure
was not a healthy weather combina
tion In January. Looking back through
the records of several years, he dis
covered a similar set of conditions one
day in March, 1891. He was stationed
tlica on the northeast coast auJ -fjUI
to remember any remarkable circum
stance connected with the date, so he
consulted the lighthouse diary for that
year. Ah! Here was a possible ex
planation. The chief keeper, a stran
ger to him, was something of a meteor
ologist. He had written: "At 4:15. p. m. the
barometer stood at 27.16 degrees and
the thermometer at 45.80 degrees.
There was a heavy sea and a No. 7 gale
blowing from the S. S.-W. About 5
o'clock the wind Increased to a hurri
cane and the sea became more violent
than I have seen it during five years
experience of this station. Judging
solely by the clouds and the flight of
birds, I should Imagine that the cy
clonic center passed over the Scilly
isles and the Land's End." -Then
next day:
"A steady northeast wind stilled the
sea most effectually. Within twenty
four hours of the first signs of the hur
ricane the channel was practicable for
small craft. A fisherman reports that
the coast is strewn with wreckage."
Brand mused over the entries for
awhile. With his night glasses he
peered long into the teeth of the grow
ing storm to see if he could find the
double flash of the magnificent light on
the Bishop Rock, one of the Atlantic
breakwaters of the Scilly isles. It was
fully thirty-five miles distant, but it
flung Its radiance over the waters from
a height of 143 feet, and the Gulf Rock
lamp stood 130 feet, above high water,
mark. A landsman would not have dls-j
tingulshed even the nearer revolutions,
of the St Agnes light, especiallyduithe
prevalent gloom, and .wispaofspindrIft
were already stxlkih'tbe lantern-and
blurring the glass. - " -
KerertbeteBS i caught tfc- Quick;
fiaflMs rtfttfeft from cfcad low, put
or THe mcCnling nae Dnugmg Dexter
weather, and he bent again over the
record of the equinoctial gale in 1S31.
Soon he abandoned this hope. The
growing thunder of the reef as the tide
advanced gave the first unmistakable
warning of what was to come. As a
mere matter of noise the reef roared
its loudest at half tide. He understood
now that a gale had swept across the
Atlantic in an irregular track. How
soever the winds may rage the tides
remain steadfast, and the great waves
now rushing up from the west .were
actually harbingers of the fierce blast
which had created them.
Of course the threatened turmoil in
nowise disconcerted him. It might be
that the rock would remain inaccessi
ble during many days. In that event
the girls wo-i!d take the watch after
the lamp was extinguished, and they
must learn to endure the monotony and
discomforts of existence in a storm
bound lighthouse. They would be nerv
ous unquestionably perhaps he had
forgotten how nervous but Brand was
a philosopher, and at present he was
most taken up with wonderment at the
curious blend of circumstances which
resulted in their presence on the rock
that night.
Ha! A tremor shook the great pillar.
He heard without the frenzied shriek
of the first repulsed roller which flung
itself on the sleek and rounded wall.
Would the girls sleep through the next
few hours? Possibly, if awake, they
would attribute the vibration of the
column to the wind. He trusted It
might be so. Shut in as they were,
they could not distinguish sounds. Ev
erything to them would be a confused
hum, with an occasional shiver as the
granite braced its mighty heart to re
sist the enemy. -
But what'new note was this In the
outer chaos? An ordinary gale shud
dered and Tvhistled and chanted Its
way past the lantern in varying tones.
It sang, it piped, it bellowed, it play
ed oh giant reeds and crashed with
cymbals. Now he lookejf at the clock,
after midnight there was a sustained
screech in the voice of the tempest
which he did not remember having
heard before. At last the explanation
dawned on him. The hurricane was
there, a few feet away, shut off from
him by mere sheets of glass. The
lighthouse thrust its tall shaft into
this merciless tornado with grim stead
fastness, and around its smooth con
tours poured a volume of unearthly
melody which seemed to surge up from
tjie broad base and was flung off into
the darkness by the outer sweep of the
cornice. -
The wind was traveling seventy,
eighty, mayhap a hundred miles an
hour. Not during all his service nor
in earlier travels through distant lands
had he ever witnessed a storm of such
fury. He thought he heard something
Crack overhead. He looked aloft, but
all seemed well.' Not until next day
did be discover that the wind vane had
been carried away, a wrought iron
shank nearly two inches thick having
snapped like a piece of worsted at the
place where the tempest had found a
fault.
He tried to look out into the heart
of the gale. The air was full of fly
ing foam, but the sea was beaten flat.
If the growling monster beneath tried
to fling a defiant crest at the tornado
the whole mass of water, many tons in
weight, was instantly torn from the
surface and flung into nothingness.
Some of these adventurers, forced up
by the reef, hit the lighthouse with
greater force than many a cannon ball
fired in battles which have made his
tory. Time after time the splendid
structure winced beneath the blow.
If Stephen Brand were ever fated to
know fear he was face to face with -the
ugly phantom then. The granite col
umn would not yield, but it was quite
within the bounds of possibility that
the eiitiro lantern might be carried
away and he with it.
He thoi:2ht, with a catching of his
breath, of the two girls in the tiny
room beneath. For one fleeting instant
his mortal eyes gazed into the unseen.
But the call of duty restored him. The
excessive draft affected the lamp.
Its arior must be cheeked. With a
steady hand he readjusted the little
brass screws they were so superbly
indifferent to all this pandemonium
just little brass screws, doing their
work and heeding naught beside. Sud
denly there came to him the trium
phant knowledge that the pure white
beam of the light was hewing its path
through the savage assailant without
as calmly and fearlessly as it lit up
the ocean wilds on a midsummer night
of moonlight and soft zephyrs.
"Thank God for that!" he murmured
aloud. "How can a man die better
than at his post?"
The ring of Iron beneath caught his
ears. He turned from the lamp. Con
stance appeared, pale, with shining
eyes. She carried the lantern. Behind
her crept Enid, who had been crying.
She strove now to check her tears.
"Is this sort of thing normal, or a
special performance arranged for our
benefit?" said his daughter, with a fine
attempt at a smile.
"Oh, dad, I am so frightened!" cried
Enid. "Why does it howi so?"
CHAPTER YI.
T says a good deal for Stephen
Brand's courage that he was
able to laugh just then, but It
is a fine thing for a man in a
moment of supremest danger to be
called on to comfort a weeping woman.
The next minute might be their last.
Of that he was fully conscious. Even
before the girls reached his side be felt
a curious lifting movement of the
whole frame of the lantern. Steel and
glass alike were yielding to the sus
tained violence of the wind pressure.
Well were they molded, by men whose
conscience need harbor no reproach of
dishonest craftsmanship. They were
being tested new almost beyond en
;LU
durance.
Some natures would have found relief
in' prayer. Gladly would Constance
and Enid have sunk on their knees and
besought the Master of the winds to
spare them and those at sea. But
Brand, believing that a catastrophe
was imminent, decided that in order
to save the girls' lives he must neither
alarm them nor lose an unnece S ;-y
Instant. ;
To desert the light that was impos
sible personally. If given the least
warning he would spring toward the
iron rail that curved by the side of the
stairs to the service room and take his
chance; otherwise he would go with
the lamp. There was no other alterna
tive; the Kr!s must leave him at once.
The laugh with which ha greeted
their' appearance gave him time to
scheme.
"I ought to scold you, but I won't,"
he cried. "Are you plucky enough to
tlescend to the kitchen and make three
Dice cups of cocoa?"
Just think what it cost him to speak
In this bantering way, careless of
words, though each additional syllable
might mean death to all three.
His request had the exact effect he
calculated. For once Constance was
deceived and looked her surprise.
Enid, more volatile, smiled through
her tears. So it was not quite as bad
as they imagined, this gale. Their fa?
ther could neveT be so matter of fact
In. ths. ace. of reaj jifj'jl to all of them.
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Facsimile Signature of
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Cocoa! 'FajSCy a "riaii "'gmng ms
thoughts to cocoa while they were ex
pecting the lighthouse to be burled Into
the English channel!
He turned again to manipulate the
brass screws.
"Now, do not stand there shivering,"
he said, "but harden your hearts and
po. ise the oil stove. By the time It
Is ready"
"Shivering, Indeed!" ;
Constance, of the viking "breed "would
let him see that he had no monopoly of
the family, motto, "Audeo." She, too,
could dare.
"Down you go, Enid!" she cried.
"He shall have his cocoa, poor man!"
He looked over his shoulder ity.
caught his daughter glancing at him
fwMUt the wftll a&tJba.ota'va.. .
(To be ContinueJ)
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nly 25c at Allen & Woodward's dru
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1 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 sprockets, all keyed
on. Galvanised hood. Every part is made extra
strong, regardless of co-t. It is made for the man
who wants th best, made in our sizes, 35, so,
70 and too bushel capacity.
Guarantee Should any part break, wear out or
cet out of order withi" one year we replace free
of charge. Sendor free catalog, showing latest
improvements. I tells how to apply manure to
All Jr
1 Bears the 1 t
I. W