12 THE OMAHA DAILY BJ1T& SATUJRDAY" , MAY 4 , 1895. A FIGHT fflTIl MM A Stirring Story of Adventure of the South ern Sea. , ( IJy roun o\ell WllJimn ) The dally Straits Times on the desk be fore me. contained a vivid word picture of the "Capture of the British aleanuhlp Namoa , by 300 Chlnt-o pirates , the guns of Hongkong almost within sight , and the year of our Lord , IS'JO , but Jiml drawing to a close. " The report teemed Incredible , I pushed the paper across the table to thfl grizzled old taptaln of the Hunker Hill nnd continued my examination of the ac counts of a half dozen sailors of whom he was Intent on Retting rid. lly the time I hail signed the last discharge and affixed the consular seal , he had finished the article and put It aside with a contemptuous "btlmi > . " expressive of his opinion of the \alor of the crew and officers. I could see that he was anxious for me to give him my attention vvhllo he related one of those long drawn out utorles of perhaps a like personal experience I knew the svmptoms and took occasion to escape , If business or Inclination undo me forego the pleasure Today 1 was In a lit mood to humor him. There Is always something dcllclously re freshing In a sailor's > arn. I ha\e listened to hundreds In the course of my consular career , and have jet to Una one that Is duller or prosy. They all bear the Imprint of truth , perhaps a trifle overdiawn , but ncvcr- the lets sparkling with the salt of the sc.t. and redolent with the romance of utrjngc people and dlttant lands. In listening one becomes almott dizzy at the rapldltv with \\1ilch the scene and personnel chinge The Icebergs and the aurora borcalla of the Arctic give place to the tepid waters and the south ern cross of the South Pacific. A volcanic Island , an Arabian de'ert , a tropical jungle and the breadth and width of the ocean serv ? as the theater , \\hKe a 1'egll Islander , an Cs- ( | ulmaux nnd a turbaned Arab are the actors In a half hour's tale. In Interest thsy rival Verne , Kingston or Marryat. All they lack Is skilled hands to dress them In proper lan guage. TIIC CAPTAIN'S YAUN The captain helped himself to one of my Manilas and commenced "I've ' nothing to say about the fate of the poor fellows on the Namoa , seeing the captain was killed at the first fire , but It looks to me like a case of carelessness which was almost criminal. The Idea of allowing 300 Chinese to come aboard as passengers without tcarch- .ng them for arms. Why ! It Is an open bid to pirates Goes to show prettly plain that these seas are not cleared of pirates. Sailing ships nowadays think they can go anywhere without a pound of powder or an old cut- lasB aboard Just because there Is an English or Dutch man-of-war within a hundred miles. I don't know what we'd have done when I first traded among these Islands without a good brass swivel and a stock of percussion cap muskets. "Let me see , It was In ' 58 , I was a cabin boy on the brltf 'Danger. ' Captain Howe , hale old fellow from Maine , had his two little boys aboard. They are merchants now In Boston. On the 'Elmlra' I've been sailing for them ever since. Wo were trading along the coast of Borneo Those were great days for trading In spite of the pirates. That was long before iron steamers sent our good oaken ships to rot In the deck yards of Maine. Why , In those days jou could Bee n half dozen of our snug little crafts In any port of the world , and I've fcecn more American flags In this very harbor of Singa pore than of any other nation. We had come into Snngaporo with a ship load of Ice , ( no scientific ice factories then ) , and had gone along the coast of Java and Borneo to load with coffee , rubber and spices for a return voyage. Wo were Just oft Kuchlng , the capi tal of Sarawak , and about loaded , when the captain heard that gold had been discovered somewhere up near the head of the Kcjang. The captain was an adventurous old salt and decided to test the truth of the story , so tak ing the long boat and ten men , he pulled up the Sarawak river to Kuchlng and got permission of Rajah Brook to go up the Rejang on a hunting expedition. The rajah \\ns curtcous but tried to dissuade us from the undertaking by relating that several bands of Dykas had been out on head huntIng - Ing expeditions of late , nnd that the mouth of the Rejang was Infested by Illanum pi rates. The captain only laughed , and Jok ingly told Sir James that If the game proved scarce he might come back and claim the prize money on a boatload of pirate heads "Wo started at once , for captiln let me go , and rowed some sixty miles along the coast to the mouth of the Rejang Then for FIGHTING HAND-TQ.IIAND. four days we pulled up Its snake-Ilka course It was my first bit of adventure , and every thing was strange and now The river's COUIEP was llko a great tunnel Into the dense black Jungle. On each side and above , we were completely walled In by an Impenc trablo growth of great tropical trees and the Iron-like vines of the rubber. The sun for a few hours each day came in broken shafts down through the foliage and exposed the black back of a crocodile on the green sides of an Iguana. Troops of monkeys swung am chattered In the branches abova and a Intervals a grove of cocoanut broke the monotony of the scenery. Among them wo would land and rest for the day or night cat of their Juicy fruit and go on short ex curslons for game. A roasted monkey , some baked yams nnd a delicious rlco curry made up a royal bill of fare and as the odor o our tobacco mixed with the breathing per fume of the jungle , I would fall asleep listen InK to sea yarns that sometimes ran back to the war of 1612. II. "At the end of the fifth day we arrlve < at the head of the Rejang. Hero the river broke up Into a dozen small streams and a gnamp. A stockade had been erected am the rajah had stationed a small compati ; of native soldiers under an English olll'-er to keep the head-hunting Dyaks In check I don't remember what our captain found out In regard to the gold fields , at least , I was not encouraging , for he gave up the search and joined the English lleutenan In a grand deer hunt that lasted for five days , and then started back , accompanlei by two native soldiers bearing dispatches to the rajah. "It was easy running down the river with the current , One man In each end of the boat kept It off roots , sunken logs and croco dlles , and the rest of us spent the time na best our cramped space allowed. Twice we detected the black ugly face of a Dyak peer- lug from out the jungle. The men were or hunting them down for the price on their leads , but the captain Eild that he never killed a human being except In self-defense , and that If the rajah wanted to get rid of he savages he had better give the contract 0 n Mississippi slave trader. Secretly I \as longing for some kind of excitement , and \OB hoping that the men's clamorous talk vould have some effect. I never doubted our ability to raid a Iyak village and kill he head-hunters and carry off the beautiful naldens. I could not see why a parcel of blacks should be such a terror to the good rajah when Big Tom tald he could easily handle 1 dozen and flattered me by saying tint such i brawny lad as I ought to take care of two at least. "In the course of three days we reached the mouth of the river and prepared the sail for the trip across the bay to the Dingor Just as everything was In readiness one of those peculiar and rapid changes In the weather took place , that are to common hero In the tropics , near the equator. A great blue , blnck cloud , looking like an Im mense cutrldge , came up from the west. Through It played vlved flashes of lightning and around It was a red haze. "A nasty animal , " I heard the Bo'son tell the captain , and jet I wa * fqpllshly delighted when they decided to risk a blow and put to sea. The sky on all sides grew darker from hour to hour. A smell of sulphur came to our nos trils It was oppressively hot , not a breath of wind was stirring The sail flapped use lessly against the mast and the men labored at the oirs while streams of sweat ran from their bodies. "The captain had Just taken do n the mast when , without a moment's warning , the gale struck us and the boat half filled with water We arranged to head It with the wind and were soon driving with the rapidity of a cannon ball over the boiling and surging waters. It was a fearful gale ; we blew for hours before it , oftlmes in danger of a volcanic reef , again almost sunken by a giant wave I billed until I was completely exhausted , but the long boat was a staunch little craft and there were plenty of men to manage it , BO as long as we could keep her before the wind the captain felt no great anxiety as to our safety. III. "At about six bells in the afterncon the wind fell away and the rain came down in torrents , leaving us to pitch about on the rapidly decreasing waves , wet to the skin and unequal to another effort. Wo were within a mlle of a rocky Island that rose like a half ruined castla from the ocean. The Dyak soldiers called It Satang Island , and I have sailed past It many a time since Without waiting for the word we rowed to It. and around it before we found a suitable beach on which to land One end of the Island rose perclpltous and sheer above the beach a hundred feet and ended In a barren plateau of some two dozen acres. The re mainder comprised some hundred acres of sand and rocks on which were half a dozen cocoanut treoa and a few yams. Along the beach we found a largo number of turtle eggs. "The captain remembering the rajah's cau tion In ngard to pirates , decided not to make a light , but we were wet and hungry and overcame his scruples , and soon had a huge flre and a savory repast of coffee , turtles' eggs and > ams. At midnight It was extin guished and a watch stationed on top of the plateau ; toward morning I clambered grum bling up the narrow , almost perpendicular sides of the rift that cut Into the rocky watch tower. I did not believe In pirates and was willing to take my chances In sleep. I paced back and forth Inhaling deep breaths of the rich tropical air ; below me the waves beat In ripples against the rugged beach , castIng - Ing off from time to time little flashes of phosphorent light and mirroring In their depths the hardly distinguishable outlineof the southern cross. The salt smell of the sea was tinged with the spice-laden air of the near coast. Drowsiness came over me. I picked up a musket and paced around the lit tle plateau. The moon had but just reached its zenith making all objects easily discern ible. The smooth storm-swept space before mo reflected back Its rays like a well scrub bed quarter deck ; below were the dark outlines of my sleeping mates. I could hear the light wind rustling through the branches of the Casuarnla trees that fringed the shore. I paused and looked out over the sea. Like a charge of electricity a curious sensation of fear shot through me. Then an Intimation that some object had flashed between me and the moon. I rubbed my eyes and gazed In the air above , expecting to see a night birder or a bat. Then the same peculiar sensation came over mo again and I looked down into the water below just In time to cee the long keen knife-like outline of a pirate prahu glide as noiselessly as a shadow from a pass ing cloud Into the gloom of the Island. Its great , wide spreading dark-red sails were set full to the wind and hanging over its side by ropes , were a dozen naked Illanums guiding the sensitive craft like a thing of life. Within the prahu were two dozen fight ing men , armed with their alligator hide buckler , long steel tipped spear and ugly snake-like krls. A third prahu followed In the wake of the -other two and all three were lost In the blackness of the overhanging cliffs. "With as little noise as possible I ran across the plain and warnet my companion , then picked my way silently down the de file to the camp. The captain responded to my touch , and was up In an Instant The men were awakened and the news whis pered from one to another. Gathering up what food ard utensils we possessed we hurried to get on top of the plateau before our exact whereabouts became known The captain hoped that when they discovered we were well fortified and there weto no wrecks to pillage , they would withdraw without giving battle. They had landed on the op posite side of the Island from our boat and might leave It undisturbed. We felt reason ably safe In our fortress from attacks There were but two breaks in Its precipitous sides , each a narrow defile filled with loose boul ders that could easily be detached and sent thundering down on an assailant's head. On the other hand our shortness of food and water made us singularly weak In case of a siege. But we hoped for the best , Two men were pos'ed at each defile , and as nothing was heard for an hour , most of us dropped aslc p. IV. "It was Just at dawn when we were awakened by the report of two muskets and the terrific crashing of a great boulder fol lowed by groans and yella. With one accord wo rushed to the head of the canyon. The Illanums , naked with the exception of parti- color&l sarongs around their waists , with their bucklers on their left arms and their gleaming knives ( trapped to their right wrists , were .mounting en each other's shoul ders , forcing a way up the precipitous defile u.nmlndful of the madly descindlng rocks that had crushed and maimed nrre than one of their number. They were fine , pow erful fellous. with a reddish brown fkln that ihcna like polished ebony. Their hair was shorn close to their heads ; they bad high cheek bones , flat notes , syrah atalned Up * and btood-shet ores , In their movements they were as lithe and supple as a tiger and commanded our admiration while they made us shudder. We knew that they neither give nor take quarter , and tor years had ter rorized the entire Bornean coast. "We were ready to fire but a gesture from the captain restrained us ; our ammunition was low and he wished to save It until we actually needed It. lly our united efforts wo pried off two of the volcanic rocks , which , with a great leap , disappeared Into the dark ness below , oftlmes appearing for an Instant before rushing to the sea. Every time an Illanum fell we gave a hearty American cheer , which was answered by savage jells. Still they fought on and up making little headway. We were gradually relaxing our efforts , thinking that they were sick of the affair , when the report of a musket from the opposite side of the Island called our attention to the 'Bo'sn , * who had been detailed to guard the other defile. "The boatswain and one native soldier were fighting hand to hind with a dozen pirates who were forcing their way up the edge of the cliff , Half of the men dashed to their relief just In time to see the soldier go over the precipice locked In the arms of a giant Illanum , One volley from our muskets settled the hopes of the Invaders. Our little party was divided and we were outnumbered ten to one. One of the sailors In dislodging a boulder lost his footing and went crashing down with It , amid the derisive yells of the pirates Suddenly the conflict ceased and the pirates withdrew. In A short time we could see them building n number of small fires along the beach and the aroma of rice curry came up to us with the breeze. The captain , I could sec , was anxious , although my bojlsh feelings did not go beyond a sense of Intoxi cating excitement. I heard him say that nothing but a storm or a bhlp could save us In case we were be'leged ; that It was better to have the fight out at once , and die with our arms in our hands than starve ted d ath. "Giving us each a small poitlon of ship biscuit and a taste of water he enjoined on each a careful watchfulness and a provident use of our small stock of provisions. "I took mine In my hand and walked out on the edge of the cliff somewhat sobered. Directly below me were the pirates and at my feet I noticed a fragment of rock that I thought I could loosen Putting down my food I foolishly picked up a piece of timber which I used as a lever , when , without warn ing , the mass broke away and with a tre mendous bound went crashing down Into the very midst of the pirates , scattering them light and left , and cndri by crushing one of the prahus that was drawn up on the sand "In an Instant the quiet beach was a scene "I CLOSED MY EYES AND FIRED of the wildest confusion. A surging , crowdIng - Ing mass of pirates with their krls' between their teeth , dashed up the canyon Intent on avenging their loss. I dropped my lever and rushed back to the men nearly frightened to death , at the result of my temerity. There was no time for boulders , the men reached the brink of the defile Just In time to wel come the assailants with a broadside. Their lines wavered , but fresh men look the places of the fallen , and they pushed ; on. Another volley from our guns and the dead and wounded encumbered the progress of the liv ing. A shower of stones and timbers gave . us the fight and they withdrew with savage yells to once more open the siege. Only one of our men had been wounded. He by an arrow from a blow pipe.V. . V. "All that night we kept watch. The nex morning wo were once mora attacked , bu successfully defended ourselves with bould crs and our cutlasses. Yet one swarthy pirate succeeded In catching the leg of the remaining native soldier and bearing him away with them With cessation of hos tllltlea we saarched the top of the Island for food and water. At one sldo of the table land there was a break In Its surface and a beach of some dozen acres lay perhaps twenty feet below our retreat. Wo cautiously worked our way down to this portion am there to our delight found a number of fan shaped travelers , palms and monkey cups full of sweet water , which , with two wild sago palms , we calculated would keep us alive a few days at all events. "We were much encouraged at this dls covery and that night collected a lot of brusl from the lower plain and lit a big flre on the most exposed part of the rocks. Wo did no care If It brought a thousand more pirates as long as It attracted the attention of a passing ship. Two good nine-pounders would seer end our foes In all directions. We relieve * each other In watching during the night , and by sunrise we were all completely worn out The third day was one of weariness am thirst under the burning rays of the tropl cal sun. Tliat day we ate the last o our ship biscuit and were reduced to a few drops of water each. Starvation was looking us In the face. There was but one alternative , and that'was to descend am make a fight for our boat on the twach. The Bo'son volunteered , with three men , to de scend the defile and1 reconnolter. Armed only with their cutlasses and a short ax they worked their way carefully down In the , shadow of the rocks , while we kept watcl above. "All was quiet for a time , then there arose a. tumult of cries , oaths and yells. The cap tain gave the order and pell-mell down the rift wo clambered , some dropping their mus kets In their hurried descent , one exploJIng In its fall. The 'Bo'son' had found the beach and our boat guarded by six pirates who were asleep , four of whom they succecde < in throttling. Wo pushed our boat Into th surf , expecting every moment to see one o tha prahus glide around the two Inlets. We coald plainly hear their cries and yells as they discovered our escape , and with a heigh o-helgh our long boat shot out into the plack ocean , sending up a shower of phosphoren bubbles. We bent our backs to the oars as only a question of life or death can make one. With each stroke the boat seen ed al most to lift Itself out of ths > water. Almos at the same time a long , dark line , filled with moving objects , dashed out from the shadow of the cliffs hardly 100 yards away. "It was a glorious race over the dim waters of that tropical sea. I as a boy could no realize what capture meant at the hands o our cruel pursuers. My heart beat high and I felt equal to a dozen Illanums. My thoughts traveled back to New England In the midst of the excitement. I saw mysel before the open arch fire In a low roofed oh house , that for a century had withstood the fiercest giles on the old Maine coast , and from whose doors had gone forth three g'n eratlons of sea captains , I saw myself on a winter night Jelating this very adventure to an old gray-haired , bronzed faced father and a mother whose parting kiss still lingered gored on my lips , to my youngsr brother and sister. I could feel their undisguised ad miration as I told cf my fight with pirates In the Boran sea. It is wonderful how the mind will travel. Yet with my thoughts in Maine I saw and felt that the Illanums were gradually gaining on us. Our men were weary and feeble from two days fasting while the pirates were strong and thlrstln ; for our blool , "The captain kept glancing first at the enemy and then at the musket that lay nea him. He longed to use It , but not a man could be spared from the oars. Hand over hand they gained on us. Turning his eyes on me , seated In the bow , the captain said while he bent his sinewy back to the oar Jack , are you a good shot1 I stsmmerec and answered , 'I can try , sir. ' 'Very well get the musket there in the bow. It Is loaded. Take good aim and shoot that big fellow In the ( tern. It you hit him I'll make you a master of a ship some day. ' Trem blingly I raised the heavy musket as dl reeled. The boat was unsteady. I hardly ex jjectcd to bit tie chief , but aimed low , hoping o hit one of the rowers at least. I aimed , iloted my eyes and fired. With the report of he musket the tail leader sprang Into the air and then felt head foremost amid his rowers. I coulil ( Just detect the gleams of he moonlight on ( he jeweled handle of hlu iris as he ( ante Into the waters. I had hit ny man. The sailors sent up a hearty Amor- can cheer and a tiger , as they saw the prahu : amcto a standstill. Our boat sprang away nto the darkncis. Wo did not cease rowing until dawn ; then we lay back on our oars ind stretched our tired backs and arms , I lad taken my place at the oar during the night. "Away out on tha northern horizon we saw a black speck ; on the southern horizon an other , The captain's glass revealed one to ba the pirate's prahu with all sails set , for a wind had come up with the dawn. The other we welcomed with a cheer , for It was he 'Danger. ' Enfeebled and nearly fa-n- shing we headed toward It and rowed for life. How we regrettsd having left our sails on the Island. The prahu had sighted is and was bearing down In full pursuit ; teen we could distinguish Its wide spread- ng rakish satis almost touching the water as It sped on Then v e made out the naked 'arms of the Illanumr hanging to the ropes , far out over the watir , and then we could irar their blood curdling yell. It was too late , their yell was one of balllcd rage. It was answered by the deep bass tones of the swivel on board the 'Bangor' sending a ball skimming along over the waters which , although It went wide of its mark , caused the natives on the ropes to throw themselves bodily across the prahu , taking the great sail with them , 'In another Instant the red sail , the long keen black shell , the naked forms of the fierce Illanums were mixed In one undo- finable blot on the distant horizon. " J OV.\1 > AT I..IST. Itnrpcr's llarnr. The muse-maid's second cousin had unfor tunately died. And It behooved her to go forth nnd seek the widow's side ; So JllstressH Hes she had to tnke care of the bojs that day. And keep their little paddles clean nnd out of mischief's vvny. The cook hnd such n headache that he couldn't do a. thing ; She trulv couldn't tell n poker from a muf- fln-rlng ; And hence It vvns that Mistress Bess was forced to go downstairs And get the dinner ready for her husband and the hclrs . The waitress had departed In a manner known ns Trench , Because she hnd been scolded for the thirst "lie sought to quench : So Bess had work to do likewise with plates nnd forks and knives , Such ns would prove distasteful to the general run of wives. And ns thf > laundress' brother on a sudden hud a fall , That broke a rib and both his legs , at HIckey'R Tem' > "nnce ball , She too had left that day to go to see him nnd his folk , And that Is why poor Mistress Bess put nil the clothes to soak. And that Is why her husband , When he heard what she had done. Said that he'd found one thing quite new at last beneath the sun ; A thing that htvl ( been sought for many yenrp , a very pearl A willing , pretty , civil , wholly perfect servant girl. HIDDEN STREAMS. The Question of Umlcrcround inters for Irrlgiitlnn Purposes The development of largo enterprises for the purposes of Irrigating arid or semi-arid lands in tha west , says the Engineering Record , has for a considerable time directed the attention of engineers and others to the Importance of underground waters in this connection. Tluro ore many apparently "dry rivers" In and vycst of the Rocky moun tain region , as well as In Jrany portions cf the country Immediately east of it , which the early discoverers regarded as rather re markable plmnomena. cf nature , but they certainly1 never regarded them as sources of great future wealth for the people whc might subsequently develop that portion of the country. It has long bcen known , however - over , that these dry river beds are but the top surfaces of accumulations of sand , gravel and boulders , through which are flowing at low velocities great bodies of water which may be made available with comparative ease for the Irrigation of large tracts of adjoining country , essentially sterile and unproductive In Its natural state. Many small landholders as well as great Irrigation companies , are wisely directing their efforts to the utlllzatlor of these underground sources of agricultura wealth , and the operations of engineers have seldom been employed toward a more ad vantageous direction of "the great sources o : power in nature * for the use and convenience of man. " The legal character of these undergroum percolating waters renders them particularly available for the purposes of Irrigation , since the title to them seems to rest with the owner of the land in which they are found No water may be taken from any surface stream flowing above a well defined bed , ant whose course may be clearly followed am determined , without rendering adequate com pensation to any rightful water user below the point at which It is uxken from the stream , but the owner of any land througl which underground water may bo percolat Ing may sink wells and drive tunnels for the purpose of Intercepting and utilizing such waters , apparently without any regard to the effects upon the flow in similar wells and tunnels In the vicinity of his own property As long , therefore , as any party confines hi operations within the boundaries of his own land he may collect and distribute , to any extent , the underground waters which may be found flowing through the subsurface sand or gravel without fear of legal compll cations. The stimulating effect of such lega conditions , combined with the prospect o profitable returns from well-managed Irriga tion enterprises , has been remarkable , am Is well shown by the recent and rather prominent enterprise of the Spllman Subur ban Water company of Los Angeles , Cal of which Mr L. S. Holt Is the secretary am Mr. George Manuel is the engineer , both o whom are well known In connection with Irrigation Interests. A preliminary report by the latter , nnd a recent paper by the former , read before the farmers' Institute of Redlands , Cal. , contain some very Interesting , as well na valuable Information in connection with a number o largo works of the same character , Including data Indicating what. In accordance will past experience , may be reasonably expectec as a yield from water-bearing subsurface sand and gravel. While underground sup piles of water for cities and towns In the eastern portion1 of the United States have not yet proved to be as successful as couli be desired , it appears to be very clearly established that the narrow undergroum outlets from some of the canyons of the mountain ranges , of the west , as well as other similar subsurface conformations o sand and gravel , afford opportunities of In tercepting very largo supplies of percolating waters , having their origin In the melting snows of higher levels , and which are thus of an apparently permanent nature , on which rellanca may be placed for all time It is a field of engineering work in whlcl many successful results on a largo scale have already been obtained , and although there have been some disappointments , am perhaps even failures , enough has been suc cessfully done to show that Irrigation en gineers may yet expect large developments in this line cf their work. A-nii ppolutocl Man. Plttsburg Chronicle : "How much does the government allow me ? " said a citizen to the Income tax collector. "Four thousand dollars , " replied the of ficial. "Here Is a statement of my Income , then , ' nd he handed a paper to Uncle Sam's .crre- sentatlve , who looked at It and then ob served , with some warmth of feeling- "You have no occasion to file this II shows an Income of only Jl-00. You don'l need to file a statement unless your Income Is | 3,500 or more. " "D'dn't you say the law allowed me $1,000 ? ' "Yes. " 'Well , my Income was J1.200 and I file the statement so that the government can give me the difference , which I figure out to be 12,800 , When do I get It ? " After much expostulation the citizen was finally led out Into the cool spring air. Through Increased postal facilities a letter potted In Paris at midday can be delivered in London at 8 p. m. , by means of on "ex- presi mtgscDger'ft" arrangement. JAVA'S ' MIGHTY UPHEAVAL A Stupendous Oatacljttu Described by n Visiting Engineer , ORIGIN OF THE SMOKY VAPOR OF ' 83 A Volrnnlo flutlirrnk Unrqunlcil In 1'ury HIM ! Dcatructltrucfs riio Unrtli lockc ! < l , House ] tumbled null Cntft Continued. It Is n curious and Inexplicable fact that little or nothing has appeared In print dur ing the past twelve jears about the great eruption of Krakatoa , Nearly every perton In America , sajs Current Literature , will recall the famous jellow day In August , 1SS3 , when the sky of this whole continent was covered with a smoky vapor , through which the sun shone llko a large ball of red lire The phenomenon was at the time ml under- stood. Later It was attributed to the terrific upheavals of the Island of Java , whence re ports came by slow degrees of the sudden activity of an extinct crater , which In May began belching forth a continued mass of flre and smoke and molten stone. On the 12th of August , the eruption culminated In a series of explosions. The earth was rent In places , Islands were sunk beneath the sea , and new ones brought Into being , hum-in be ings lost their lives by thousands and hun dreds of thousands , and one of the greatest physical catastrophes of modern times then took place. It has been generally accepted since that the hazy atmosphere which cov ered our continent came from the endless outpouring of smoke and ashes which pre ceded this final outbreak Some Idea of the magnitude of the occurrence can bo gained from the fact that the center of the disturb ance was thousands of miles distant from our eastern shores , that at the * cone Itsfflf the sky was literally as black ns night at noon time , and that the explosions which ended the great catastrophe were said to have been distinctly hcird In countries which were thousands of miles distant. The event was certainly a phenomenal one. Yet In the twelve jeari tint have since elapsed no general mention has been made of the occur rence , and an article which oppeirs In the April number of the Cosmopolitan by Joan T Van Gestel , claims to be the first account written by an eye-witness of the occurrence Mr. Van Gestel Is a surveyor , of Dutch birth , who had been sent to Java by the Dutch government. He was present at the time of the eruption , and gives a graphic description of Its terrors. The trouble began on the I3th of May , when the whole of Java , Sumatra and Borneo were convulsed , and continued to the middle of August. The noise at and near the scene of action he de scribes as continuous and appalling. The sky was filled with smoke and cinders , and from the center of an Island , some eight or ten miles long , there was a column of flre shooting straight up Into the sky. There was a constant rain of pumice stone , while rivers of molten sulphur ran down the slopes , while every living being that had dwelt upon the Island had apparently been consumed , and the trees were gradually being burled be neath the pumice Mr. Van Gestel disem barked on this Island and ventured to ex plore It , but was driven back by the heat. He remained In that region , however , until the final catastrophe , which he describes as an eve-wltness. He was then al Anjer , was sitting overlooking the bay. As he looked at the small boats he saw that they were all moving In one direction , and In nn Instant had all disappeared. "I ran out of the house , " he sajs , "back , up higher , to where I could command a better view , and looked out far onto the sea. Instantly a great glare of flre right In the midst of the water caught my eyes , and all the way across the bay and the strait , and In a straight line of flame to the very Island of Krakatoa Itself , the bet tom of the sea seemed to have cracked open , so that the subterranean fires were belching forth. On either side of this wall of flames , down Into this subaqueous chasm , the waters of the strait were pouring with a tremendous hissing sound. It teemed at every moment a& If the flames would be extinguished , but they were not. There- were twin cataracts , and between the two cataracts rose a great crackling wall of flre hemmed In by clouds of steam of the same cottony appearance which I have spoken of before. It was In this abjss that the fishing boats were dis appearing even as I looked , whirling down the hissing precipice , the roar of which was already calling out excited crowds In the city of Anjer at my feet. "The sight was such an extraordinary one that It took awny the power of reason. With out attempting In any way to explain to my self what It was , I turned and beckoned to some one , any human being to a servant , we will say to come and see It. Then , In a moment , while my eyes were turned , came an Immense deafening explosion , greater than any we had heard , as yet , proceeding from Krakatoa. It stunned me and It was a minute or two before I reall eJ , when once more I turned my eyes toward the bay , that I could see nothing. Darkness had instantly shrouded the world. Through this darkness , which was punctuated by distant cries and groans , the falling of heavy bodies and the creaking disruption of masses of brick and timber most of all , the roaring and crashing of breakers on the ocean were audible The city of Anjer , with all its 60,000 people in and about it , had been blotted out. If any living being , save mjself , remained I did not find It out then. One of those deafening explcslons followed another , as some new submerged area was suddenly heaved up by the volcanic flro below , and the sea admitted to the hollow depths where that flre had raged In vain for centuries. "The awful surge of the maddened ocean as It rushed landward terrified me. I feared I would be engulfed. Mechanically I ran back up the mountain side. My subsequent ob servations convinced me that at the first ex plosion the ocean had burst a new crater under Krakatoa. At the second explosion the big Island , Dwers In-de-Wcg , had been split In two , so that a great strait separated what were the two halves. The Island of Legundl , northwest of Krakatoa , disappeared at the same .time ; and all the west coastof Java , for fifteen or twenty in lias , was wrenched loose. Many new Islands were formed In that throe , which afterward dis appeared. A map , which I made not long afterward , shows the change of the con figuration of that part cf the world. "I waded on inland in a dazed condition , which Eeemed to last for hours. The high road from Anjer to Serang was white and smooth , and easy to follow ; and I felt my way along It In the darkness I reached the city of Serang about 4 or 5 oVlcck In the afternoon , after having made ono stop at a house on the way. This resi dence loomed up on the sldo of the road , offering me , apparently , a welcome refuge. I rushed In thinking to find relief from , the Intense heat under the shelter of Its roof , but through the tiles of the flooring little blue flames were flickering as I en tered , and the house Itself Eeemed like a furnace. The subterranean fires were at work even then , on the side of the moun tain Under the mass of flooring , or masonry , I could not distinguish which , I taw the body of a woman In native garments. I rushed out horrified from the burning tomb It was the residence , I learned afterward , of Controller Frankcl , an officer of the govern- mc-p , ranking Immediately after the governor himself. "I staggered blindly on my way. When I reached Serang 1 was taken Into the garri son and nursed for two days. I was sup posed to be a lunatic. I started up In my sleep a half dozen times the first night , utterIng - Ing cries of terror. I was soothed by drugs , and enabled on the third day to go to Batavla " * On Mcrak Point , where the gov ernment had been blasting rock , were an engine and several boilers , used for com pressed air. All of these , containing com pressed air , had been hurled against the walls of the quarry , and absolutely flattened out like Hheets of paper. In Lombok , on the southeast coast of Sumatra wooden , a man-of- war , belonging to the Dutch government , and two barks , of 200 or 300 tons each , one of tl em loaded with salt , had been thrown 150 feet up the mountain eldo Into the trees by the tidal wave which Immediately followed the explosion. " My Investigations showed that there was 100 feet of water where the city of Anjer had been , so short a distance from my villa , and that the coast line was. just one and one-half miles further Inland. " The author's escape wag a narrow and a miraculous one , but still more astonishing Is the sllencei he and others have kept re garding the event. With the exception of a fugitive article In Nature , a few jeara ago , we bave barely seen mention of the event. Charles MacDonald , a Prominent Chicago Business Man , is Restored to Health. J ' 1 ' I"/ Within a few steps of the Intersection of two of the busiest thoroughfares In Chicago , It not In the entire country , Is a store through the portals of which more people pass In the course of a day than enter Into nnd depart from any other establishment of Its size In the west. Men nnd women whose faces bear the stamp of Intelligence and culture , women who lead In society , art and letters , men who are prominent In the professions ; lawjers , physicians , artists. Judges and Jour nalists. The exterior of the place elves Im mediate evidence of Its character , which Is that of a center of current news and Informa tion. It Is the news and periodical depot of Charles MacDonald at E5 Washington street , who writes the following letter : CHICAGO , Feb. 20 , 1895 Messrs. Wells , Richardson & Co. , Burlington , Vt Gentle men : It Is clearly the duty of everv person to acknowledge a service rendered , no mat ter what its nature Mlien , however , the character of the benefit bestowed Is such that It lightens the dally burdens of our lives and changes our nights from dreary watches to periods of tranquil and refreshing repose , the duty resolves Itself Into a pleas ure. A few months ago , owing to the con fining nature of my business , I began to feel at first a sort of languor and llstlcssiness , tc ) disguise which I was compelled to bring Into play all the strength of will I could com mand. "Hie feeling grew upon mo , how" over , and In a short time It took such posses , slon of me that It affected ray appetite and caused Insomnia. I approached my mcala with a feeling amounting almost to nausea1 nnd my bed with horror at the restless night that I was nearly certain was before mc\ It was only by the strongest efforts that I was enabled to hide the change from peopta who came Into my place of business , but my. . Intimate * acquaintances were quicker to no tice It. J had arrived at a point where I could no longer keep silent upon the subject , and speaking of It to one of my friends on day he suggested tliat I try Palne's celcryj compound. I purchased a bottle , and bet- fore I had taken n dozen dcscs I knew that the suggestion was a good one , for I felt an Improvement. I continued to use It , and , feel entirely restored. My appetite la good , I sleep well , and , Instead of an irksome ) grind , my business has again become a pleas * ure to me. You may put mo down OB ft strong advocate of Palno's celery compound , , Yours respectfully , 11 CHAS. MAC DONALD. . ) i TO AUTHORS FOR "Stories of ' THE CHICAGO RECORD offers to authors the sum of $30,000 for original stories written in English , no parts of which have ever been heretofore published. The offer is made upon the following conditions : $20,000 Will be paid in twelve cash prizes lor llic best twelve stories , llie money will be divided as follows : Firat Prize - - 310,000 Second Prize - - 3,000 Third Prize - - 1,500 Fourth Prize - - l.OOO Fifth Prize - - - 800 Two Prizes of 8600 each 1,200 Five Prizes of $500 eaoli 2,500 Maliine ; n total of $20OOO The firat prize- will bo pild for the utory adjudged to bo thebost , the tccond prize for the Bloiy mlu ] < ! i'rd tlie next bunt , the tlilrtl prlco for the Btory acljiulirril to ho thu tlilrtf In nitrlt , the fourth iirlzo for the fourth In nitrit , the llftli prize for the nftli In merit two prize H of UDJ each nnd five prizes of f SOU cacti , limb making thu total of twelve prizes In $20,00 u $10,000 additional will be paid at space rates for stories of accept ed value , but which may not be awarded any of the twelve cash prizes. The stories submitted in this competi tion are required to be "stories of mystery , " in other words stones in which the mystery is not explained until the last chapter , in or der that readers may be offered prizes for guessing the solution of the mystery in ad vance of its publication. The Htorlon iiuiBt reach The Chicago Kecord at Its office of pulillcitlon 181 MJ'llBon hlnet Chicago III , bi fore Oct 1 , IX'JS , niitl tlio .iwanla will bo in.-ulo .m noon afu r tli.it ( lain .IB they cin bo rc.U and JudKud. Fur full Information authors will adilrx'HU VICTOR F.L.VWSON , Publisher The Chicago Record Chicago , III. , U. S. A. LADIES. TURKISH BATHS. FIRST CLASS SERVICE. REASONABLE RATiJj. 100 I3EK OUILDINO. Rooms Adjoining Young Woman's Christian Association Rooms MME.YALE'8 and other Toilet Articles kcptoa Bile.