Show A lire on the ocean wave I A I home Oil the rolling deep a ho tnduolo wlcfjlod his tall llll ho willed hlmsKir to sleep From tho Ballads of Stanley Jonnsson It Is l not recorded that any of the arty wits irullty of the t heinous sin of shooting an albatrosa or of shooting anything else with the possible exception excep-tion of craps but certain It Is that mls fortune piled up on them In large over vhelmlng1 ltlnttit ics and It Is something f thing of a ondcr that certain mem hers of the party arc not aL present ucupylng a briny grave at the bottom of lie Groat Salt lake They started out at 2 oclock Saturday Satur-day afternoon In the good ship Cambria 11 Skipper Davis commanding The arty Included George Q Morris Victor P Wells Stanley D Tonason Sidney avllle Walter Conrad Will James and Misses Vela Hardy Hazel Taylor and Emma Lucy Gates of Provo Nell Young of Ogden and Minnie James oJ Salt Lake They had irovlslons onward on-ward for an extended trip and spent he afternoon cruising about Antelope eland At f 030 the essel started on Its return journey before twenty minutes had parsed the wind began rising fast n nd one of those sudden squalls which ore frequent on the Great Salt fake drove the little yacht on Its beam cfTs Lower the topgallant and reef the nainsl shouted Capt Davis hoarsely Aye aye sir was the choc re ponsc of the crew The pilot jammed the helm hnl alee and dl > some stunts with the jib boom but even this ervcd to lessen only slightly theperil of the passengers The salt waves dashed In sheets over the bows and the staunch little vessel shook from stem to Htorn under the repeated blows The venturesome excursionists ex-cursionists crowded together under the lee of the cabin and hung lightly It t the lniTrnll to keep from being blown overboard over-board The pangs of seasickness added to their I misery and ll waimt long until the dock looked ns if It had been out all night S As the storm was Increasing In force every minute the captain directed tho I passengers to lower the boats and pull for Saltalr where the lights of the pavilion pa-vilion could be seen shining like beacons bea-cons of hope Jonasson got Into one of the boats and managed io help Miss ITardy Miss Taylor and Miss Young In with him No sooner had the boat left the side of the yacht than It capsized and the five were struggling In the bly ter brine Ylth nerves overwrought by the tension of excitement and the t fear of drowning MIsu Gates and Miss Young fainted and Jonnsson with great difficulty rescued them und assisted them back upon the yacht The other young women were also pulled onboard on-board and the trip iaa abandoned A little later Savllle and Conrad started for the shore in different boats to secure aid for the shipwrecked mariners mari-ners After two hours of the hardest kind of work during which Savllles boat was capplzod three times they reached the pavilion about D i oclock and hastened to the city to tell the parents of the young women of the peril they wore In There were some sleepless sleep-less relatives In town Saturday ritL The remainder of the party stayed on the yacht all night cold wet and seasick sea-sick They were saved from starvation by a rlpo tomato with which George Morris had provided himself and which combined with the sail water made a very acceptable salad The lack of vinegar and olive oil caused great suffering It was not until long after daybreak that the passengers were able to land at the Saltalr pavll Inn and they took the jlrX train to tho city arriving nt the depot at 130 1 The appearance of the party as they stepped from the train at the Garfield Bench station was one to be remembered remem-bered Their clothes were so full of salt that they 1 rallied like boards and the dresses of the young women stuck out like amateur parachutes They were In a jolly mood but thankful for their escape from a danger which for a time wna very serious Indeed There wan enough sodium chloride In the party to keep a family supplied for a year yearIve been across the Atlantic twice I and Ive crossed tho English channel said Vie Yells but 1 never was so sick before in all my life After those waves had churned us around for a few hours and turned us upside down and Inpldc out and extracted from us everything every-thing extractable It didnt make any difference to me whether we were on the boat or underneath All I wanted was some nice cosy place where I could crawl off and quietly die all by myself my-self |