ARENAC SHIPS THAT | ARENAC..-Wooden NEVER DIE| built #155 in 1888. oss t schooner, later in St. Clair, US #106549. 178.6 x 34.5 x 12.7, 521 She also Photo from the Author's Collection a tow barge, Mich., by Simon Langelle ran for many years in the lumber trade on the Lakes for various owners, among them A. Be Comstock, Sinclair of Duluth, Line, of Detroit. She was a familiar sight here and was often seen with the W. K. MOORE as her sis- ter consort in tow of the GETTYSBURG and other’ steam bargese Along with the ALEX AN- DERSON and the steam barge GETTYSBURG, she was’ sold in 1916 to the Sullivan Trans- portation Company of New York, an affiliate of the Moore-McCormack Linese She outlived the ANDERSON which was lost in the gale of Oct. 1-2, 1916, in the and the Pringle Barge Gulf of Maine and served faithfully on the East Coast until 1923. She was sold to Cuba that year. If anyone has more infor- mation as to her disposition the author would be happy to hear from them. While she was a tow barge on the Lakes’ she masts, a dark hull white stripe along her decks. Along with her many cargoes of lumber, she often hauled iron ore and stone. The Reve Peter Vander Linden