»«.«SI JAN California ------- this Winter where the sun is “ on the job ” c o p y fa ig -H T T H E B O B B S -^ E R R J L tT c o M P A N Y ; HALSEY ENTERPRISE i Visit------- :N yO N jÇ 19, 1921 Four Trains a Day Provide a service that contributes to the’traveler’s comfort and convenience suddenly, while every one exclaimed at once, “There, she’s quite all r ig h t - see how her color is coming back I” C H A P T E R I — Jane H a r d in g respect- a b le and c o n servative old e p fn e te r-b u t The penknife that I had lost in my n ever too old to th in k o f m arria g e — w ith struggle with Captain Mugnus had ¿more m oney th a n brains, is in veigled by to a stro n g -m in d ed spinster. Miss H ig g le sb y- fallen at the Scotchman’s feet. a ro w n e , In to fin an cin g an expedition to Wrenching himself free of his all but h u n t fo r burled trea s u re on Lee w a rd Island. H e r niece. V ir g in ia H a rd in g , un­ severed bonds he had seized the knife, d e rta k in g to stop her, gets on th e vessel slashed through the rope that held engaged fo r the hu nt, and In the c o n fu ­ Tickets good till April 30— Stopovers allowed sion la u n w illin g ly c arrie d along. him to the tree, and flung himself on Captain Magnus. It was a brief strug C H A P T E R I I . —B y no m eans concealing No W ar Tax ou Railroad Tickets gle— a fist neatly planted on the ruf h e r d ista s te fo r the exp editio n and her contem pt fo r its m em bers, V irg in ia m akes tian’s Jaw had ended It, and the cap L’ l • f Q o a ln t a n c e o f the H o n o ra b le C u th ­ lain, haif dazed from his potations, bert V ane, and Is s om ew hat Im pressed. went down limply. Since 1870 th e S o u th e rn Pacific has iy C H A P T E R I I I . —T a lk in g w ith D ugald id en tifie d w iih th e d e v elo p m en t of Wes on Throughout the fray Chrla slum Bhaw, the leader o f the expedition, V i r ­ g in ia very fr a n k ly expresses her views, bered undisturbed, and he and the un p ra c tic a lly accusing Shaw and the oth er conscious Magnus were now reposing m em bers o f the p a rty , in cluding a som e­ w h a t u n ce rtain personage. C a p ta in M a g side by side, until they should awake arHl a shady " fin a n c ie r," H a m ilto n to find themselves neatly trussed up H . Tubbs, of b e in * In a conspiracy to de­ frau d Miss Jan e H a rd in g . T h e ir rela tio n s with Cookie's clothes-lines. n a tu r a lly , a re som ew hat strained. But my poor brave Crusoe dragged JO HN M. SCOTT, C H A P T E R I V -b a n d lin ín . e on th e island a broken leg. from a kick bestowed on G eneral P assen g er A gent Is a m a tte r o f some d iffic u lty . V irg in ia is him by Captain Magnus, at whom he being c arrie d ashore in the a rm s o f C u th ­ had flown valiantly in my defense. b e rt V an e , to her disquietude. T h e la n d ­ ing, ho w ever, is s afe ly effected. So far so good; we had signally de­ feated our two guards, and the camp C H A P T E R V .—Le d by M iss H lg g le sb y- ' on the narrow strip of sand before B ro w n e the p a rty d ra w s up an a g re e ­ was ours. But what about the pirates the sea-mouth of the cave, we saw the m ent w h ereby V ir g in ia H a rd in g is barred fectly genuine swoon. who were still in the cave and would from p a rtic ip a tio n in the profits o f the figures of four men, who ran wildly Tlieu the Scotchman, Cuthbert Vuna shortly t>e reluming from It? They expedition. B elieving the whole th in g to about and scuglit for a foothold on tin * fra u d . V irg in ia is not g re a tly w o r­ were three armed and sturdy ruffians. and I set off through the woods. The sheer face of the cliff. As we stood ried. C u th b e rt V ane alon e votes ag a in s t It would mean a battle to the death. the exclusion o f V irg in ia . men were heavily armed, and 1 hart watching them, with, on my part, at Our best hope would be to wait In recovered my own little revolver and least, unexpected qualms of pity und C H A P T E R V I . —-W ild pigs abound on ambush behind the trees of the clear­ the island, and “ C ookie," the colored restored it to my belt. Mr. Shaw had a cold Interior sensation very unllk m em ber o f the p a rty , insists he has seen ing I mean for Dugald Shaw and seen to this, and had said to me. very triumph, they discovered us. Ther a " h a n t, ’ in the fo rm o f a w h ite pig Cuthbert Vane to do It—and about quietly: D u rin g a w a lk V irg in ia m eets th e " h a n t /’ for the first time, I suppose, they un a w h ite bull te rrie r, an d p rou dly brings down the unsuspecting pirates as they "You know:, Virginia, If things don’t derstood the nature of their disaster him in t o camp. returned. This desperate plan, which go our way, It may he necessary for We could not heur their cries, hut we so unpleasantly resembled murder, you to use it— on yourself." C H A P T E R V I I . —On th e island Is the saw arms stretched out to us. fists h u t of a copra g a th e rer, and the presence cast gloom on every brow. And I nodded nssentlngly. frantically shaken, hands lifted In o f the dog. nam ed "C ru so e’’ by V irg in ia “It's the women, lad,” said the is thus accounted fo r. R a m b lin g about, We went In silence through the prayer. We saw Mr. Tubbs flop down and fe elin g h e is e lf not to be a re g u la r Scotchman in a low voice to Cuthbert. green hush of the woods, moving In upon hl» unaccustomed knees— It wa.- m em ber o f th e expedition. V irg in ia comes " It’»— It’s Virginia.” And Cuthbert single file. M.v place as guide was In all rather horrible. upon a sand-im bedded sloop, the Island Queen R e tu rn in g to ths cam p, she Is heavily assented. I drew hack, shivering. "It won’t in tercepted by C ap tain M agnus, who a c ­ Seeing myself as the motif of such costs her un p le a sa n tly . She esc apes him . be for long, of course,” 1 said uncer­ w ith the aid o f “C rusoe." slaughter shocked my mind suddenly tainly, "Just till the steamer conies— back to clearness. C H A P T E R V I I I . —F ire d w ith the idea und we'll give them lots to eat— hut I o f h e r re lf d iscovering the treasure. V i r ­ “Oh,” I cried, “not that. Why not suppose they think—they will goon he g in ia pays a v is it to the cave which has surprise them In the cave, and tnuke been singled out as the most lik e ly place Just a lot nmre skeletons—” And in w h ich it has been concealed, and them stay there? One man could here I was threatened with a moist these she Is cau g h t by the tide and res ­ guard the entrance easily—and after­ cued by D ugald S haw , f r im certa in anticlimax to my late Amazonian death. T h in k in g her unconscious, Shaw ward we could build It up with logs or mbod. whispers Words o f e n d earm ent, which something.” she treasures. Why should the frequent and nat­ Everybody stared. ural phenomena of tears produce such C H A P T E R I X . —In id le c u rio s ity V i r ­ “A remarkably neat scheme,” said g in ia . dabb lin g ab o u t the w reck o f the panic in the male breast? “It's been Mr. Shaw, "but Impossible of applica­ Is la n d d QUeen, finds a d ia ry . Identified too much for her I" exclaimed the once o n ly as h a v in __________ _9 t by "P ______ _ g been k ep e te r, tion, I ’m afraid, because none of ua fo rm e r seeker o f the »reasure. In It he dour Scot in tones of ungulsh. “H ur­ know where to find the cave.” tells of bis fin din g o f the hidden w e a lth ry, lad—we must find her some wa­ and there her le a d in g ia in terru p te d . I shook my head. ter—” "I know I” C H A P T E R X —O p inions as Io the proper “Nonsense,” I Interposed, winking There w'as a lengthy silence. Peo m ethods of prosecuting the search fo r the rapidly. "Just think of some way to tre a s u re are divided, an d a wide d iv e r g ­ pie looked at one another, und their ence is a p p a re n t in the councils o f the calm those creatures, so that I shan't eyes said, “This has been too much lit t le p a rty . V ir g in ia '» In te re s t in the see them In my dreams, begging and leader o f the exp editio n Increases. for h er!" beseeching—” For I had not forgot­ “I know,” I Impatiently repeated. "1 C H A P T E R X I . —T h e d ia ry which V lr - ten the Immensity of my debt to Tony. nla has found in the rem ain s o f the can take you straight there. I found land Queen rev e a ls th e fa c t th a t the So a note was written on a leaf existence o f the gold was know n to oth the tombstone before Mr. Tuhba did, torn from a pocketbook and thrown *rs. and an a c tiv e and successful search und the cave, too. Come, let’» not fo r it c arrie d on. T h e record tells o f the over the cliff weighted with a stone. waste time. We must hurry— they’ll * finding o f the treasure and its tra n s fe r The captives swooped upon It. Fol­ •n e e to the sm all boat, but i t Is evident be getting back 1" the finder never le ft the Island w ith his lowed then a vivid pantomime by Amazement, still more than half In w e a lth . V irg in ia , of course, believes it Tony, expressive of eased if unrepent­ to be on th e Is la n d Queen, and so w ith in credulous, surged round me. - Then h e r reach F o r v arious reasons she d e­ ant minds, while Mr. Tubbs, by ges­ Mr. Shaw said rapidly: cides to say n o thin g o f her discovery u n ­ tures, Indicated that though sadly mis­ t il she has in ve s tig a te d fu rth e r. ’’You're right. O f course, If you understood. old II. H. was still our have found the cave, the best thing C H A P T E R X I I . —Led by direction s In friend and benefactor. we can do is to keep them shut up in “ P e te r s’’ d ia ry , V irg in ia finds a h ig h ly It was an attentive group to which Im p o rta n t clue to the hidden treasure, It. But we must move fast—perhaps J w tc but her courage fa ils w hen It comes to on our return to eamp I related the we're too late already. I f they have pushing h e r In vestigatio ns. circumstances which had made possi­ found the chest they may by.now be Wa W ent in Silence Through tha Green Hush o f the Woods. C H A P T E R X I I I —In te r r u p tin g a fe rv e n t ble our late exploit of imprisoning the starting for camp with the first load d e c la ra tio n o f love by C u th b e rt Vane, pirates in the cave. The tale of my of doubloona.” V irg in ia is s ta rtle d by the announcem ent "the vau, hut Mr. Shaw deposed toe | achievements, though recounted with o f M r Tubbs th a t he has found the clew Again I shook my bead. tfrom It and went ahead himself, while to th e w h ereabouts of th e trea s u re He due modesty, seemed to put the finish­ “They haven’t found the gold," la s dem ands, as the price o f his secret (as Cuthbert Vane brought up the rear. ing touch to the extinction of Violet, he supposes) a h a lf o f the w e a lth found sured him. No one spoke, even to whisper. I T h e p a rty declines to accept his term s for she wilted finally and forever, and The astonished faces grew more guided Dugald Shaw, when needful, an d decides to continue the search w ith was henceforth even bullied by Aunt out his a id. D u rin g ths e xc item e n t C ap anxious. “It sho’ have told on 11*1« Miss by a tight tough upon the arm. Our ta in M agnu s disappears. Jane. The diary of Peter was pro­ Jinny's brain." muttered Cookie to enterprise was one of utmost danger. himself. • H A T T E R X I V - I n view of the dlscov- duced, and passed about with awe If we met the pirate» It was their e ry m ade by M r Tubbs, a new agreem ent “They haven’t found the gold,” I re from hand to hand. Yesterday's dis live» or ours—and I recall with incre­ is d ra w n up. e n tire ly fa v o ra b le to Vir­ iterated with emphasis, “because the ginia. T u rn in g from the docum ent, the cover.v In the cave had rounded out dulity my resolution to Imbed five of my p a rty is surprised by th e appearance of gold Is not In the cave. Don't ask me six bullets In u pirute before 1 turned the history of Peter to a melancholy an arm ed force, a g a in s t whom there how I know, because there Isn't time the sixth upon myself. could be no effec tiv e resistance. completion. But though we knew the to tell you. There was no gold then end we guessed in vain at the begin We passed the grave, and I saw that C H A P T E R X V - C a p ta in M agnus, It but the two bags that the pirates the vine» had been torn aside again, nlug, at Peter's name, at that of the tu rn s out, has ' double-crossed** his trea s ­ brought back last night. 'Die— the and that the tombstone was gone. We ure-seeking c o r -one. and w ith four old grandfather whose thrifty piety o th er desperaooex p.ans to c a rry off the skeleton moved It all out.” hail brought him to Havana and to the «rattle to the brink of the cliff, and I gold, which he believes Tu b b s ’ discovery “My Lawd!" groaned Cookie, stag has ma e ora t ’cal arquaintance of the dying mate of pointed silently downward along the gerlng backward. C H A P T E R X V I . — Tu bbs goes over to the Bonny Lass, at the whereabouts of ledge to the angle in which lay the th e w ln n in c side, and, le a v in g Shaw and “Virginia I I had no Idea you were mouth of the cave. My breath came the old New England farm which had C u th b e rt v a n e securely bound. M agnus and bis friends m ak e th e ir w a y to the superstitious 1” quavered Aunt Jane. qqfckly, for at any Instant a head been mortgaged to buy the Island trea s u re cave, re tu rn in g w ith tw o bags " I say, do take some sleeping tab­ Queen, at the identity of Helen, who might be thrust forth from the open­ o f gold, which they had ta ke n fro m the g rip of a skeleton, whom V irg in ia alone lets or something and quiet yom ing. waited still, perhaps, for the lover know s is the u n fo rtu n a te P e ter, ths rea l nerves I” Implored Cuthbert with the Mr. Shaw and Cuthbert dropped who never would return. discoverer o f the hidden w ealth. tenderest solicitude. down upon the ledge. Though under But even our regret» for Peter did C H A P T E R X V I I . - M a g n u s and a com In my exasperation I stamped my whispered orders to retreat I could not chill the exultation with which we panion, "Chris.** le ft to g u ard Shaw and foot. not, but hung over the edge of the thought of the treasure-chest waiting V ane, a re m ade in to x ic ate d by ths fa ith “And while we are arguing here the cliff, eager and breathless. Then with fu l "Cookie.* an d V ir g in ia releases her there under the sand In the cabin of frie n d a pirates may be starting back to camp a bound the men were beside we. Mr. the Island Queen. CHAPTER X V III. And then we'll have to kill them am! Shaw caught my hand, and we rushed All afternoon we talked of It. That, go home and give ourselves up to 1« together into the woods. for the present, was all we could do The Young Person 8c ore a hanged I Please, please, come with mt A quake, a roar, a shower of flying There were the two prisoners In Tamp My first memory is of voices, and and let roe show you that I know!" I rocks. It was over—the dynamite had to be guarded—and they had present­ after th ttt I was ah it swiftly out of a lifted my eyes to the Intent face o done Its work, whether successfully or ly awakened and made remarks of a Dugald Shaw. tunnel from an imuieuae distance and not remained to he seen. After a lit­ strongly personal and unpleasant opened my eyes upon the same facer “All right,” be said tersely. “I think tle the Scotchman ventured hack. l i e ' trend on discovering their situation. which I had left at some Indefinite you do know. How and what, we'll returned to us where we waited In the There was Crusoe Invalided, and need­ And out later." Rapidly he made hl period In the past. There was Aunt woods—Cuthbert to mount guard over ing petting, and getting It from every­ Jane s, very tearful, and Miss Higgles plan, got together the thing» needful ine— with a cleared face. body on the score of his romantic past by-Browne’s, very glum, and the H<« for Its execution, looked to the bond- “It's all right,” he said. “ The en­ as Itenjy ns well as of his present vir­ ora hie Cuthbert’s, very anxious and s of the still dazed and drowsy prison trance 1» completely blocked. I set tues. The broken leg had been clever­ little dazed, and Cookie's, very, very era. posted Cookie In their neighbor the charge six feet inside, hot the roof ly set by Dugald—somehow In the late black. The face of Dugald Shaw I hood with a pair of pistols, and com Is down clear to the moath. Poor upheaval Miss snd Mister had dropped did not see, for the quite Intelligible manded Aunt Jane to dry her tear.- wretches— they have all come pouring quite out of our vocabtilarP-s— with reason that I was lying with my head and look after Miss Hlgglesby -Browne out upon the sand—” Cuthbert as surgeon's assistant and upon his shoulder. who had dismayed every one by uioa . All three of us went back to the me holding the chloroform to the pa­ As soon as I realised this 1 sat up ItiOgportuneJ/ toppling over In a per edge of the cliff. Seventy feet below. tient's nose. Jlicte was the fatigue 8 Y N O P 8 I8 . Reduced Fares Santa Barbara....Los Angeles.... San Diego Southern Pacific Lines through the glass the new arrival out to be not the tubby freight­ er, but a stranger of clean-cut. rakish hut|d, lying low la the water snd de­ signed far speed rather than carrying capacity. a unte offshore she lay to* aud a host left her side. Wondering snd dis­ quieted. we returned to the beach to await her coming. Was It another pi­ rata? Wbat possible errand could bring a at earner to thia remoto, unvto- tted. all but forgotten little Island? As the oarsmen drove the boat upon the beach the man In the atarn sprang agilely ashore. Dugald Bhaw stepped forward, and the stranger approached, dotfing his helmet courteously. “You are the American and English party who landed here some weeks ago from the Rufus Smith?” UU English was easy aud correct, though spoken with a pronounced Spanish accent Hi» dark high-fea­ tured face w as the face of a Spaniard. Aud his grace was the grace of a Spaniard, as he bowed awecplugly and handed Mr. Shaw a card. “Señor Don Enrique «•--uz... • Dugald, bowiug lu hi» -■ J fashiou, “1 am happy to »< i aa you represent , president of the *cpuhn. Murlua 1 suppose you come ou uum ue»», Sauor Gouxa'cs?" “Precisely. I am enchant«-«! t:> you appieht-ud t: tlresomeuesa of explanations. o business la a cold, usually a dUugree- able affair, I» It not so? That being the case, let us get It ova.." “First do ua the hotist tv he Heated. Bailor Uonzalea." Comfortably bestowed In a camp- chair In the shade, the Spaniard re­ sumed : “My friend, till............. of course you are await- to tm public, of which I have tin li............ a cjttzen. All right» and p. such a» harvesting the ,o,nu « . - , str(«tly conserved by the rt-pum,.. a i persons desiring such are leq ie-et I negotiate with the tuin.sler o. n the republic. Amt lio— when It I» a questioti a very large treasure, seuor/ The Scotchman's face waa dark. “1 - bad understood,” he replied, without looking In the direction ef Mis» Htgglesby-Browna, who seemed In the last few moments to have un­ dergone some mysterious process, “that negotiations lu the proper quarter had been undertaken and brought to a successful rooclu mi —tliat In short we were here with lhi express permission of the government of Santa Murlno." Thia wus a challenge which Misa Browue could not hut meet. "I had," she said hoarsely, “I hnd the assurance of a—a person high In the financial circles of the Timed States, that through his— his Intlucuce with tha government of Santa Manna It would not ba necessary— In short, that he could Ax the president— 1 em­ ploy his own term—for a ceuslderable sum, which I —which my friend Mlaa Harding gave him." "And the name of thia Influential persooT' Inquired the Santa Marinan, suavely. "Hamilton H. Tubba," croaked Mian Browne, Señor Gonzales smiled. “I rem.uiher the name well, madam. It la that of tha pretended holder of a concession from our government, who a few years ago Induced a number of American school teachers and clergy­ men and other financially Innocent persons to Invest In Imaginary coffee plantations. He had In soma doubtful fashion become possessed ef a little entirely worthless land, which formed the basis of his transactions. His franda wore discovered while he was to our country, and he waa obliged te leave between two days, according to your bo picturesque Idiom. Needleaa to aay hla application for permission te visit Leeward Island for any pur­ pose would Instantly have been re­ fused. hot aa a matter e f fact It waa never made.” In a henomhed silence we met the blow. The riches that had seemed within oar grasp would never be ourn. We had no claim upen them, far all iur toil and p e ril; no right even te be here upon the Island. Suddenly I be­ gan to laugh; faces wearing various shades of shocked surprise were turned on me. Still I laughed. “Don’t you see,” I cried, “how rldle- ■Ions It all la? All the time It la we vho have been pirates I” The Spaniard gave me a smile made irllllant by the gleam of smoldering black eyes and the shine of white teeth Señorita, with ell regret, I must agree." “What's tn a name?” remarked Du- gald Sliaw, shrugging. “Wa were after other people's property, anyway. am very sorry about IL Señor Goo- zalea, but I would like te ask. If you don't mind telling, hew you happened to learn of ear being here, to long as was not through the anthemic channels. On general principle*. I tried Io keep the matter quiet .” “We learned In a mat ner Mxnewbat ■what do you aa>?—curious,” re­ turned tha Spaniard, who. having pre­ sented the mea with cigars and by permission lighted one himself, was making himself extremely at home and appeared to have no Immediate Inten­ tion of baling us away to captivity in Santa Marinan daugeoua. "but before go further, kindly tell me whether you have had any—eb—visitors dur­ ing your stay on the Island?” W» have." Mr. »haw replied, "vary and reaction from extitei. cut ivh1> It everybody felt, and Peter's diary to he read, and golden dreams to be In­ dulged. And there was the delicate question to be discussed, of how the treasure should be divided. “Why, It all belongs to Virginia, of course," said Cuthbert, opening his eyes at the thought “of any other view being taken but this obvious one. "Nonsense!" I hastily interposed. "My finding the diary was Just an ac­ cident; I ’ll take a share of it— no more.” Here Miss Browne murmured some­ thing half Inaudible about "—confined to members of the expedition—" but subsided for lack of encouragement. "1 suggest,” said Dugald. “that, our numbers haviug most fortunately di­ minished and there beiug. outlie buss of Peter'» calculation», enough to en­ rich us all, we should »hare and share alike.” And this proposal was received with acclamations, us was a second from the saute source, devot- ug a certain percentage of each stiare to Cookie, to whom the uewa of his good fortune was to come later as great surprise. Shortly before sundown Cuthbert and Cookie were dispatched by Dugald Shaw to the cliff above the cave with -upplles for the Inhumed pirates. These were let down by rope. A note ■tag brought up ou the rope, signed by Mr. Tubbs, and containing strangely Jumbled exhortations, prayers and threats. A second descent of the rope elicited another missive, neatly folded and addressed In the same hand to Miss Jane Harding. Cuthbert gave this privately to me, but Its contents must forever be unknown, for It went, unread. Into Cookie's fire. I had no mind to find Aunt Jane, with her um brella ns u paruchute, vanishing over the cliffs to seek the arms of a repent ant Tubbs. The fly In the ointment of our satis­ faction, and the one remalnlug obsta­ cle to our possession of the treasure, was the presence of the two pirates In our midst. They were not nice pi rates. They were quite the least choice of the collection, Chris, when he was not »wearing, wept molatly and so touched the heart of Aunt Jane that we lived In fear of her let ting him go If she got the opportun Ity What to do with the pirates contln ued for a duy and a night a knotty problem. It was Cuthbert Vane who solved It, and wlth'the simplicity of genlua. “ Why not send 'em down to their churns the way we do the eats?” he asked. Dire outcries greeted the decision Aunt Jane wept, and Chris wept E I,’ PAUU 3 The Remarkable Program W te T ri­ umphantly Carried Out. Oaths flowed from Captain Magnus In a turgid stream. Nevertheless the twain were led away, firmly oound and guarded by Dugald, Cuthliert and the negro And tha remarkable pro- gram proposed by Cuthhert Vane wit« trlumphuiitly carried out. Six prison ers now occupied the old cave of the buccaneers. With tha camp freed from the pres ence of the pirates all need of watch­ fulness was over. The prisoners In the cave wore provided with no Im­ plements but spades, whereas dytta mite and crowhurs would tie necessary to force a way through the debris which choked the mouth of the tunnel. A looking over of the ground at the daily feeding time would he enough Tomorrow's sun would see our hopes crowned and all our toll reward­ ed by the recovery of the ” -«asure from tha Island Queen. C H A P T E R X IX . *T w ixt Cup and Lip. Next niornfrtg an avent occurred sufficiently astonishing to divert our thoughts from even tha all-important topic of the Island Quean. Cookie, who had been on the high land of the point gathering firewood, came rush Ing hack to announce that a steamer had appeared In tha offing. All the party dropped their occupations ami ran to look. That the Rufua Smith had returned at an unexpectedly early date was of course the uatural explanation of tire appearance of a vessel in these lonely yeaa. But J R r