The Chesterfield advertiser. [volume] (Chesterfield C.H., S.C.) 1884-1978, July 31, 1919, Image 3
I Pieces I j
1 of Eight |i
V Being the Authentic 0 j
0 Narrative of a Treasure Q <1
Q Discovered in the /) I
7) ; Bahama Ialande in the A c
ft Year 1903?Now Pint \ 1
\ Given to the Public. V ?
ft RlCHAtO UGALUENNE \
Oopjnrletal by Doubled*;, P*ge * Compeoy
(Continued From Last Week) fl
"Do you mean, brother, that the 1
Lord has given you second night?" P
"Dat am It I Glory to his name, hal- (
lelujnh!" he answered. "I look In a '
glass ball?so; and If de spirit helps R
me I can see clear as a picture far "
under de ground?for, far away over V
de sea. It's de Lord's truth ? ?
blessed be his Dame!"
I naked him whether he would look I t
into hlR crystal for me. With a hurst I ?
of profanity, oh unexpected as It wun j k
vivid, he cursed "dem boys" that had ?'
stolen from him a priceless crystal I
which once had belonged to his old ?
royal mother, who," before fc'ro, had d
had the same gift of the spirit. But. r
he added?turning to a table by his t
side, and lifting from It a large cut- tl
glass decanter of considerable capac- c
Ity, though at present void of con- h
tents?that he had found that gazing h
Into the large glass ball of Its stopper n
produced almost equally good results h
at times. t<
First he asked me to be kind enough
to shut the door. 1
\We had to be very quiet, he de- ?
clared; the spirit could work only In t
<, deep silence. And he asked me to bo c
kind enough to close my eyes. Then , r
vj heard his voice muttering. In a f
Mtrunge tongue, a queer dark gobbling (
kind of words, which may have beer, f
undent African spell-words, 01 sheer ?
gibberish such as magicians In ull
times and places have employed to t,
mystify their consultants. n
1 looked at him through the corner
of my eye ?as doubtless he had nntlci- H
pa ted, for he! was glaring with ?m nil t
of Inspired abstraction Into the hall of ?
the decanter stopper. So we sat silent
for 1 supjMise some ten minutes. Tbei \
I ku.nl I.I... ' ' *
m. iiv.nava iiiiu ^i?'C tllHUIIt'I llt't'P M^D
Opening my eyes I Haw him slowly v
linking his head. n
"De spirits don't seem communicable t
dlH afternoon," he muttered tilting tiie p
decanter slightly on one side und ob- II
serving It drearily. r
"Do you think, yonr majesty," I h
asked with as serious a face as I "
could assume, "the spirits might work a
better?If the decanter were to be
filled?"
"Mebbe, sar; mchhe. Spirits Is curious
things; dey need Inspiration
sometimes, Just like ourselves."
"What kind of Inspiration do you
think gets the best results, your majesty?"
"Well, sar, I can't say oh dey is very
particular, but l'se noticed dey do ?
seem powerful 'tached to Just pluln
good old Jamaica rum."
"They shull have It," I said.
I had noticed thut there was a saloon
u few yards uway, so before many j
more minutes hud passed I had been . y
there and come back nguin, and the V
decanter stood ruddlly filled, ready for I
the resumption of our seance. Hut be- I
fore we began I of course accepted the |
seer's invitation to Join him and the
spirits In a friendly libation. I
Then?I having closed my eyes?we C
huiflin o rro I n <>n<) i * nioo aul.?nlol*ln<r I
ft"" ?????? 0*111 II ?i?o nniwiuniiui^ n
with what rapidity the thick-coming |
pictures begun to crowd upon thut In- I
ner vision with which the I-ord had en- ?
dowed* his faithful follower!
Of course I waJ Inclined now to take
the whole thing is an amusing Impos- I
turc; but presently, watching his face t
and the curioua **geelng" expression of
his eyes, and noting the exactitude of
one or two pictures, I began to feel
that, however much he might be Inventing
or elaborating, there ^wns some
substratum of truth lii what he was
telling me.
The ilrst pictures that came to him
Were merely pictures, though astonish- '
ingly clear ones, of Webster's boat, the
Flamingo, of Webster himself, and of
the men and the oid dog Sailor; but In
all this he might have been visualizing
from actual knowledge. Yet the details
were curiously exact. Presently
his gaze becoming more dxed:
"I see you uuchort d under, a little
settlement. You are rowing ashore.
Dere aret. little pathways running up
among de coral rock, and a few white
houses. Seems to he a forest; big
trees?not like Nassau trees?and
thick brush everywhere; all choked up
so Thick und dark, can't see nut'n.
Walt a minute, dough. Dere seems to
he old houges all sunk In and los\ like
old ruins. Can't see detn for de brush
And'walt?Lord love you, Bar, hut I'se
afraid?I seem to see a big light coming
up trough dg brush from far under
de ground?Just like you see old rotr
ten wood shining In tie dark?deep,
deep down. Didn't I tell you de I/??rd
gave me eyes to see Into tie bowels of
do earth??It's rle h/iwets of de earth
for sure?oil Ut up and shining. Praise '
tie I.ord?It am de gold, for certain, I
all hidden away and shining dere un- I
der de ground?" 1
"Can't you nee It closer, clearer?" I *
exclaimed involuntarily; "get aome
Idea of the place It's In?" '
The old mun gazed with a renewed 3
Intensity. I
"No," he aald presently, and his dH*appolnted
tone seeme<l to mo the heat i
evidence yet of hla truth, "I only see a 1
little golden mist deep, deep down un- I
der de ground; now It Is fading away, t
L It's gone; I can only aec de woods ami 1
" de ruins again."
This brought hla,virions to an end. 1
The spirits obstinately refused to <
take* any more picii^es, though the
pld man continued toagaze on In the i
decanter stopper for (fully Ave mln- <
rT
mmmKomaeaBmrnemmmmmmammmmm
?///? CHAPTER III. . ^:B^r'
In Which W? Talc* 8hlp One* Mora.
The discovery which?through my
tlend the dealer in ''marine curloslles"?I
had made, or believed myself
o have made, of the situation of
lenry P. Tobias' second "pod" of
rea8ure, fitted exactly with Charlie
Vebster's wishes for our trip, sinull i
itock as he affected to take In It at the |
aoment.
"Short Shrift Island" lay a few miles ,
o the northwest of Andros Island, j
'low Andros Is a great haunt of wild t
luck, not to speak of that more august
tlrd, the flamingo. Attraction number
me for the good Charlie. Then, though
t is some hundred and fifty miles long
ind some fifty miles broad at Its
irondest, It has never yet. It Is said,
men entirely explored.
Its center.Is still a mystery. The
mtlves declare It Is haunted, or at all
vents Inhabited by some strange peole
no one has yet approached close
nough to see. You can see their ]
louses, they say, from a distance, but
s you approach them, they disappear. ]
lere, therefore, seemed an excellent ,
ilnce for Tobias to take cover In. ]
'lmrlle's duck-shooting preserves, end- ,
ess marl lakes Islanded with man- , ]
rove copses, luy on the fringe of this (
lysterlous region. So Andros was ,
ilninly marked out for our destlna- |
Ion. t
Sailor had watched his master get- (
Ing his guns ready for some days,
nd, doubtless, memories stirred In ^
il 111 of Scotch moors they had shot j
ver together. He raised his heud to j
he night wind and sniffed Impatiently, ,
s though he already scented the wild I ,
H/.L- ??1 ... ?
..v~ wu niiuros isiftim. He was Im- I
mtlent, like the rest of us, because, |
hough it was an hour puRt sailing- |
line, we had still to collect two of the j
rew. The two loiterers turned up at ^
ust and, ull preliminaries being at f
L'ngth disposed of, we threw ofT the j
loorluc ropes and presently there wus f
eard thai most exhilarating of sounds
o utiyotie who loves seafaring, the rip- f
>llng of fhe ropes through tho blocks
s our mainsail began to rise up high ?
gainst the moon which was beginning <
o look out over the huge block the 1
lolonlal hotel, the sea wall of which I
an along as far as our mooring. A 3
ew lights in its windows here and
here broke the blank darkness of its I
acade, glimmering through the ave- i
aies of royal pnlms. I am thus ex
licit because of something that pres- 1
ntly happened and which stayed tho ,
lalnsnll In Its rippling ascent. <
A tall tiguro was running along the i
ea wall from the direction of the ho- i
el, calling out, u little hreuthlessly, In m
rich young voice as It run: i
"Walt a minute there, you fellows 1 j
Vnlt a minute 1" i
We were already moving, parallel
idth the wall, and at least twelve feet (
way from It, by the tiuie the ilgure?
hat of u tall hoy, cowboy-hatted uiul i
dcturesquely outlined In the hulf
Ight?stopped Just ahead of us. He |
alsed something that looked like u |
tag In his right hand, calling ottt ;
Catch" as he did so; and, a moment |
if tor. before a word could he spoken.
Before a Word Could Be Spoken, Ha
Took a Flying Leap.
le took a flying leap and landed
imnngst um, plump in the cockpit and
ivns clutching first one of us and then
the other, to keep his balance.
"I>ld It, by Jove!" he exclaimed In
i beautiful English accent, und then
darted laughing as only ubsurd dureJevll
youngsters can.
"Forgive me!" he said, an soon as he
ould get his breath, "but I had to do
t. I leaCen knows what the old man
>vill say!"
"You're something of a long Jutnp I"
;a!d Charlie. I
"Oh! I have done my twenty-two
ind an eighth on a broad running
lump, but I had no chance for a run
there," answered the lad, carelessly. )
"Hut suppose you'd hit the water Indent!
of the deck?"
Vl'hul ,it 1(9 Pont nnn ou.lmV'
"I guess you're all right, young
nan," nalcl Charlie, softened; "but
. . well, we're not taking passengers."
The words had u familiar sound,
rhey were the very ones I had used
o Tobias, as he Htood with his hand on
he gunwale of the Maggie Darling.
[ rapidly conveyed the coincidence?
ind the difference?to Charlie. It
struck me as odd, I'll admit, that our
second sturt, In tlilH respect, should
t?e ho like the first. Meanwhile, the
roung man was answering, or rather '
heading, In a boyish way:
"Don't call me a passenger; I'll help
ivork the boat. I'll tell the truth. I
heard?never mind how?about your
rip, and I'm Junt nutty about burled
treasure. Come, be a sport. We cuu
et the old guv'nor know, aomehow
. . and It won't kill him to tear hla
^alr for a day or two. He knowa I
ran take care of myself."
"W?\'l! said Charlie, after thinking
iwhlleVi hia alow way, "we'll think it
>ver. YAu can come along till the
nornlng. Wp i c&g get ft gQfid Ififik 4
% I'
"v,v
> ? *c V t
you. If I don't like your look* well
till be able to put you off at West
End; and If I do?well?right-ho 1
Now, boys," he shouted, "go ahead
with the sails."
Once more there was that rippling
of the ropes through the blocks, as our
mainsail rose up high against the
moon and filled proudly with the
steady northeast breeze we had been
waiting for.
So two err three hours went by, as
we plunged on, to the seething sound
of the water, and the singing of our
sails, and all the various rumor of
wind and sea. After all, It was a good
music to sleep to and, for all my scorn
of sleeping landsmen, an Irresistible
drowsiness stretched ine out <m #the
roof of the little cabin, wonderfully
rocked Into forgetfulness.
My nan enme to an end suddenly,
ns though some one had flung me out
through a door of blue and gold Into a
new-born wortTT. There was the sun
rising, the moon still <m duty, and the
morning star divinely naked In the
heaven.
And there was Charlie, his broad
face beaming with boyish happiness.
and something like a fatherly geutlenegs
In his eyes, as he watched his
companion at the tiller, whom, ^or a
half-asleep moment of waking, I
could T account for, till our st?rt all
came buck to me, when I realized that
It was our young scapegrace of irverxlght.
Chaclle and he evidently were
>n tlio host of terms already.
Old Tom had heen busy with break'ast
and soon the smells of coffee and
'reshly made "Johnny-cake" und fryng
bacon compete<l not unsuccessfully
vith the vurlous fragruuces of tlie
nornlng.
Breakfast over, Charlie filled his
>lpe, assuming, as he did so, a Judicial
ispect. I filled mine and our young
'rlend followed suit by faking u silver
1 garotte case from his pocket and
itrlklng a match on the leg of his
thakl knickerbockers with a profesdonal
air.
"All set?" asked Charlie, and, after
i slight pnuse, he went on:
"Now, young man, you can see we
ire Hearing the end of the Island. An>ther
half-mile will bring us to West
Bud. Whether we put you ashore
here, or take y?ni along, depends on
four answers to my questions."
"Fire away," answered the youth,
>lowlng a cloud of cigarette Hmoke In
1 delicate spiral up Into the morning
iky; "but I've really told you all I
ihvi to tell."
"Ni; you haven't told us how you
Mime to knmv of our trip, whut we
were supposed to be after, and when
we were starting."*
, "That's true!" flushed the lad, monentarily
losing his composure. Then,
warily regaining It: "Is It necessary to
inswer that.quest ion?"
"Absolutely," answered Churlle, beginning
to look really serious.
"Because, If you don't mlud . . .
well, I'd Just as soon not."
"For that very reason I want to
fcnow. We are out on a inore serious
justness than perhaps you realize, und
pour answer may mean more to us
[ban you think."
"I'm sure It cannot he of such Importance
to you. Itcally, It's hardly fulr
for me to tell. I should have to give
iway a friend."
i 111 wirry, inn i sunn nave to inilst,"
replied Charlie, looking very
grim.
"All right, then," answered the
youth, looking him straight In the eyes,
"put me ashore."
"No; I won't do that now, either,"
declared Charlie, sternly setting his
Jaw. "I'll put you in Irons, rather?
and keep you on bread and water?till
you answer my questions."
"You will, eh?" retorted the youth,
Bashing Are from his tine eyes. And
as he spirke, quick ns thought, he
leaped up on to the gunwale und, without
hesitation, dived into the grout
glassy rollers.
Rut Charlie was quick, too. Like a
flash he grabbed one of the boy's ankles,
so that the beautiful dive was
spoiled; and there was the boy, hanging
by an Imprisoned leg over the
Bhip's side, a helpless captive?his
arms in the water uud his leg struggling
to get free. Rut he might us well
have struggled against the grip of
Ilercules. In another moment Charlie
had him hauled ulx/urd again, his eyes
full of tears of boyish ruge and humiliation.
"You young foof!" exclaimed Chnrlie.
"The water round here is thick
RATS PIE
so do mice, once they eat RAT-SNAP.
And they leave no odor behind. Don't
take our word for it?try a package.
Cats and dogs won't touch it. Rat
pass up all food to get RAT-SNAP.
Three sizes.
25c. ?i*e (1 cake) enough for Pantry,
Kitchen or Cellar.
BOc. ?ize (2 cakes) for Chicken
House, coops or small buildings.
*1 .00 aise <5 cakes) enough for
all farm and out-buildings, storage
buildings, or factory buildings.
Sold and Guaranteed by
Farmers' Hardware Co. Square
Deal Drug Co- and A. F. Davis.
MBBggtBBaesHggges i i \m amestame.
, with sharks; you wouldn't hara gone
fifty yards without one of them getting
you."
"Sharks!" gasped out the boy, contemptuously.
"I know more about
harks than you do."
"You seem to know a good many
things I don't," said Charlie, whose
grlmness had evidently relaxed a little
at the lad's display of mettle. Meanwhile,
my temper was beginning to
rise on behalf of our young passenger.
"I tell you what, Charlie," I Interposed;
"If you are going to keep this
up, you'd better count me out on this
trip and set us both ashore ut West
End. You're making a fool of yourself.
The lad's all right."
! The boy shot me a wurm glance of
I gratitude.
"All right," agreed Churlle, beginning
to lose his temper, too. "I'm
damned If I don't'." And, his hand on
the tiller, he made as If to turn the
boat about aud tack for the shore,
j "No! no J" cried the hoy, springing
; between us and nppenllngly laying one
j hand on Charlie's shoulder, the other
1 on mine. "You mustn't let me spoil
' your trip. I'll compromise. And, skipper,
I'll tell your friend here all there
; Is to e1! ?everything?I swear?If you
will leave It to his Judgment."
"Rlght-o!" agreed Charlie ut nit:
i no oiir passonget and 1 thoro?ipc?- 1
withdrew for our conference.
It wns soon over ami 1 couldn't heplaughing
aloud at the simplicity of tt
all.
".lust as I told you. Charlie," I exclaimed;
"it's Innocence Itself." Turning
to the lad, I said: "Dear bo\,
there Is really no need to keep such u
' small secret as that from the skippei
here. Yiru'll really have to let me te'u
him."
The boy nodded acquiescence.
! "All the same, I gave my word," he
said.
When I told Charlie the Innocent secret,
he laughed as 1 had done, aim
his usual good humor instantly returned.
The stubbornly held secret had
| merely amounted to this: Our lad was
| acquainted with my conchologist, and
j had paid him a visit the very ufterI
noon I did, had lt\ fact seen me leavI
lag the house. Answering to the hoy's
romantic talk of hurled treasure and ]
j so forth, the shell enthusiast had j
' thought no harm to tell him of our 1
; projected trip; and that was the whole
of the mysterious matter.
I Yet the day was not to end without
u little Incident which, slight though
indeed it was, was momentarily to
( arouse Charlie's suspicions of our .
charming young companion once more,
j Presently, in the far southwest, tiny
' points like a row ?*f pins begun very
' flllntlv fn Ponon iKomool.inn *
iucumrivrn UIHIIK mu i
sky-line. They were palm trees, 1
i though you could not make them out |
to lie such, or anything in particular, '
till hmg after. One darker point i
seemed closer thiui the rest.
"There's High Cay!" rang out the 1
rich young voice of our passenger.
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TT*riy:H552!S5S^ESE52E5ES5E2SHHfiSE5ES^tt
whocf we'd half forgotten In ow tense
scanning of the horlzort. Clin rile and
1 both turned to hint together in : ur-\
prise?and his fnre certainly betrayed
the confusion of one who has
let something glip Involuntarily.
"Ho! ho! young mun," cried Charlie,
his face darkening again, "what do
you'kuow about High Cay? 1 tie
this was your tirst trip."
"So It Is," answered the hoy, "on'1
the sea."
"What do you mean: '<n the smi?'"
"I mean that I've done it tunny a
time?on the chart. I know evet\,
bluff ami roof and sluml and ca>
around Andros front Morgan's Itluft
to Washington's Cut?"
"You do, eh?"
"On the chart. Why, I've studied
charts since I was a kid, and goto
every kind of voyage you can think of
?playing at buccaneering or whalirtg
or discovering the north pole. Kvery
kid litres that."
"They do, eh?" said Charlie, evidently
quite unimpressed. "I nevet
did." ;
"That's because you've about as
much imagination as a turnip in thai
head of yours," 1 broke in, in defense ^
of nty young Apollo.
"Maybe, If you're so smart," continued
Charlie, paying no attention to
me, "you can navigate us through the
North Bight?"
"Mtiybe!" answered our youngster
pertly. with mi odd little smile. He
hud evidently reeovered his nerve, mid
seemed to tuki? pleasure in piquing
Charlie's .suspicions.
(To Be Continued Next Week )
WEALTHY NORTH
CAROLINIAN DIES
B. D. Heath, one of Charlotte's
wealthiest citizens is dead at the aire
of 09. Mr. Heath was a mill owner
and financier and was worth about
$2,500,000, all of which he accumulated
by his own efforts. He was born
in Lancaster County South Carolina,
of poor parents and had jfreat difficulty
in saving: enough money to cdu- ,
cato himself. He was a philanthropist
of note, having: given largo sums
for the support of various Methodist
institutions of North Carolina.
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with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they .
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Tatarrh is a local disease, greatly ioluenced
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nternal remedy. Hall's Catarrh MiJi:ine
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Hall's Family Pllla for constipation.
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IICINE Krl
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Miss Gray's letter breathes I
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Liquid or Tablrt l-'orm I
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ifyank of %h
The Oldest, Largest
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4 Per Cent. Paid en Savings Deposits
See Us
C. C. Douglass,
R. E. Rivers, President. D.
M. J. Hougli, Vice-President. D. I
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Dental Surgeon Iff
Chesterfield, S. C. |U
Oifice on second tioor in Rosi ^
i
l>U..Ulllg. >
All who desire iny services witt /
[dense see nie at Cheslerlield, as I I (
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! |
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DR. R. L. M c M A N U S
Dentist
i lltice over Bank of Chesterfield.
Vv i!I visit PnKelund every Tuesday; | ^
Mt. Cro^han every Wednesday.
Other <lnys in Chesterfield. 1
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A t tor ney-a t-I .a%w IW
Olfice in Courthouse 4^
Cheiterfield, S. C. I |f ^
_ V
HANNA A HUNLEY ^
?Attorneys?
R K. Hannn, C. L. Hunley,
Cheraw. Chesterfield p
Offices:
The Courthouse, (Chesterfield I
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esterfield 1
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ru.it Policies are
it
an & Ins. Go.
S, Manager
/I'll, HAIL, LIVE STOCK
CE
itate Money Loaned
SPECIALISTS
ftffiEE Ll iJlliiSfei
; Wc Do It Right
I ^ 1 Spi i i.?hkis <Mi repairing all ;
1 m.ikrs of Automobile K.hIm- j "^Jj| !
Tt ! n.rv. Wc m.ik. flu-in a> u*hkI \ 4-11:||
't n .is iu u \\ i ,iho repair ten J *-H
iutn. i.uihs .luj nniKt* racing ?4 J"1 l}|
. se.%\\ ^hipiis\our radiators t'tfl 1 I
i : : ni-ini '.i T > ni -.1) R*i 11
y.R.Hartin & Bro
181S Main St ..Columbia SO
ASHCRAFT'S
ndition Powders
high-class remedy for h<>r.-.es
mules in poor condition and
teed of a tonic. lluilds solid
icle and fat; cleanses the sy?
, thereby producing a smooth
;sy coat of h?ir. backed 'o
1