I B - L «$. 2y ¢ A * Mk FRANCIS LYNDE= A \ ; 7 “AN df lp: a = = fis = Te SSN a a id Te =r los) Ae ah See =~ = = = #4 er" O A pp COPYRIGHT BY CHAR RIBNER'S SONS ~~ (Continued). jiffy. I must have a heart-to-heart SYNOPSIS. talk with the cautious Mr. Bullerton, CHAPTER I.—Under his grandfather’s will, Stanford Broughton, society idler, finds his share of the estate, valued at something like $440,000, lies in a “safe re- pository,” latitude and longitude de- scribed, and that is all. It may be identi- fied by the presence nearby of a brown- haired, blue-eyed girl, a piebald horse, and a dog with a split face, half black and half white. Stanford at first regards the bequest as a joke, but after considera- tion sets out to find his legacy. CHAPTER I1.—On his way to Denver, the city nearest the meridian described in his grandfather's will, Stanford hears from a fellow traveler a story having to do with a flooded mine. I happened to think of the Mining exchange, and to wonder if somebody connected with it might not have a list of engineers and mining experts. A hike through the streets brought me to the exchange and the secretary not only had such a list, but was willing to show it to me. In its proper place I found the name, “Charles Bullerton.” A query shot at the man behind the desk elicited the information that Mr. Charles Bullerton was in South Amer- fica. At this, I could have shouted for joy, because it proved conclusively that Charles Bullerton was my man, and that the tale to which I bad lis- tened wasn’t altogether made up out of whole cloth, as so many Pullman smoke-room romances are. Bullerton’s usual address, when he was in Colorado and not in Denver, was in care of a certain bank in Crip- ple Creek; or at least, that was the way it had been before he went to South America. A telegraph office was the next thing on the program, and when I found one it seemed to be about a hundred-to- one shot that I'd never touch bottom, since I had no hint that Bullerton had been headed for Cripple Creek. My message, prepaid and answer prepaid, contained only a single question: “What was the name of the old gen- tleman who bought the watered mine ° and then died? An answer to that would tell the story. For two whole days, an interval which I spent in hither-and-yon chas- ings of piebald ponies and harlequii. faced dogs about the streets of Denver —and found no blue-eyed girls a&at- tached to any of them—I thought f had merely shot up into the air witu my telegram, and missed the whole face of the earth. Then, one morn- Then One Morning the Answer Came. ing, the answer came in just two words, like this: “To Stanford Broughton, “Hotel Savoy, “Denver. “John Smith. “CHARLES BULLERTON.” That settled it with a vengeance, you'd say. And yet it didn’t. It merely proved that Mr. Charles Buller- ton had acquired a sudden excess of caution, and was probably cussing him- gelf plentifully for having been too loose-tongued with a perfect stranger in a Pullman smoker. He had an- swered my wire with a name that meant just as much or as little as if he'd said “Alexander the Great,” and that was precisely the amount of in- formation he had intended to convey. Whether or not Bullerton’s memo- randum agreement with my grandfa- ther would be binding upon me as Grandfather Jasper’s heir, was a ques- tion for the courts to decide. But one thing was certain—that is, granting all the assumptions; if he should find the mine and go to work on his unwater- ing scheme, he would have a grip on things that might be handsomely trou- blesome to shake loose. After I had argued it out thus far the next step suggested itself in a ' was hunting for. signed to unwater a lot of flooded telling him who I was, and perhaps giving him a chance to join forces with me in the search, if it should prove te be my grandfather's mine that he was looking for. Grabbing this inr pulse by the neck, so to speak, I took the first train for Cripple Creek. The next morning, when I made inquiry. I found that Bullerton had left town, though where he had gone the bank folks couldn’t say. 1 had gone into the chase more than half for the sheer fun of it; pretty much as the dog runs after the stick you've flung into the bushes, and which he hasn’t much hope of finding. But now it was appealing to me as more of a man’s job. There was a legacy ; and however valueless it might be in its present condition, it had once been worth nearly half a million—and might be again. And a half-million is a whole lot of money, when you come to consider it. From what little the bank folks told | me it appeared that Bullerton was | fairly well known in Cripple Creek and the region roundabout. Therefore, somebody in the near vicinity must know more than I had as yet been able to learn about the manner of his | disappearance and his probable desti- nation. My job was to find the some- body. About the time 1 thought I had ex- hausted all the combinations, 1 found | the one particular Bullerton friend I His name, as I re- call it, was Hilton, or something like that, and he was the superintendent of : a big drainage-tunnel undertaking de- { mines on the hills above the tunnel ' gite. “I can give you a little information, but not much,” was his answer to my inquiry. the subject of a lost mine—not an un- | usual disease in any mining country— . He has a sketch map of the location, but : nothing to tie it to. I didn’t ask him where the location was—or rather, ' and he has gone to hunt for it. where he thought it was.” “Then, of course, you have no idea where his hunt was to begin?” I threw in. “Only a guess, In our talk, he asked me if I knew anything about a place called Placerville, in the Red desert; what sort of a town it was, and if a man could outfit there for a prospect- ing trip. I took it from this that he might be heading for Placerville, though te didn’t say that he was.” As you'd imagine, this was enough for me. The next morning I was back in Denver, figuring out the quickest way to get to Placerville in the Red desert. I hoped Bullerton was on the true scent, but was mightily afraid he wasn’t—in which case I, too, would go begutifully astray. But if he should happen to be on the right track, then 1 must beat him to the goal. much better off than I was. the other hand, I had the girl, a hori? und a dog. CHAPTER IV. At the Back of Beyond. To my chagrin, the railroad ticket offices in Denver didn't know any such place as Placerville in the Red desert region, which was then, as now, trav-. ersed only by one railroad. The sin- gle “Placerville” they had listed was a station not far from Telluride, In | Nor | quite another part of the state. would the Mining exchange gentleman help me. However, he suggested that if 1 could find some old resident (‘“‘old- timer” was the word he used) whose memory reached back a ways, there might be something doing. “Steer me,” I begged; “I'm a half- orphan and a total stranger in Den- ver.” He laughed, and then thought for a winute, and said: “The Du Pont Powder people have been doing business here for a good many years, and they know the pow- der buyers all over the state. It's just possible that they could tell you. Sup- pose you ask at their office.” I went, forthwith; and the gentle- man to whom I presented my card at the cashier's window had the dope. The Red Desert Placerville, he told me, was strictly a “has been.” The placers had long ago been exhausted, and the place had afterward figured as a shipping point for some mine or mines on the desert slope of the East- ern Timanyonis. He was not quite cer- tain, but he thought the name ‘“Placer- ville” had been changed to something else. As to the manner of reaching the “has been,” this, as he pointed out, was simple encugh. There were through sleepers by way of the P. 8-W. and Copah all the way to the Pacific coast, Armed with this information, 1 quickly shook the dust of Denver (no glam here intended at the Queen City of the Plain) from my feet, taking a “Bullerton is bughouse on | True, he bad a map to zuide him, and was that | But, ea lowing morning, when I ran my win- dow shade up previous to turning out for breakfast, the train was rollicking along over endless reaches of the dryest, dreariest, most barren-looking country that the sun ever shone upon; red sand, it appeared to be, with with- ered bits of grass here and there and scattering bunches of what I after. ward learned was called “greasewood.” It was while luncheon was getting it- self served that the train stopped to water the engine at the most desolate place that ever lay out of doors, I do think. The place was utterly deserted; there wasn’t a human being in sight, either on the platform or in the street upon which the station faced; not even the bunch of loafers which usually ma- terializes out of nowhere to see a train came and go. I was looking out of the window and wondering how any- body, even a hermit telegraph opera- tor, could stand it to live in such a graveyard of a place when I got my shock. Jt was a dog that connected up the high-voltage wires for me; a shaggy ' mongrel with his ears cocked and a red ribbon of a tongue hanging out as he jumped up on the high station plat- form as if to say “Hello, stranger!” to me. For, right down the center of that dog's face and dividing it as accurate- ‘ly as if it had been drawn by some | mathematical draftsman, was a line marking off a black half from a white . half! . 1 was just taking a swallow of hot chocolate when the dog appeared, and © it nearly choked me. Luckily, T got ' the swallow down before I saw the : horse—a grasshopper-headed COW pony, saddled and bridled and standing . hitched to a gnawed wooden rail in , front of one of the tumble-down \ \ \ NC iy | “H’'m; Ticketed to Angels,” He Mut- tered Half to Himself. shacks. “Piebald” is a sort of an elas- through ticket to Angels; and the fol- | + have | strenuous effcrt to suraightea things | | ticket-named and found a typical mining camp of a | dreariness scarcely exceeded by that © of the dead-alive Atropia. thing I saw on th | man whose greatest need was for a . train conductor. | rich, but if I could have known the “Thank you; that helps. Now how i much farther is it to Angels?” “Bout twenty miles.” “All right. And when will there be a train coming back to this Atropia place?” “Way-freight — tomorruh mornin’— eight-thirty out o’ Angels.” “Good. Now if those fire people and the brass band don’t miss me—" 1 couldn't resist the temptation to give him a final shot, and it hit the bull's- eye. As he edged away I could see by his expression that he still thought we crazy. When I got back to my Pullman after luncheon I perceived at once that the train conductor had promptly passed the word about the episode in | the dining car. The Pullman conduc- tor evidently had his weather eye on me, and the negro porter shied every time he passed my section. This was tenth part of what was going to pop out of this Pandor~ box that I had foolishly dug up in ‘he dining car, the amusement feature would speedily | been Forgotten in pretty | there was yet time. ! the train at my | of Angels. | out. while I descended fron destination single street and a tawdry, dusty | The first station platform was my train conductor talking earn- estly to a large, desperadoish-looking clean shave. By the manner of the two I saw that their talk was aiming itself at me; the railroad man was only too | plainly warning the Angelic person that Angels the Blest had a probably | harmless, but possibly dangerous, maniac ip its midst. Still I saw only the humorous side | of it and refused to be disturbed. Fired | by the ambition to find some way of : returning at once to Atropia, before | the magic horse and dog should disap- ! pear, I tramped off in search of a place where I could leave my two grips. The place that offered, and the only one, was the “Celestial Heel” and 1 won- dered what sly wag had suggested the name, which was a double pun upon the name of the town and the fact that the tavern, half restaurant and half lodging-house, was kept by a China- man. But I secured accommodation, and as I was turning to leave the restau- rant-tavern trouble loomed up in the shape of the heavy-shouldered des- peradoish-looking person whom I had seen at the station talking with the “I’m onto you with both feet,” he re- marked, boring me vith an eye that I | into the heart of the most reckless ! 1 | "could easily fancy might strike terror | 1 | 1 | criminal. “I'm givin’ you warnin’ right ' now that no funny business don’t go in | ! this man’s town; see?” | “Im quite harmless,” I assured him. | : “Give me a little information, and I'll | | forthwith remove wyself from the con- fines of your charming city. How far | | is it by wagon-road to Placervilie- | . Atropia, and how can I get there?” . of you in the same dog-goned week!” tic word, as the dictionaries define it, | and it might apply to almost any beast-markings out of the ordinary. | But the horse I was gaping at fell eas- ily within any or all of the definitions; it was a true “calico,” white and light | sorrel in grotesque patchings; unmis- * takably “piebald,” if a purist in the use of the mother-tongue—like Cousin | Percy, for example—wished to call it S0. Before 1 could rush back to the steward’s sentry-hox in the vestibule GL the car our train was chasing along again, ! “Hey!” I shouted: “what’s the nape of that place where we stopped to wa- ter the engine?” : ground. Atropia?” “I don’t get you.” “Excuse me; I'll try to put it in | simpler form. Why is Atropia?”’ He appeared to have reached tne conclusion that I wo3 an escaped luna- | tic, safe enough, most probably harmless one. He looked first at the lit- i tle colored slip sticking in my hat-band and then consulted a note-book drawn from his pocket. “H'ma; ticketed to Angels,” he mnt- tered half to himself. And then to me: “Was you expectin’ to have friends meet you at Angels?” This was too much, and, anxious as I was to find out something more about Atropia, I felt it an imperative duty— fool-like—to do my small part toward enlivening a rather sad world. So ( said, solemnly: What are the industries of Angels fire department, in uniform, and with the apparatus, headed by a brass band. But this is irrelevant to the present burning question. What I am thirsting to know is why there should be a dog with a face half ! white and half black standing on the bald pony hitched to the horse-rack on the Atropia public square.” That finished him. “Say, young feller, you've got 'em bad,” he commented. “But that'll be all right. Just you wait till we get to Angels, and then you can find out ail these funny things you're so dead anx- ! ious to know.” “Hold on a minute,” I interposed as he was trying to escape. “Atropia hasn't always been as dead as'it is now, has it? What was its name when it was alive and able to sit up and take nourishment?” “Huh?” he queried; and then: “Oh, 1 get you, now; it used to be called Placerville.” | “Atropia.” | “Deuth-sleep,” I translated with = | grin. “It fits, all the way down to tue ! a: “I shall be met by a parade of the | Atropia station platform, and a pie- | | kind, and hurried down to the rail- | “My gosh!” he snid gloomily; “two “HWven so. When did the other one | arrive?” “Day before yistidday. He didn’t | look so much bughouse as you do, but | 1 reckon he must ’a’ been off his ka- | whoop, too, 'r he wouldn't 'a’ gone to i "Tropia.” “Let him rest in peace. Do I get my : {nformation?” “Shore: we speeds the partin’ guest You've come apast your place. Twenty- one mile back; and the way-freight 'll git you there to-morruh mornin’.” { “1 gong to Atropia—-this aiier: noon,” 1 bragged. . lle let me pass, and 1 tramped up the street until I found the one livery stable. Here, again, my fool reputs- tion had quite evidently outrun ne. The man had idle horses, plenty of | them, as I couldn't help seeing, but I couldn't hire one for love or MOREY. When it came right down to the pinch, he wouldn't even sell me one. By this time I was in a hot swert of impatience to be on my Way; to | bridge that twenty-one miles before the elusive clue—if it were the clue— could once more dodge me and vanish into thin air. In that frame of mind I told the cautious liveryman, in gentle phrase, what I thought of him and bis | road, hoping to be able to catch an east-bound train of some kind, any kind, whose crew could be bribed or cajoled into carrying me to Atropia. It was just as I was about to inquire of the telegraph operator what the chances were that the great tempta- tion rose up and slapped me in the face. Up the grade from the westward a tiny, three-wheeled car, carrying two men, came spinning along. 1 recog- nized it at once as a track-inspection | car, driven by a small gasoline engine; an evolution of the old velocipede car, foot and hand-driven and used by road- masters and other vailroad men for making quick trips over short dis- tances. In half a minute the little car rat: tled up to the station and made a | quick stop, the two men setting the brakes and hopping off to dodge into the telegraph office. They left the lit. tle pop-popping engine running at idling speed, and in a flash I saw my chance. Of course, if I should steal the car, I'd be caught and arrested ana hauled off somewhere to be tried and fined; but before any of these unto- | ward things could happen, I should have settled that biting question of the ownership of the piebald pony and the harlequin-faced dog. With a quick glance over my shoul: der to make sure that the coast was still clear, I slipped into the driving: seat, jerked the throttle open and re- leased the clutch, praying fervently ! sunlight. j was that the switches might be set right for me at the upper end of the Angels yard. As (he machine began to gather speed, I looked back. What I saw was a-plenty. Three men, one of them, What | Saw Was a-Plenty. whom I took to be the telegraph op- erator, in his shirt-sleeves, came run- ning up the station platform. The shirt-sleeved man was yelling and wav- ing something that glistened in the Next I heard the distance- diminished crack of a pistol and a blunt-nosed bullet sang a whining lit- tle lullaby to me as it tore past. I flung up an arm to show the pistol- firer that he had missed, and then the small car swung around the shoulder of the nearest hill and Angels became only a backward-flitting memory. CHAPTER V. The Magic Triad. To be stopped before I could reach my goal was no part of my plan, so I opened things up and gave the little three-wheeled dinky all the gas it could use, keeping a sharp lookout ahead, and meaning to pull up a little way short of the graveyard city, aban- doning the car and making the actual approach on foot. Judging from the way the scenery was racing backward, I estimated that the little car must be doing at least thirty miles to the hour; which meant forty minutes or such a matter, to cover the twenty-one miles. If oppos- ing train or trains, whatever they might be, would only keep out of my way for those precious forty min- minutes. : I pushed the small motor to its limit suddenly, on a grade that was a bit steeper than usual, the popping ex- haust quit short off, the engine slowed down, and the car, squeaking and grinding. came to a stand on a low embankment between two of the hill cuttings. There wasn’t anything very compli- cated about the little motor, and I soon discovered that a broken ignition wire what had killed it. Happily, there was a small toolbox under the «eat. and in the kit there was a pair of pliers. But sometimes—and this was one of them—a bit of material is as important as the tools to work with. The broken wire was too short to eou- ple up again, and there wasn’t an inck of spare wire to be found in the Kit. They say that necessity is the moth- er of invention; but I'll defy anybody to invent a piece of wire in the middle of the Great Sahara desert. Every minute I was expecting to hear the rumble and roar of a train. In this extremity it was a little desert zephyr that gave me the great idea. A gzentle breeze came sighing up | the draw from some overheated area out beyond, and finding no trees on the barren hills, it sang its little song in the thickly clustering telegraph wires on the poles. Why, sure! I said to myself; here was my wire— miles and miles of it. All I had to do was to climb up and get it. Gentle reader, 1 wonder if you've ever tried to climb a telegraph pole without the contrivances that a line- man buckles upon his feet? If you haven't. the advice of this amateur is— don’t. Half a dozen times I shinnied up to perhaps the height of a man’s head, only to come sliding dowh again on a run. At last, by a series of inch- ings I contrived to get within arm’s- reach of the lowest crosspiece. Pliers in hand, I strained for the nearest wire, progged it, and began to twist it back and forth to break it. Not to let me miss any of the thrills, it was at the precise instant of the wire-breaking that my straining ears caught the sound they had been lis- tening for; a far-away, drumming rum- bie that seemed to come from nowhere in particular. Then, out’ of the same indefinite circumambience came a warning that was still more unmistak- able—the long-drawn blast of a loco- motive whistle. I didn't climb down that pole; I came down like the time-ball on the flagstaff in Washington at high noon. Moreover, I struck the ground run- ning, as one might say. All thoughts of tinkering that confounded motor had vanished and my one great object in life was to get the car off the track before a worse thing should happen. I was doing fairly well with the lifting and tugging when the enemy hove in sight less than five hundred yards away. And that wasn't all, either. At precisely the same instant, as if it had been timed by the same mechanism that had brought the freight train, here came a wild engine around the curve in the opposite direction, with its whistle valve held open and making a racket to wake the dead. The be- reft motor-car riders had found a lo comotive somewhere and were chasing me. One mad heave at the stranded gas- oline car, a mighty boost that got all but one wheel of it in the clear, and I was gone—streaking it like a jack- rabbit for the tall timber—only there wasn't a stick of timber nearer than the slopes of the backgrounding moun- tains. One glance over my shoulder as I fled showed me what I was in for: that the story was to be immediately continued in our next, Both engineers tried to stop; did stop in time to avert the greater catastrophe. Three or four men jumped from the freight and two from the wild engine to come tearing after me. I fancied I could give them their money’s worth at that game— being in pretty fair training—so I pitched out to try to turn the hypo- thetical theory into a condition. It was a great race. Through one gap and into another we went, mak- ing figure eights around the hills and back again, dodging into new ravines and out of them into others, circling among great sandstone boulders that took all sorts of weird shapes in the passing glimpse, I don’t know just how long the chase lasted, but it was long enough to give me a very considerable degree of re- spect for the nerve and persistence of those highly indignant railroad men. We must have been miles away from the scene of the disaster when I final- ly left them behind and lost them. When I looked back and found myself alone with the solitudes I sat down up- on a flat rock to gasp and laugh. It had all been so supremely ridiculous, and so beautifully in keeping with the reputation I had left behind me at Angels, that I felt sure that now noth- ing less than a verdict of expert alien- ists would ever serve to convince these Red Desert folk that I was anything but an escaped lunatic. After the breathing spell I kept on up the valley, heading away from the setting sun, and feeling certain that, sooner or later, I must come out some- where in the neighborhood of Atropia. Two hours later I came into a sort of an excuse for a road. Being pretty well winded by the stiff climb out of the canyon ravine, I sat down at the roadside to rest a bit and to decide which way I should go, to the right or to ‘the left, Just as I was making up my mind I heard a patter of feet and a dog barked. A moment later I could see the beast, indistinctly. He had been com- ing up the road and had stopped at the sight—or scent—of me. Since a dog argued the proximity of a dog- owning human being, I called coaxing- ly: “Here, Towser—here—come on, old fellow—that’s a boy!” and the cur- ! jous thing about it is that he did it, and was getting along beautifully until | running up a little way and stopping, and finally coming to squat before me and to lift a paw for me to shake. I jollied him a bit and let him nose me to his heart’s content. Then sud- denly, as if he had discovered a long- lost master, he broke away and began to leap and dance around me, barking a furious and hilarious welcome. In the midst of this hubbub I heard hoof- beats and the squeaking of saddle leather, and the dog's owner rode up. At first I thought the dimly outlined Stetson-hatted figure in the saddle was that of a boy. But it was a woman's voice, and a mighty pleasant one, that called to the dog: “Down, Barney, end hehave yourseif—what's the mat- ter with you, sir!” I stood up and pulled off my cap. “Pm chiefly the matter,” I said. *Your dog seems to think he knows me, and I'm awfully sorry that his memory is so much better than mine.” You'd think—anybody would think —that a woman riding alone in the dark on a solitary mountain road would be handsomely startled, to say the least, at seeing a man rise up falr- ly under her horse's nose. But if my iittle lady were scared, she certainly didn’t parade her fright. “Barney is such a foolish dog, some- times,” she said apologetically. “He has a double brain, you know; half of it is good-natured and silly and the other half is—well, it's—" (Continued Next Week). ——— el ———————— Pennsylvania Leads in Automobile Registration. Pennsylvania leads the Union in the number of passenger automobiles registered, according to a tabulation prepared by the Bureau of Public Roads, United States Department of Agriculture. The total number of such cars registered in Pennsylvania is 557,765. California had only sever- al hundred fewer—bH57,231. IFassen- ger automobiles in New York are es- timated, in the lack of complete infor- mation, at 505,642. Other States showing large registrations are Ohio, 547,000; Illinois, 512,641; and Texas, 412,332. Nevada has the smallest number of registrations, 8,688. —— Come here for your job work. JREE—— Where Old Ship Rope Goes. Rope from ships that have sailed the Seven Seas—that has been tied to every port in the world—ends its ca- reer by guarding the natiui : tele- phone conversation. From junk rope is made the high grade ot paper which insulates every | wire in a piece of telephone cable. Over 13,000,000 pounds of old rope were fed to the giant vats which tore, enalrod. washed and heat nlp the makings of '1,u0U,000 pounds of cable paper used by the Bell Tele- phone system last year. ee ered eter Subscribe for the “Watchman.”