» ae. TO THE SHARKS] — Synopsie—The man who tells this story-—-call him the hero, for short fs visiting his friend, John Saun- ders, British official In Nassau, Bahama Islands. Charlie Webster, a local merchant, completes the trio of friends, Conversation turn- ing upon buried treasure, Saunders produces a written document pur- porting to be the death-bed state- ment of Henry P. Tobias, a suc cessful pirate, made by him in 1850, It gives two spots where two mil- ltons and a half of treasure were buried by him and his companions, The conversation of the three friends is overheard by a pocks- marked stranger. The document disappears, Saunders, however, has a copy. The hero, determined to seek the buried treasure, charters the auxiliary schooner Maggie Dar- ling. The pock-marked man fis taken on as a passenger for Span- ish Wells, Negro Tom catches and cures a ‘sucking fish" &8 a mascot for the hero; it has the virtue of keeping off the ghost of the pirate who always guards pirate treasure On the voyage somebody empties the gasoline tank and the hero starts things. He and the passen- ger clash, He lands the passenger, who leaves a manifesto bearing the signature, “Henry P. Tobias, Jr.” w crew, the Maggie Dar. is passed by another schooner, 0 Susan B The hero lands on Dead Men's Bhoes. CHAPTER VIi—Continued, avai “I can't afford to give that, Theodore.” “I'd dle for dat,” he declared. “Take this handkerchief Instead: but, meanwhile, my eyes were open- ing. “Take this instead, Theodore” 1 suggested, “I'd die for dat.” he repeated, touch- ing the tie, His voice apd touch made me sick and afrald, just as people In a lunatic asylum make one afraid. “Look out!” murmured elbow, And just then I noticed hiding In you Tom at my some bushes of seven-year apnle trees, two faces I had good reason to know. I had barely time to pull out the | commandant’s revolver from my pocket. I knew the pockmarked genius or the engl neer. But for the moment I was not to be sure which one I had hit. For, as my gun went off, something heavy came down on my head, and for the was going on. * * » » - » ® “Which did I hit, Tom? were my first words as I came back to the glory of the world; but I didn't say them for a long time, and, from what Tom told me, it was a wonder I ever said them at all. “There he ls, sar,” said Tom, point- ing to a long, dark figure stretched out near by. “I'm afraid he's not the | man you were looking for” “Poor fellow I I sald ; it was George, the engineer; “I'm sorry—but I saw the muzzles of their guns sticking out of the bush there. It was they or| me.” “That no lie, gar, and If it hadn't wouldn't be here now.” “It didn't save me from a pretty | good one on the head, Tom, did It? “No, sar, but that was just ft—if it hadn't been for that knock on the | head, pulling you down just that min- | ute, that thar pockmarked fellow | would have got you. As it was, he grazed your cheek and got one of his own men killed by mistake—the very fellow that hit you. There he ls— over there” : “And who's that other, Tom?" I| asked, pointing to another dark figure | a few yards away. i “That's the captain, sar.” i “The captain? Oh, I'm sorry for | that. God knows I'm sorry for that" | “Yes, sar, he was one of the finest gentlemen I ever knowed was Cape tain Tomlinson; a brave man agd a good navigator. And he'd taken a pow- erful fancy to you, for when you got that crack on the head he picked up your gun and began blazing away, with words I should never have expected from a religious man. The others, ex- cept gir special friend" “Let's call him Toblas from now on, Tom,” I interposed, “Well, him, sar, kept his nerve, but the others ran for the boats as If the devil was after them; but the eap- tain's gun was quicker, and only four of them got to the Susan B. The other two fell on their faces, as If some thing had tripped them up, In a couple of feet of water. But just thén Tobias hit the eaptain In tho heart; ah! if only he had one of those skins—but he always laughed off such things as su- perstitious, “There was only me and Tobias then, and the dog, for the engineer boy had gone on his knees to the Su. ran B. fellows at the first crack, and ‘begged them to take him away with them, There was no one left hut To bias and the dog and me, and I was sure my end was not far off, for I was never much of a shot. “As God is my witness, sar, I was ready to die, and there was a moment ‘when I thought that the time had come;' but Tobias suddenly walked away to the top of the bluff and THE CENTRE REPORTER, CENTRE HALL, PA. A —— rem ia hd fat Given to the Publi called out to the Susan B., that was Just running up her sails, At his word they put out a boat for him, and while he waited he came down the hill toward me and the dog, that stood growling over you; and for sure 1 thought it was the end. But he sald: “Tell that fellow there that I'm not going to kill a defenseless man. He might have killed me once but he didn't, It's bound to be one of us some day or other, but, despise me all he Hkes—I'm not such carrion as he thinks me; and If he only likes to keep out of my way I'm willing to keep out of his. Tell him when he wakes up that as long as he gives up going after what belongs to me—for it was my grandfather's—he Is safe, but the min- ute he sets his foot or hand on what Is mine, It's elther his iife or mine. And then he turned away and was rowed to the Susan B.,, and they soon salled away.” “With the black flag at the peak, I! suppose, Tom,” sald I. “Well, that! was a fine speech, quite a flight of ora- tory, and I'm sure I'm obliged to him for the life that's still worth having, in spite of this ungodly aching in my head, But how about the poor cap- taln there! Where does all his elo- quence come in there? He can't call | They waiting i ready to murder us, 8s you saw. I'm afraid the captain and the law be. tween them are all that is necessary to cook the goose of our friend Heury P. Tobias, Jr, without any help from as the captain died for! me, I should prefer they allowed me to make it a personal matter.” i “It's the beginning of the price,” | gaid Tom, “The beginning of the price? “It's the dead hand,” continued Tom: “I told you, you'll remember, that wher- it self-defense. were me-—though, and waiting till another dead man comes along to take up sentry duty so to say. The ghost is getting busy. And it makes me think that we're coming pretiy near had all this happen. Mark me. the treasures near by—or the ghost wouldn't be so maliclous™ And then, looking around where the captain and the engineer and Silly Theodore lay, 1 said: “The first thing we've got to do is to bury these poor fellows: but where” I added, “are the other two that fell in the water? “Oh,” sald Tom, “a couple of sharks got them just before you woke up.” CHAPTER VIL In Which Tom and | Attend Several Funerals, When Tom and I came to look over the ground with a view to finding a burial place for the dead 1 realized with grim emphasis the truth of harlie Webster's remarks—in those souggery nights that seemed so re mote and far away--on the nature of the soil which would have to be gone over In quest of my treasure. No won “Why, Tom,” I said, “there isn't al load of real soll In a square mile, We couldn't dig a grave | for a dog in stuff like this” and as I | spoke, the pewterlike rock under my feet clanged and echoed with a metal lie sound. “Come along, Tom, I can't stand any more of this. We'll have to leave our | funerals till tomorrow, and get aboard | for the night"—for the Maggie Darling | was still flouting there serenely, as | though men and thelr violence had no! existence on the planet. “We'd better cover them up, against : i of those unsavory birds rising in the | air as we returned to the shore. We did this as well as we were able with rocks and the wreckage of an olf boat strewn on the beach. I don’t think two men were ever so glad of the morning, driving before it the haunted night. After breakfast our first thought was natursily to the sad and disagreeable business before us, “I tell you what I've been thinking, sar,” sald Tom, as we rowed ashore, and I managed to pull down a turkey buzzard that rose at our approsch-— happily our coverings had proved fair ly effective—"T've been thinking that the only one of the three that really matters Is the captain, and we ean find sufficient soll for him in one of those big holes” “How about the others?" “Well, to tell the truth, I was think ing that sharks are good enough for them.” “They deserve no better, Tom, and I think we may as well get rid of them first.” So it was done as we sald, and car rying them by the feet and shoulders tunely—we skillfully flung them In, and they glided off with wmearce a splash, call them, and there we were able to) dig him a fairly respectable grave, Tom and Sailor and I were now, to | the best of our bellef, alone on the | island, and a lomesomer spot it would | be hard to imagine, or one touched at | certain hours with an falrer beauty— | a beauty wralthlike and, like a sea shell, haunted with the marvel of the sea. First we went over our stores, and, | thanks to those poor dead mouths that | did not need to be reckoned with any | more, we had plenty of everything te inst us for at least a month, not to | speak of fishing, at which Tom was an | expert, When, however, plans for the hunting we | soon came to a dead stop. The indi cations given by Tobias seemed, in the | face of sueh a terrain, naive to a de- | gree. Possibly the land had changed since his day. Some little, of course, | it must have done, Tom and I went over Toblas® directlous again and | there was the compass earved on the | rock, and the cross, There was some. thing definite—something which, If it | was ever there at all, was there still- for In that climate the weather leaves things unperished almost as in Egypt. Sitting on the highest bluff we could | find, Tom and I looked around. “That compass Is somewhere amon: these Infernal rocks—if It ever carved there at all—that's one thing | certain, Tom; but look at the rocks!” Over twenty } we turned to our treasure Was miles of rocks north | and south, and from two to six from | A more hopeless job the Ce CIEE ERE ET ERE 2 we reached the boat at sunset we had and roll into our bunks. A machete is a heavy weapon that needs no little skill in" handling with economy of force, and Tom, who had been brought up to it, was, in spite of his years, a better practitioner than I. 1 have already hinted at the kind of way through, but no words ean do jus- tice to the almost inte ent tess with which those weird opposed us, It really they were Inspired by force pitting itself vegetable Incarnation of evi and fury and cunning Day after day Tom an home dead beat, wit word to exchange v 8 We had now been at it § fortnight, and I loved the more every day for the grit age with which he supports tubborn- Reema] as rible labors and kept u nce or twice whi other to see, and once tried BOING bl ed to suggest ia into the ' : CHAPTER VIL An Unfinished Game of Cards, One even ¥ o ¥ | ship unusu ened I a §ve or EL Wey done all we RTS Les " 2 7 3 e i th LL v F ob £ + 44 tat Te " vi CL TELL Lh They Glided Off With Scarce a Splash, Tom his | mind of man could not concelve, shook his head, snd scratched graying wool. “I go most by the ghost, sar,” he said. "All these men had never been killed if the ghost hadn't been gome- where near, Mark me, If we find the treasure it'll be by the ghost” “That's all very welll” I laughed. “But how are we going to get the ghost to show his hand? 1Ile's pot such bloodthirsty ways with him.” “They always have, gar” sald Tom, no doubt with some ancestral shudder of voodoo worship In his blood. “Yes, sar, they always cry out for blood, It's all they've got to live on. They drink it like you and me drink coffee or rum. It's terrible to hear them in the ~. agnia, again, when clos nd i WHO Wore tow wars far apart to hear each other's hal had fired our ! f that MBO reps got with the But. fi dently ply. But ther . } I fired, Still ne was on the f fi fi when I heard Sallor racing me, It was ng the over the jagged Evidently there was something “Something wrong old Sailor?" I asked, as though he could answer me as pisinly as dog could townrd rocks wron with don, wagging he had come. “Off we go, then, old chap.” and as as | could. to get to where Tom had been work. ing. Sallor brushed his way ahead, pushing through the scrub with canine importance. Presently, at the tod of a slight elevation, I came smong the bushes to a softer spot where the soll had given way, and saw that it was dently fallen In. and whined, pawing the earth, and \ at the same time I heard 8 moaning un night.” : “Well, Tom,” I remarked, “you may | be right, but of one thing I'm certain: | if the ghost's going to get any one, sha'n’t be you" “We've both got one good chance against them—-" Tom was beginning, “Don’t tell me again about that old sucking fish.” “Mind you keep it safe, for all that,” sald Tom gravely. “I wouldn't lose mine for a thousand pounds” “Well, all right, but let's forget the damned old ghosts for the present.” We decided to try a plan that was really no plan at all; that Is to say, to seek more or less at random, till we consumed all our stores except just enough to take us home. Meanwhile we would, each of us, every day, cut a sort of radiating swathe, working sin- gle-handed, from the cove entrance. Thus we would prospect as much of the country as possible in a sort of fan, both of us keeping our eyes open for a compass earved on a rock. In this way we might hope to cover no in considerable stretch of the country In “I= that you, Tom?" I called. Thank God, the old chap was not dead at all “Thank the Lord, it's you, sar” he “I'm all right, but I've had a bad fall——and I can’t seem sable to move.” I'll be with you in a minute,” I called down to him. " A cave, a pirate’s bones, a chest and— os os (TO BE CONTINUED. Cure for Rheumatism, A certain variety of seaweed, known in Ireland as “tope,” has been recom mended by a farsus physician as a cure for rheumatism and throat affec tions if eaten hot, whilst In some parts of England and Wales a variety of seaweed, known as “laver,” has been in demand for years as a vegetable, be extremely palatable Critic Coins New Word, Tired of the hackneyed phrase, a “gripping” story, originated by some weary critic and eagerly snatched up by book advertisers, it has remained for a Boston dramatic critic to dis ' He hus found u Return to Strictly Straight Line Is Predicted. : Variety of Styles and Contradictions Between Paris and New York Expected to Continue. Differing from the general opinion abroad is an American authority who ment that a return to straight line tallored coat is certain. As this comes from one of the houses SIMPLE AND CHARMING DRESS well known it carries weight. Having discarded much the knee downward as the warmest of weather wenring velvet berets and as ire is a vogue for hats of black t » and innovation. The white velvet is, of course, very vear velvet on a summer da forth charming milan, but they rome and One of Lewis’ of white velvet in au enllor shape with a huge “pouf” ot murabou in white also, It had the merit of looking summery, at least in roiling gs did some of the velvet tam-o'-shan- i cription a nwich vil in Q« our own Greg like i BIH sm and Skirt, or into One-Piece Street Dress. Phere is no displays restraint ial which so per 845 A - 2 ' serge. The color apd the in themselves suggest opportunities Ignored. implied an experience and knowledge of. infinite va- there is According to the need of the wearer, SeTEe may and skirt, or into a dress. With an exacting ose-fit- » made Of Hs r. the « d the utmost of finish and cut, coupled with a resolute determination not inch to the skirt hem, one give free scope to these detalis are observed, to {Ince shears may be allowed. Blue serge is the for accessories of Let for glk Yes wrist, or sand-colored spats, suede loosely over the tight a fur neckpiece of reduced tions, Then, as a signature propor to vell eteh a mad design In one bold, de- ie a dashing touch In a costume other wise reserved. ’ Blue serge Is unaseailable, impece cable, It is clever, and it is wise. THE HAT AND BAG TO MATCH | i { | { | This is a dress of yellow voile bead- ef in blue and white, with 2 sash of blue; an exquisite creation so sum- | mery and beautiful, FAD FOR STRIPED CRETONNES Pleasing Effects Are Considered Smarter for Hall, Living Room and the Porch, There is a fad for striped upholsters ings this year and just po striped effects are cor art er, for hall, ls room and porch, than the flowered patterns that are reserved for sleeni: g rooms. Som ¥ w these widered smart the broadly striped designs have gres dignity and character give a room a certain probably because of thelr that is fancied st the moment than the garety of flowered chintz. A specially smart pattern has a tan- | colored ground with very wide stripes | of deep blue, and down the center of each blue stripe runs a narrow, definite stripe of black. A country house lHving room is going to have curtaics and chalr covers of this blue, | black and tan-striped cretonne, used with a deep blue rug, some pleces of { old, beautifully polished mahogany, | and lamp shades of deep blue printed and NOW OKS— more { silk. These shades are merely squares of | silk, bordered with nasrow black | braid, and a black silk tassel swings i from each corner of the square, when { It Is thrown over the foundation shade { which is of orange-colored chiffon. | The orange does nbt show by day, but {gives a soft glow through the thin i bine silk cover when the lamp fs lighted, OVERBLOUSE HERE TO STAY Fashion Forecasts Show the Garment Is to Be One of the Popular Fall Adjuncts. One type of garment that It seems perfectly safe to advise the average woman to purchase now with the com- fortable assurance that it may be worn when fall comes around fz the long or over-theskirt blouse, These blouses unfortunately are rather expensive just now, and Mrs, Average Woman will hesitate a little before purchasing a garment about which there has been so much discussion and which has =o long struggled for general recognition. Blouse makers have announced that they have confidence In the continued vogue of this type of blouse, now that American women have finally agreed to give it a real tryout, and because of this confidence they are bringing out, or planning to bring out in the fall lines, long blouses that will be sold at reasonable figures, Therefore the woman who does not care to walt until fall for ber over-the- skirt blouse may watch for special and ‘bargain sales and lay in as many as she likes without fear that the fall will