to sell him Cavello Island. With its fine ramshackle old house and barren cedar thickets it was all that was left of my inheritance, and what I could earn from my profession was hardly enough to pay the taxes. For two years I had tried to find a buyer and the Dodsons were my first nibble. It had seemed a first rate stroke to bring them down from New York to live in the place with me for a month. And when I joined them on the boat coming down I first became aware of the existence of Miss Linda Shannon, social secretary to Mrs. Thorley -Dodson. Be- fore we docked at Hamilton I was gloat- ing over the prospect of a month under the same roof with her. ; I don’t know what the Dodsons had expected Bermuda to be — at any rate it . was something else. They didn’t ISLAN bother to conceal their low opinion of Cavello Island. They had brought their own staff of servants with them, even a gardener, and had turned off my man Benevides, a villainous-looking Portugese whom I had had around the place doing odd jobs when I could afford to pay him anything. If only I could turn these people out and keep it for mys=If. If Linda would— but it was a foolish impulse, born of moonshine, If I didn’t sell the place I couldn’t even keep myself, much less a wife. I had to sell it. If ghosts and buried treasure wouldn’t do it I must think of something else. WE SAT ON the terrace after dinner as on the night before. But this time I had a piece of luck. Mrs. Dodson went for a walk. Mr. Dodson went inside to bring himself up to date on the market reports. Instantly my deck chair was arm in arm with Linda’s. It wasn’t long before I had the conversation at the point of asking her whether she wouldn’t like %o go on living on Cavello Island. “I'd better,” she said, “if the Dodsons buy it.” “No, but how about keeping it for ourselves? How’d you like to stay on as helpmate to a rising young author?” She laughed and made a face at me. “I eat too much, Tommny. What would we live on? Fish off the reef?” Just then there was a rattle of stones on the path and Mrs. Dodson bore down upon us in a lumbering run. “Noises,” she gasped when she could get her breath. “Back there in the dark. Like— like blows on metal. What kind of noises,” she whispered, “did you say that—that Pedro made?” We didn’t laugh at her. By flashlight that night and by daylight the next morning I searched thoroughly along the path and the cedars that bordered it. Nothing there, of course. Mrs. Dodson was indignant. “I heard it,” she said, “as plain as I hear you now. Mr. Pavey, there’s something there.” It was in the next day’s paper that we read about the murder in Hamilton. A Portugese had come home riotous with rum and, after a quarrel heard by half the neighborhood, had very thoroughly and effectively used a knife to make a widower of himself. He was still at large. The news startled us at Cavello. For the murderer was Benevides Vagos. 1 was called upon to tell all I knew about my odd job man. I had nothing much to say. I had let him hang around the Island when he had nothing else to do, but he had never endeared himself to me. Before the Dodsons dismissed him he had helped us once or twice with the diving helmet that IT had rented for Linda’s amusement. She used to say that it added to the thrill of walking along the ocean floor to have such a doubtful character as Benevides at the pump. “Do you suppose he’ll cgme back to the Island?” she asked excitedly. I said it was highly improbable. There was nothing to bring him there. Any- TOWN WEEKLY MAGAZINE SECTION how he was sure to be caught soon. But several days went by and he wasn’t caught. Linda horrified the Dodsons by pro- posing that she and I go on a private man hunt along the cliffs and caves of Devonshire Parish, where one of the rumors had located Benevides. Later she had an idea that Benevides might be hiding in the cave on our Island and we went down together to inves- tigate. IT ISN'T MUCH of a cave, but it’s an interesting spot. Halfway down the Island is a little dell, shaded by cedars and bordered on one side by a sloping bank. In the bank is a hole five or six feet in diameter. Inside you see that a flight of a dozen steps has been cut into the clay and leads down into the eawth. At their foot you are in an oval cham- ber, perhaps twenty feet across, ,col- umned with pink stalactites. At one side another flight of steps leads down again. You seem to be de- scending into another chamber, with a floor that reflects back the light of your torch. It is water—a subterranean pool s0 clear that you might easily walk down into it without knowing it was there. With our flashlights” we peered into SURREAL AER TTie TOWN COVER: WINTER CARNIVAL Chisholm Ski Jump RUMFORD, MAINE Outstanding ski jumpers of this country and from abroad participate in the annual events at the huge jump of the Chisholm Skiing and Outing Club, at Rumford, Maine, in conjunction with the annual Winter Carnivals, this year on February 4 and 5. The Chisholm jump is one of the largest in the East. Thousands of sports enthusiasts and competitors from all parts of New England and the eastern states are attracted to the various competitions including the championships Sa of the United States Fastern Amateur Ski Association. The Winter Carnivals have been sponsored by the Chisholm club for the past ifteen years. ski title events, and Class A and Class B jumping are featured attractions of the carnivals. The Maine State every corner, but found no trace of any- one having been there. Linda was annoyed. “He ought to be here,” she -said indignantly. One morning before my breakfast swim I was standing on ‘the terrace in my bathing trunks when I heard running footsteps, and three men in uniform appeared around the corner of the house. “Has anyone come this way?” one of them called to me, ony as I shook my head: “It’s Benevides Vagos. He's the Island.” They separated, skirti the shore and -stopping every fe moments -to scan the surface of the water. A tip had come to headquarters tha Benevides had been seen near George's Bay, not half a mile from the Island bicycle squad had hurried out there, Continued On Page 11 TRI 0 0 0 A ns g ; ; ‘I ansist that good sense is the principal foundation of good manners; but because the former is a gift which very few among mankind are possessed of, therefore all the civilized nations of the world have agreed upon fixing some rules for common behavior, best suited to their general customs, or fancies, as a kind of artificial good sense, to supply the defects of reason. —Jonathan Swift. "WITH LOVE -- YOUR DAD’ Dear Son: I’ve just returned from a trip to the home office at Philadelphia. The Divi- sion Freight Agent died and seven of us from different divisions of the road were called in to serve as pall-bearers. Many of the higher officials were there and from all impressions, we were being scanned up and down and from side to side as possibilities to fill the division job. And that’s life, here today and gone tomorrow. When we die there is a little commotion like the tossing of a pebble into a quiet pond. In almost no time at all the little ringlet disappears, and we are forgotten. The world goes on as usual, with some one selected to fill our shoes, and there is always some one capable of doing that. But please, Son, do not tell any one else of my possibility for the better job. If it goes through, ‘well—fine; and if it does not go through, well—what people don’t know won’t hurt them. Gelett Burgess in his book “Look 11 Years Younger’ has a sort of opposite phil- osophy. He says that if you contem- plate doing something you should talk much of it. This, he says, puts you on the spot, and forces you to go through with it. Of course, the appointment at Philadelphia is beyond my control now. All I have is thirty-five years of service behind me, as do each of the other six. And if I am fortunate enough to get the division job, should I become con- ceited and strut around like a peacock in a barnyard? tval end spl eg? 2 Nos never that, gion, I “When we die there is a little tossing of a pebble in a quiet pond. commotion like ‘the In almost no time at all the little ringlet disappears, and we are forgotten.” ® hope. We might have all the confidence in the world. We might be tickled to the nth degree about an achievement. Inwardly we can feel like that. But outs wardly we must not-brag or crow. If you deserve praise, the world will give it to you. While strolling alone last night about 10:30, I passed by the home of a six- month bride and groom. You remem- ber ‘Ducky’ Jones. There was a vociferous battle ensuing. Above the tumult I heard Ducky shout, “Why didn’t you have that $500 operation be- fore you got married?” And so if you consider marriage strictly a business proposition, Son, do not accept a bride who has not had tonsils, adenoids, ap- pendix, corns, and nagging removed. Have her visit the dentist for one final pre-marriage repair, and do not marry her until you see all the receipts. I hope you are not performing in class as I used to do. Every time the profes- sor called on me, I became almost as frustrated as a chicken trying to cross the highway in front of a speeding aute- mobile. Either I had no answer or else I couldn’t determine which one was the better. of the road and got my tail feathers clipped. Hoping to save some of your down, I suggest that you listen care- fully to the professors’ questions, and always give some kind of an answer. And if you give a foolish answer the first time, do not be whipped by laughter. Go right back at your next ; ¥oRy sh IRE As a result I stood in the center | by J. NORMAN WEBER opportunity and be determined to lick your weakness and turn your last defeat into victory. In other words, get behind the throttle every chance you have. And even though you are young, do not turn down responsibility and leader- ship. Develop this in your youth and you will reap great confidence when you are again turned loose in the throngs of humanity. We were happy to see you home again after your exams and even more happy to see that you had not forgotten how t say Grace at meals. I was just a bit perturbed when I learned that you had missed a few Sundays at Church. Isn’t God worth just forty-five minutes of your time a week for giving you a good body and a sound mind, an opportunity for a good education, clothes to wear, food to eat, a bed to sleep in, and a mother who knows how to sew on but- tons and patch your socks? What good excuse have you to offer for not visiting God’s house forty-five minutes every 168 hours? I must stop here, for the Millers are coming up the walk for a visit. I know we are in for a monotonous evening, as all George talks about concerns himself, his job, and his accomplishments. And woe is us, I do believe that is his son Egbert with his cornet under his arm. If only Mother would let me wear my ear muffs I know they would take the hint. With love, Your Dad. }