DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD, DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA. BW I . i I IIS WOMAN SAVED FROM AN OPERATION By taking Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound, One of Thousands of Such Cases. Black River Falls, Wis. -"An Lydia E. Pinkbam's Vegetable Compound saved me irom an oper .tion. I cannot any nougn in prniso of It. Ieufferedfrom organlctroubleiand my ide hurt mo bo I could hardly be up from ny bed, and 1 was unable to do my house 7ork. I hod' the best doctors in Eau Claire Bnd they wanted me to bavo an operation, but LvdlaE.Plnkhum'a VeBeti.-. Compound cured me so I did not need the operation, and I am telling all my friends about ifMrs. A. W. BmzER, Black River Foils, Wis. It is just such experiences as that of Mrs. Blnzor that hts mado this famous root and herb remedy a household word from ocean to ocean. Any woman who aufTera from inflommation, ulceration, displacements, backacho. nervousness. 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' Mother--1 wonder why u growing girl U so luirtl to manage? I'litherWell. naturally. " lout; Klin Is it girl her deeds arc till mlss-do-lug- fftrfkt and Moralef. U' Strong, Htakhy Eytt.1l they Tire, Itch, Smart or Burn, if Sore, Irritated. Inflamed or .MhjrEyeS Granulated, ute Murine W AuWiiliuTTP In I!ililinn3inillll ' ISJhrow'iNtHWSySSi KODAKS Mica, Satitba. Reiruahaa, Sate lor fat ant or Adult. AtallDrugtfsta. Wrlttla; Fred Eye oob. rtartw Eji Rwwii C., Ctoj 1 " PIECES EIGHTH BEING THE AUTHENTIC NARRATIVE OF TREASURE DISCOVERED IN ISLANDSHNH5YAR - 9oi - GIVEN TO THE PUBLIC 6p Richard Ig A SHAPE OF WITCHCRAFT. Synopsis The man who telbi this Htory call him the hero, for short -is visiting hie friend, John Haun doro, HrltlHh nmclul In Nassau, Bahama Islands. Charles Webster, a local merchant, completes the trio of friends, Saunders produces a written document purporting to be the death-bed statement of lien ry P. Tobias, a successful pirate, mado by hlrn In 1SE3. It given two spots wnuro two millions and a hult of treanuro wero burled by blm and his companions. The conversation, of the three friends Is-overheard by a pock-marked stranger. Tlio docu rnont disappears (founders, how ever, has a copy. The hero, deter mined to seek tho burled troosure, charters a schooner. Tho pock marked man Is taken on us a pas senger. On the voyage somebody empties tho gasoline tank. The hero and tho passenger clash, the pas sensor leaving a manifesto bearing the signature, "Henry P. Toblao, Jr." Tho hero lands on Dead Men's Shoes. There Is a light, which Is followed by several funerals, Tho hero finds a cave containing the skeleton)! of two pirates and a mas' slve chest empty savo for a few pieces of eight scattered on the bottom. The hero roturns to Nas sau and by good luck learns the locution of Short Shrift Island. Webster buys tho yawl Flamingo, and ho and the hero nail for Snort Shrift Island As tho Flamingo leaves tho wharf a young fellow, "Jack Ilarkaway," Jumps aboard and is allowed to remain. Jack proves an Interesting and mysteri ous passenger. Tno ndventurors capture Tobias "Jack IJarkuway" proves to bo a girl and disappears. The horo sails to Short Shrift Is land, sees an entrancing girl with a Spanish illibloon. CHAPTER I Continued. 9j .My presence Bee-mud nt once to put her on her guard. The music of her voice wiib Nuddcnly hushed, us though she had hurriedly, nlmost in terror, thrown n robe of reticence about nn 'Impulsive niitiirnlni'ss not to be dls plnyed heforo strangers. As for tho storekeeper, he was evidently n fn mlllnr nniuulnlnnce. Ho had known her ho Hnld after she wuh bodc ulnco alio was a little girl. . Wlilto ho spoke, my eyes had acci dentally fallen on the coin Htlll In hla 1 hand, with which Him had Just paid l htm, "Why," I ald, "this la n Spanish doubloon I" I "That's what it is," said tho English- , mnn laconically. "Hut doesn't It strike you an strange 1 that sho should pity her hills with I Spanish doubloonB?" I naked. "It did at ilrst." he nnswered: and then, as It nnnoyeil with himself, ho wus attempting to retrieve tin expres sion .that carried tin Implication ho evi dently didn't wish me to Totnlu, ho mided; "Of course, she doesn't til ways pay In Spanish doubloons. I Hiippose thoy have a fqw old coins Ifj the fam ily find use them when thoy n. out of others." It was aa litmo an explanation ns well could be, and no one could doubt thiU, whatover blH reason for so doing, ho vas lying. "But haven't you trouble In dispos ing of thouir" I Intiulrcd. "Gold Is always gold," ho answered, "nud we don't see enough of It hero to bo particular as to whoso head Is stamped upon It, or what date. Be sides, us I uald, It Isn't as If. I got many of them 5 and you can always dispose of thorn as curiosities.'' "Will you Boll me I his one?" I nsked- "I see no harm In your having It," ho snld, "hut I'd Just as soon you didn't mention where you got It." "Cortaluly," I unaworH, disguising my wondor nt his Boeretlvenoss. "Whnt Is It worth r He named the hum of blxteu tlol- , lars and seventy-live cents. Having ! paid him that amount I bade him I good-night, glad to bo alotio with my eager, glowing thoughts. These I took with tint In n Ml nt coral Itcarb. mado doubly white by tho moon, v rustled over by giant palms, und whlsporcxl to by the vast living Jewel of tin? sen, I ' took out my strange doubloon find i (hnrticd It In tho moon. But', brightly as It bhone, It hardly seemed ns bright ns It woild havo ' -oemed a wlmrt while hack; or, per- haps, It were truer to say that In an other, newer nspect it uhono a hun dred times mora brightly. Tho adveu turo to which It culled mo was no longer sl.;gle and simple ns before, but n gloriously confused goul or cloudy splendors, tho. burning coro of which " suddenly raying out, and then lost ngalu In brightness wcro tho cyea of a mysterious girl. CHAPTER II. Under the Influence of the Moon. My days now began to drift rather aimlessly, its without npptucnt pur- nose x omnnueu to linger on tin Island titut might well seem to havo little itructlon t" it t ranger how little I ould see by the myMiricntlcn of the -W3 THE BAHAMA, N0WFJRST; '' 'ffl8&$sm Qdef good Tom, to whom, for once, of course, I could not confldo. Yet I hnd a vngue purpose; or, at least, I had a feeling that, If I wultcd un something would develop In the direction of my hopev. The doubloon still suggested that It was the key to a door of fus clnntlng mystery to which chance might at nny moment direct me. And why not admit It? apart from my burled treasure, to the possible discovery of which tho doubloon Hecmed to point, I was possessed with n growing desire for another glimpse of thoso haunting eyes. They needed not their association with tho mys terious gold, they were magnetic enough to draw uny mnn, with even the rudiments of Imagination, along the pu'lh of the unknown. Afl tho paths out of the little settlement were paths Into the unknown, und, day nfter day, I followed one or another of them oiit Into the wilderness, taking n gun with me, us an ostensible excuse for nny spying eye, and bringing bnck with me occasional bag's of tho wild pigeons which were plentiful on the Island. One day I hnd thus wandered unus ually far nllcld, nnd at nightfall found myself still several miles from homo on u rocky path overhanging the sen. There was no sign of habitation nny-J where. It was n wild and lonely place, and presently over Its saVago beauty stole the glamor of the moon rising far over tho sea. I sat down on a ledge of the clllls and watched tho moon light grow In Intensity as tho darkness of tho woods deepened behind me. It was a night full of witchcraft; a night on which the stars, the moon, und the sea together seemed hinting at some wonderful thtng ubout to happen. Then, ns If tho fairy night wcro matching my thoughts -with a chal lenge, what wns this bright wonder suddenly present on one of the boul ders far down beneath me? a tall Hhape of witchcraft whiteness, stand ing, full in tho moon, like a statue in luminous nmrblo of somo goddess of antiquity. Sly eyes nnd my heart together told mo It wns she; nid, as she hung poised over the edge of the water in the at titude of one nbout to dive, u turn of her head gavo mo that longed-for glimpse of thoso living eyes filled with moonlight. She stood another mo ment, still as the nlghtj In her loveli ness; and the next she had dived di rectly Into the pnlli of the moon. I bow her u.vch mooulllled again, as she camo to tho surface, and began to swim not, as one might hnvo expect ed, out from the land, but directly In toward tho unseen huso of the cliffs. The moon-path did loud to a golden door In the rocks, I said to myself, and she wns nbqut to enter It It was a secret door known only to herself; and then, for the llrst time that night, I thought of that doubloon. Perhaps If I had not thought of It I should not have done whnt then I did. There will, doubtless, bo thoso who will censure me. If so, 1 nm afraid they must. At all event", It was tho thought of that doubloon that swayed tho balance of my hesitation In taking the moon-path In the track of thut bright apparition. I looked for "n way down to the edge of the sea. It was not easy to find, but nfter much perilous scrambling I nt length found myself on the boulder which had so lately been tho pedestal of thut Radiance ;und. In another mo ment, I hnd dived Into the moon-path and wns swimming toward tho mys terious golden door, Before mo the rocks ojwned In a deep narrow crevasse, a long rift, evi dently slashing buck Into the cliff, be neath the road on which 1 hud been trending. I could see the moonlit water vanishing Into a t-ort of gleam ing luue between the vast overhang ing walls. Presently 1 felt my feet rest lightly on ilrm sand, und, still shoulder deep In tho water, 1 walked on nnothur yard or two to bo brought to a sudden stop. There slin was coming toward me, breast high In that wattry tunnel I The moon, continuing its serene uscoh slon, lit her up with n budden benrn. O! shape of bloom and glory! For a moment we both stood looking ut each other, as If transilxed. Then t.he gave n frightened cry nud put her hands up to her bosom ; us sho did bo a stream of something bright like gold pieces fell from her mouth, nnd two like streams from her opened hands. Theij, ns quick ns light, sho hnd darted past mo nnd dived Into tho moou-puth beyond. She must havo swum under tho water a long way, for when I biuv her durk head rlso ugnlu In the glimmering path It was at n distance of many yards. I had no thought of following her, but. stood In u dream among tho wa tery glomus nnd echoes. For mo had come thnt hour of won . Ufi-; for me cut of that trnnii. intr. wio'u tlawtesi dncps my ojea had so vr&vL I'f-5. R r kvv - k. r ?-, often gone ttdronm, hnd risen the crea ture of miracle. 0 1 shape of moonlit morblo I O l holiness of this night of moon nnd slurs nnd scat Yes I I 'wns In love. Yet I hope, and think, that the reader will not resent this unexpected incursion lnlo the realms of sentiment when ho consid ers that my sudden attack was not, llko most such sudden attacks, an in terruption In the robuster course of events, but, Instead, curiously In tho direct lino of my purpose. Because the eyes of an unknown girl hnd thus suddenly enthralled me, I was not, therefore, to lose sight of that purposa. On tho contrary, they had suddenly shone out on the pathway along which I had been blindly groping. But for tho uccldeut of being In the dirty little store nt so psychologlcul n moment, hearing that strangely fainlllar voice und cntchlng sight of that mysterious doubloon as well us thoso mysterious eyes, I should huvo Bet sail that very night and given up John P. Toblus' second treasure In Anal disgust As It was, 1 was now warmly on tho track of some treasure whether his or not with two bright eyes further to point the way. Never surely did u man's love and his purpose muko so practical a combination. When I reached my lodging at last In the early morning following tliat night of wonders my eyes nnd heart wcro not so dazed with that vision In the cave that I did not vividly recall one Important detail of tho strange picture those streams of gold that had suddenly poured out of tho mouth and hands of the lovely apparition. Without doubting tho evidence of my senses, I was forced to believe thut, by the oddest piece of luck, I hud stumbled upon tho hiding pluce of that hoard of doubloons, on which my fair unknown drew from time to time as she would out of a bank. ' But who was she? and where was her home? There had seemed no sign of habitation near the wild place where I had come upon her, though, of course, a solitary house might easily have escaped my notice hidden umong all that foliage, particularly at night fall. To be sure, I had but to Inquire of tho storekeeper to learn all I wanted ; but I wns averse from betraying my Interest to him or to anyone In the settlement for, after all, It was my own affair, and hers. So I determined to pursue my policy of watching and wnltlng, letting a day or two elapse before I uguln went out wandering with my gun. I left the craggy bluff facing tho sea and plunged Into the woods. I had no Idea how dark It was going to, but, coming out of the sun, I was at once bewildered by the deep und com plicated gloom of massed branches overhead, and tho denser darkness of shrubs and vines so intricately Inter woven as nlmost to make n solid wall She Had Dived Directly Path of the- Moon. Into the about one. Then the atmosphere was so close und airless that a fetir of suf focation combined at once with the other fear of being swallowed up In all this savago green life, without hope of finding one's way out aguin Into the sun. 1 fought my way In but a very few yards' when both these fears clutched hold of mo with n sudden hor ror, and tho perspiration poured from mo; I could no loncer dlstlnculsh be tween tho way I hud como and nny other part of the wood I Indeed, there wns no wny nnywherol I must havo battled through tho veritable Inferno of vegetation for at least an hour though It seemed a life time. Clouds of partlculnrly unpleas ant midges tilled my eyes, not to speak or mosquitoes nnd :. peculiar kind of persistent stinging fly was adding to my miseries, when nt Inst, begrimed und dripping with swent. I stumbled out, wllh n cry of thankfuluess, on to comparatively fresh air and some thing like n broad uvenuo running north nnd south through the wood. It was Indeed densely overgrown, and had evidently not been used for many years. Still, It was comparatively passable, and one could tit least see the sky nnd take long breaths onco more. Still there yus no sign of n houso nny whoje. Presently, however, ns I stumbled ulong I noticed something looming darkly through tho muttod fore.-.t on my left that suggested walls. Looking closer, I suw thut It was tho ruin ol n small stone cottage, roofless, nnd Indescribably swallowed up In tin pitiless scrub. And then, near by, 1 descried nnother such ruin, and still another all, as It were, sunk In the terrible gloom of tho vegetation, ns sometimes, at low tide, ono can dis cern the walls of a ruined village at the bottom of the sea. Evidently I hod como upon a lorig abandoncd settlement, und presently, on some slightly higher ground to the left, 1 thought I could make out the half-submerged walls of a much more ambitious edlllce. Looking closer, I noted, with a thrill of surprise, the beginning of a very narrow path, not more than a foot i wide, leading up through the scrub In Its direction. Narrow as It was, It had clearly been kept open by tho not-Infrequent pas sage of feet. Willi a certuin eerie feel ing, I edged my way into It, nud, nfter following it for n hundred yards or so, found myself close to tho rooiless ruin of a spacious stone house with some thing of the appearance of nn old Eng lish manor house. Mullloned windows, finely masoned, opened In tho shat tered wall, and an elaborate stone staircase, in the Interstices of which stout shrubs were growing, gave, or onco had given, nn entrance through nn arched doorway nn entrance now stoutly disputed by the glistening trunk of a gum-eleral tree nnd endless matted ropelike roots of giant vines und creepers that writhed like serp ents over the whole edifice. Forcing my way up this stulrcase, I found my self in a stone hall some sixty feet long, at one end of which yawned a huge Orepluce, Its Hue mounting up through n finely carved chimney, still standing firmly at the top of the southern gable. now hud this nlmost baronial mag nificence come to be In this far-away corner of a desert island? At first I concluded thut here wns a relic of tho brief colonial prosperity of the Ba hamas, when Its cotton lords lived llko princes, with a slave population for rctulnars days when even tho bootblacks in Nassau played pitch-and-toss with gold pieces; but as I considered further, It seemed to mo that the style of the architecture nnd tho nge of the building suggested un earlier date. Could It be thnt this hnd been tho homo of one of those early eighteenth century pirates who took pride in ilnuntlng the luxury and pomp of princes, nnd who had perhnps mado this his headquarters nnd stronghold for the storage of his loot on the re turn from his forays on tho Spanish Main? This, as the more spirited con jecture, I naturally preferred, and, in default of exact Information, decided to nccept. The more I pondered upon this fancy and remnrked the extent of tho ruins Including several subsidiary outhouses and noted, too, one or two choked stone stnlrcnses that seemed to descend Into the bowels of tho earth, tho more plausible It seemed. In one or two plnccs where I sus pected underground cellars dungeons for unhnppy captives belike, or strong vaults for the storage of the treasure I tested the floors by dropping heavy stones, and they seemed unmistakably to reverberate with a hollow rumbling sound ; but I could find no present way of getting down Into them. As I snld, tho staircases that promised an en trance Into them were choked with, debris. But I promised myself to come somo other day, with pick and shovel, and make nn attempt at explor ing them. Meanwhile, nfter poking nbout In ns much of the ruins as I could penetrate, I stepped out through a gUp In one of the walls and found myself again on the path by which I had entered. I noticed that It still ran on farther north, ns having a destination beyond. Sq leaving the haunted, ruins behind I nubhed on and had cone but a short distance when tho path began to de scend slightly from the rldgo on which the ruins stood; and there, in a broad square hollow before me, was the wel come living green of a nourishing plan tntlon of coconut palms I It was evi dently of considerable extent a quar ter of a mile or so, I Judged and tho palms wdre very thick nnd planted close together. To my surprise, too, I observed, us nt length the path brought me to them after a sharp descent, that they were fenced In by u high bam boo stockade, for the most part In good condition, but here and there broken down with decay. Through one of these gaps I pres ently made my way nnd found myself among the soaring columns of the palms, ihung aloft with clusters of tho great green nuts. Fnllen pnlm fronds mnde a carpet for my feet very pleas ant nfter the rough und tnngletl way I hnd traveled, and now nnd ngaln ono of tho coco nuts would fall down with a thud amid tho green silence. One of these, which narrowly missed my head, suggested that hero I had tho opportunity of quenching very ngree nbly tho thirst of which I hnd become suddenly nware. My clnspknlfo soon mudo nn opening through the tough shell, nnd, seated on the ground, I set my mouth to It, and, raising the nut above my head, allowed the "milk" cool as spring water to gurgle dell clously down my parched throat. When at length I had drained It, and my head once moro returned to !ta nutural anglo, I was suddenly mnde aware that my pouching had not goue unobserved. Most surprisinrj people in a most curious habitation. (TO Bn CONTINUED.) In Larao Supply. When you start to borrow tronble thf l"in Isenerally oversubscribed. i Boat ;o Transcript ' . m?izw To Preserve and keep all household linen spotlessly white and in perfect condition use Red Cross Ball Blue in the laundry every week. Nothitip; else will take its place and nothing else is just as good. All grocers, 5c Cuticura Soap is Easy Shaving for Sensitive Skins The New Up-to-date Cnllcnrn Method MONTANA'S 1'INUST 11ANC1I. 1919 crop:. 80 bushels Corn, 86 Oata, fine Alfalfa, wall Irrigated, near city, 20 pew modern build lnca. S35 per acre; Includes 1,000 head stock. new J20.000 farm equipment. Need partner or sell all. 4 umatlcr fnrms. Send for pho tos, ntchland Meadoirs Ranch, Sidney, Mont. Vlsltorlal Amenities. Mrs. Hnshlelgh Some of my bonrtl era aro very witty. Uor Caller Well, they say tha' hunger sharpens the wits, you know. PHYSICALLY FIT AT ANY. AGE It isn't nee, it's cnrclcsa living thnt puts men "down nnd out." Keep your internal organs in good condition and you will always be physically lit. The kidneys are the most over worked organs in the human body. "When they breuk down under the strain nnu the deadly uric acid ac cumulates nnd crystallizes look outl These sharp crystals tear and scratch tbc. delicate urinary channels causing excruciating pain and set up irrita tions which may causo premature de generation nnd often do turn into deadly Bright's Disease. tOno of the first warnings of slug gish kidney action la pain or stiffness in tho small of tho back, loss of appe tite, indigestion or rheumatism. Do not wait until tho danger is upon you. At the first indication of trouble ro after the cause nt once. Get a trial box of GOLD MEDAL nanrlcm Oil Capsules, imported direct from the laboratories in Holland. They will give almost immediate relief. If for any cause they should not, your money will be refunded. But be sure to get GOLD MEDAL. None other is genuine. In sealed boxes, threo sizes. Adv. Distinction. Parson I'm surprised, boys, to see you in swimming on Sunday. Didn't you promise you wouldn't? Jimmy Yes, sir, but we ain't swim min', we're only buthln'. f . BOSCHEE'S SYRUP. In these days of unsettled weather look ouf for colds. . Take every pre caution against the dreaded Influenza nnd at the first sneeze remember that Boschee' Syrup has been used for fifty-three years in all parts of the United States for coughs, bronchitis and colds, throat lrrltntlon and espe cially for lung troubles, giving the patient a good night's rest, free from coughing, with easy expectoration In the morning. Mado In America and kept as a household panacea In the homes of thousands of families all over tho civilized world. Try one bottlf and accept no substitutes. Adv. 'Business Picking Up There. During tho 15-year period, 1004 to 1018, inclusive, only four American vessels called nt Sourabnyu, of au ag gregate net tonnage of nbout C,500. Seven American ships, nggregatlnn over 15,000 tons net, called at Soura baya for discharge and loading ot cargo during the llrst -six months at 1010. BITRO-PHOSPHATE IS GOOD FOR THIN ERVOUS PEOPLE A PHYSICIAN'S ADVICE. Fredarlck S. IColle, M. D., Editor ol New York Phyblclans" "Who's, Who Bays that weak, nervous peoplu who want Increased welKht. strength nnd nerve, force, should take u ft-graln tablet o Bltro-Phospliato Just before or durlni each meal. This particular phosphate Is tho dis covery of. a famous French nclentlst, anc reports of remarkable results from Ui uso have recently appeared In many medical Journals. If you do not fool well: If you trt easily, do not sleep well, or are too hln. ro to any Rood druggist and get enough Bltro-Phosphato for a two weeks' sup plyIt costs only fifty cents a week. Eat less; chew your food thoroughly, and if nt the end of a few weeks you do not feel stronger and better than you have for months; If your nerves are not steadier. If you do not sleep better and have more vim. endurance and vitality, your money will be returned, and the Dltro-Phosphatn will cost you nothing, 1 afhSlrirasn'ttf Inilicrhfi m,, be rfitclced and more arrloua condlUoni of the throat often will be avoided by promptly gWing tha child a dose of aefe PISO'S A . 4L Wj :( . " rata -"-ft