v Batnrt 23, lac. THE ILLUSTRATED BEBL' ; 13 i... jo -fci ; iT." ' -. i . . -I " ' ' '""""-.ilTriOTMWW v 1 g- rratTIM'? TCIia.4q3SSCEQ .TOE SE SS10NS CUT Trrra JiTKirm NORMA!. SCHOOL AT NORTH rLATTra. V . V - .'. YV ''' f. '-''r '. r-fl JrL I . i INST1UTCTORS IN C1L.VRGK OF THE WORK AT 1HE. KORTIX PLATTH JUNIOR NORMAL, Der, Names from left to right: T. A. Butcher. Kiss Ornro Orevw, W. II. hard , president; Jamea K. Deliell, Joseph Sparks, Miss Elisabeth V. Burke. Name from left to rlKht: O. W. Noulft, A. 8oftly, Wenley Trennler, Btata Su perintendent W. K. Kowler. W. K. Smith. BUPKH1NTKNDKNTS OP COUNTIKS TRIBUTARY TO THE NORTH rLATTB JUNIOR NORMAL. Pirate GoldThe Will-o'-the-Wisp of the New World (Copyright. 1903, by E. B. Warner.) . new world's wlll-o'-the wisp r I pirate gold Is still luring muny M a man to madneaa and de:ifh, 'AO many a fine ship to destruction. .-.' u.. V .VUII1IUHI1J WU- lng lilted out at ports along the Atlantic seab: ard to search the palm-covered islands and coral cays of Iho West Indies for tho hoards of old Spanish gold and pirate booty which aro supposed to be hidden there. At this moment several expeditions are searching for them nnd every year expedi tions search, as they have searched for many generations. Not long ago a private yacht was se cretly fitted out In New York for a Wtst Indian treasure hunt. Other expeditions have started recently from Philadelphia, Boston, Newport News, New Orleans and other ports. Nor is the hunt confined to Americans. A year des not pass without expeditions leaving London, Glasgow, Liv erpool or other British ports, while the West Indians themselves, living In the at mosphere of treasure stories, arc niturally the keenest of all the hunters of phantom gold. Sometimes thesa expeditions never return. The ship is reported missing and another Is added to the long roll of ocean tragediej of which the public bears little or noth ing. Years afterward a few bleachod bones on a remote Islet or a derelict float ing in the track of shipping tells a grim tale of shipwreck, mutiny or death by those diseases most dreaded by sea-faring men yellow fever and beriberi. Some months ago no fewer than five treasure-hunting expeditions were reported at Kingston, Jamaica. The earl of Craw lord and Hal car res had brought hU mag nificent yacht Into the harbor on a West Indian cruise and It was said that he was combining business with pleasure and meant to search for a pirate treasure re ported to be buried on tho Uny Island of Anegada, in the Virgin group. His lord ship apparently had no luck. The second expedition was headed by an English gentleman, who hoped to find tho secret hoard left by King Christophe of Ilayti. Tbe third was a small affair got ten up by a Jamaican planter, who aimed at locating the treasure" of that buccaneer king. Sir Henry Morgan. This Is said to be buried In a cave In Gun hill. Trelawny, Jamaica, and to be guarded, like Captain Kidd's, by the devil In person hoofs, horns, tall, pitchfork and all. The other two expeditions were working In Santo Domingo and the Cayman Islands. This was a period of special activity In the treasure-hunting lino, hut such enter prises are so familiar to the Creoles th.it they hatdly excite comment. Some men waj-te their lives and fortunes (llttlriK all over the Caribbean tea, from on reported pirate haunt to another, ar:d digging for buried gold. When the mnn'a once get hold of a man It never seems to leave him until It has soured his temper and raUd his life. Barbadoes is a favorite resort of the treasure seekers. Several caches of doub loons and pieces-of-elght have been found there in digging among old ruins. Captain Kldd once ran his ship ashore at Barbndoes when chased by a cruiser. He left a paper after his death describing a spot In a small wood near Bridgetown, tho island capital, whero ho said he had burled an Immense treasure. Whether this was a post-mortem Joke or not It is Impossible to Fay. If Jt was, It succeeded to perfection. 'F"or acres round the spot indicated," says Hesketh Bell, a colonial officiul, '"the soil has been perfect ly honeycombed by the excavations of treasure-seekers. No one knows whether the booty was secured or not, as the Under would In all probability have been most careful to keep his success a secret, so as not to have to share with the government and tho owner of the land besides. Even now, when any one is noticed to become suddenly well off and Hush of money, ho is at once set down to have discovered a buried jar of gold, when, perhaps, the rea son of his attluence may be much ruoro Questionable." In Haytl not long ago a hidden treasure was brought to light In tho picturcsquo town of Gonaives in a rulaer curious way. A mulatto lived there who, as the saying goes, was not worth 30 cents. He Inhabited a desolate ruin which had once been a tine old planter's chateau in the days when the French owned the islands, and he eked out a miserable existence by cultivating a feeble yam-patch. Suddenly this mulatto blossomed out as a man of wealth. He bought a fine house, a provision store, a rum shop, and horses and mules galore. Little sums like a hun dred dollars "cut no ico" wiv.i him. Every body wondered where ho hud got his money but only one man, anor.-r Haytlan mu latto, had sense enough to figure the mat ter out "See here," said the second mulatto, Tvo taken a fancy to that old mfn of youra Kind of picturesque, isn't it? I'll give you M0 for It." The first mulatto jumped at the offer. As soon as the deal had been perfected the purchaser had the house carefully pulled down, brick by brick, and the foundations dug up. As the result, he found nine arrurll Iron-bound chtsts filled with treasure. They contained a great deal of J-Tench gold and silver coin of the eighteenth century, gold ami silver plate, jewelry, church ornaments and other valuables. Altogether, the nine chests were valued at over $.JD,000. When the first owner heard of It ho was furious. It then came out that one day by accident ho had found a similar chest hli'den In the wainscoting or the hall and had realized upon It. It never struck him that there might be more behind, so ho gladly sold the house, foadly Imagining that It was an empty shell rom which ho had extracted the kernel. He raved llko a madman when he heard tho news, but the other mulatto poser-sac d political "pull" and soon quieted hint by tbe slmplo ex pedient of having him thrown Into Jail. There Is a firm ' belief tnroughout the West Indies that there are many other hidden treasures of . the same character In Haytl and Santo Domingo. When the negroes roeo In Insurrection against thtlr French nnd Spanish musters the latter had to fly to the towns or To the woods for refuge. In most cases they could not take their valuables with them and they con cealed them somewhero about their cha teaux. These fine old mansions are now mere ruins, overgrown by the rank luxuil ance of tropical vegetation and Inhabited only by the goats and tno vultures. If a man must go treasure-hunting, these aro the places ho should select, In preference to mythical pirate lairs Vaguely indicated by legend or by somo Incomprehensible chart drawn In blood on a plcco of rag, after the fashion of "King Solomon's Minis." In the Bahamas they tell a queer story of a big haul recently made there by a mysterious American. He arrived in his own schooner oft West Calcos, an Islet In the Bahama group, and dropped anchor. There he stayed for some days, doing noth ing and telling nobody his business. Ho evidently had not come for salt or sponges or coral or any of the oiner things that seafaring men ordinarily visit the Calcos for. Nobody could imagtne why he was there, for West Calcos is tho last place a man would think of visltfntr unless he had business there. Ono day tho American lowered a boat from the schooner, hired a cotiplo of ne groes from tho shore, and made them row him to another Islet about four miles off. According to the story which the negroes tokl on their return, he walked straight up to a lone palm on the Islet, measured a distance by paces to Ihe southeast after consulting a chart, nnd then made them dig. morning, noon and night, all around a largo circle he marked wot. When they grew tired and stopped he foamed at the mouth nnd threatened them with his rifle. After two days' hnrd digging they found a big pea chest, so heavy that the three of them could hardly drag it to the boat. They rowed back to the Bchooner, nnd as soon as the chest had been hoisted aboard the American weighed anchor end sailed awny north. There Is much speculation In West Calces and throughout the Bahamas ns to who tho American was, what he found and how he 1 -arned that It was ther. It Is supposed that ho got .1 big pirate treas ure and Fome peoplo even think he se cured the famous hoard of Captain Kldd, but nol.ody has ever found out anything about tho matter. Ono of the queerest West Indian trrauro 8'orh s was told by the tkipper of a Grand Cayman bchooner In Kingston, Jamaica. The storr Is too wildly improbable, for any writer of fiction, but Its absolute truth can be attested to by hundreds of people In Jarnvica and Grand Cayman. A bark had been wrecked on a reef near tb Cayman islands and tho skipper bad taken his schooner there to hunt for sal vage. While his men were busy on th bark ho looked over the tdde of his vessel and saw, ubout ilht feet below on a shelv ing ledge of the reef, a curious yellow gleam. Ho thought It was a piece of cop per sheathing und told ono of his men to dive for It. Tho man came up with hla hands full of gold coin Spanish doubloon and pleces-of- Ight, dating back to the early days of the conqulstadore. The ledge was simply covered with loose gold. All day tho crew dived for It and when they had skinned the place bare they found they had over 2,000 gold pieces, besides a few score of silver coins, all Spanish.' Th skipper showed several of tho coins to prove his story. They were all In a re markably fine sate of preservation. He sold tho lot afterward for nearly $20,00.) to a Jamaican Jew. How the coins came on the-reef nobody known. A hundred explanaUons have been suggested, but uuno of tueia quite meets the case. Thero is an Englishman now living la a fishing hamlet In Kent, Englund, who was driven road by his vain search for treasure In the West Indies. Ho Is hope lessly Insane. Formerly he was a colonel In tho British army and served with dis tinction in several wars. Late in life ho caught the treasure-hunting fever and sold all ho had In order to fit out a yacht and hunt for a hoard burled, so legend says, by Mansvelt, tho famous buccannecr, on Angullla island. He searched for years, until in the end disappointment turned his brain. In the British Vest Indies, more espe cially In Barbndoes and Grenada, largo holes dug in the earth apparently for do purpose aro frequently seen. Inquiring tho Peason of them, the reply Is that they havo been made by the blacks digging for buriod money. It Is a curious fact that a West Indian negro rarely, If ever, sets about looking for treasure of his own accord. An "obeahman" (witch doctor) cornea to him and says: "Obi, the all-seeing, has told me In a dream there Is money burled beneath tho roots of the old Cottonwood tree, which yon are to dig up and keep. But hearken to my warning! When that treasure was burled the owner killed the slave who dug tho hole and burled his body on top of tho gold, fnless you pay me ten dollars to put 'good obe-ih' on tho ground the 'duppy (ghost) of that Hlave will go on sinking tho money deeper and di epi r Into the earLh, so that you will never find It." , It Is said that a West Indian negro wOl believe anything except that which Is truo. At any rate, he believes tho obeuhmiin nnd parts with his ten dollars. It goes without saying that tho obeahman Is the mly per son who gets any treasure. This Is a common Incident. It happens every day In some of tho West Indian colo nies. These Illiterate old African wltcft (Continued on ragn Fifteen.)