hrr 1sunday i good stories ii f i · the siat i l- i i i 1t i ii u c i f i uti t 1t ii f i it i...

1
THE SIAT I L- i i I 1t i ii u c i f i Uti t 1t II f I I It I f Good Stories i 1 d r eni- f S LAKE Hrr 1SUNDAY FEBRLARY 1ln r- ti I = = = = Wonderful OF A BRIGHT BOY A SHIPWRECK A CARGO OF MIRRORS- A STRANGE ANIMAL KCUE OLIVER was smoking his pipe on the porch the children came home and he wont indoors with them for he was a mn who preferred to be with youngsters than with grownups As eoon as they had taken their hats and coats off they flocked around him and asked him all manner of questions as usual Finally Mabel inquired you ever see A fireeater Uncle Oliver a picture of one on fence down town Tea he replied Ned I knew one once upon a Doe be really eat eked Tim uTJ e i what does be Well I cant exactly till you He fins his mouth with cotton filled with some stuff like Itcnzinr and be lights it keeping his mouth closed tight BV that doesnt burn him and breathe ihrongJi his nose When he gets his lungs full of air be just blows it out and that sends forth a flame- It is very surprising how much fire he can send forth Why deesnt it burn his asked Mabel He keep em wet all the time It tares a lot of practice to become an accomplished fireeater let me tell Vbat was the mans name that you asked Tim He a boy and his name was Tommy Hun land He learned the trick from his Uncle ortner who was a great performer on the piccolo in a Ger man band never told me how it was done but I hate read about it in a book Did Tommy Hkvilaad asked Tim Tot fireblowing but Le became wealthy by Multipod the Elastic ifnltrpod- On wliats a Multipod Never beard cf that meant manyfooted Ok mean a centipede OFF ON A LONG TRIP i No I a wbiek atthaal- higgerthaa an least ibis ow was and it waa the only I beard of Ha iweovered it in the Wad of TMrph away orf of Asia uQh tell us till about it cried the children seiz- ing chairs and sitting in a circle around Uncle Oliver v Well I know as it is a very interesting tory begin Uncle Oliver bemuse its all about rannlbais and pirates wrecked snips piles of gold and and awful animals in caves You like that kind of a story Oh certainly not skid iin as be winked at his sisters We could not bear to listen to it He wiggled all ov r as be drew near to his uncle who went on Yon see thjs boy Tommy had a bad uncle named Bill Fortnejr as well as the good Uncle Charley in the B ttcb land and be lived with Uncle Bill who made him get up at four oclock in the morning to build the fire bring in the milk and do everything- that he didnt want to do himself Then all day he worked in Uncle Bills lookingglass factory for ha was the trade He never received any pay however so he rarely had any uiQueylo spend Charley the gave it to him The fun lie liad was in leanring some of the many tricks his rncle Charley knew Among them was this fire which be soon was even more adept than But Uncle Bifl caught him at H day in the slop and gave licking because the slop wasnt insured Fomy of running way and going wits a circus or something of the kind but just when he was really determined to- t his undo said to him one day I am going to make a salesman of you Theres a ship sailing to the Philippines and you hall go in her with a lot of sample mirrors and iy to sell them over there where I am sure they need them Of Tommy was delighted but be Hdut show iTOee fear his uncle would see it and change his mind He hastened to get ready and next day ras on board the ship which was the Owl Abs con and commanded by Captain Dave Bar rett Here be found that a large packingcase filled lookingglasses was being placed in the hold He saw his own name on the box and when lie went to the captin the latter asked him what was in the box Lookingglasses replied Torn STRANGE DEEP SEA CREATURES Humph I wonder where ve can sell lbemtBrp- ie dont wear clothes in the countries weriiiJEJjK they dont need lookingglasses very mudr Well that dashed poor Tommys hopes lliht i start but he made up his mind to try possible to sell the mirrors As this was his fir t- upp rtunity to make his way in the world be de- termined to get rid of them even if he had to sell them at cost Little did be imagine in what an manner he would dispose of them nor die he would get Meanwhile had nothing to do on board ship but road and watch the great waves and now and then eat tire to amuse Captain Barrett or the crew which you may oe spe tickled then all vastly for it was harming ia the least Sometimes when the wind failed and the sea v alm a millpond Tommy used to fish of the ship for the h but usual i v too warm to permit of that jipvrC cj the crew hid m tht shade of a sail toile aiuy auci Captain Barrnt reclined beneath am awn g Matching Use ti iiigii h circling butterfly hfei arot IK the craft skimming over water like gwillows r sviftly darting aloft to avoid the bly and ever hungry catfish vibe memr7 of file latter could tc hear ii tM Li vbii ho ruined his prcv as act hen Did The No do J it lips t knew captur the I I i uli pod all tat fat coast p hg uncle a t i f ith H a wronderful brig to see flames proceeding from a lads mouth without as tAp H all Ji8 A Tale rather a tune fire r i How was get richl be- fore Multi you f mean was elep et i he dons woU t athaat one t sea smmy the atoms t ense dying > were the G < > ¬ > ¬ > > ¬ > ° HE THREW THE SUNLIGHT ON THE GREAT SHINY CREATURE as the deeptoned bay of the great hulking dogfisb slinking along in the dark shadow of the ship and hewl of the seawolf Jar down in the depths lurking there in the hope of falling in with some iwndeping seaurchin on an errand to his mor maid aaother in the seaweed forest like poor lamenpl Bed Riding Hood Sealions and sea wftce down there in that slowheaving deep as as seaelephants and great seacows bellows could be faintly heard at times as they roamed across the wide fields of se cuQumbers and seaanemones growing there But Tommy rarely caught sight of any of these cieaturos At nj when the wafer was with glowing nce as if untold millions of fireflies were through the waves he sometimes saw the great fish with windows in their sides through which streamed a brilliant glare or heard drflinfish beating his solemn tattoo to marshal the l ote of the sharks and gigantic eele tn gather and investigate the strange monster that dated above them on the surface for ships ae in the waters of the Pacific so vast that oceajt He saw the halflighted waters the sun h and the starfish vicing with i of n shapes and sizes crowded the writer and Tommy that with the light Jit gathering it might bB a fish ball that wa heW b below him Ccptem Barrett was ull of stories about the won ders of did deep Hour after hour be would sit ami spin yarns about strange things which he had seen or whit had befallen his friends about monstrous barracouta which bites ouly the tees of swimmers how be had once beheld tjH f sea serpent and strange to say it was not at while coming from a banquet haw eel attached himself to his ship aaidvdiiis to the compass so that Captain Barrett toered the ship a thousand miles out of his way and the Unsociable Islands whirls were net d hm on his chart how a a bfe s J Merry Grig of Boston let in lot of ttter entered the ship and then clapped the bo Dde Uacta after which the fish remained in the bow for days eating the cargo of white ASPIRATE SHIP APPEARS v Ife toid Aow anotke of Us the Ann Meader of Harlem onoB zaji into a school of fish so deep so tlte vessel was lifted dear out of wfter aw carried seven hundred miles out of th along day after day it the Straits of Kerfuwilein Mhk into the depths tho ship hnd the suns beat she leaked like of blowfish and throwing them pity hold where of air as you perhaps may if you ever lived near the sea- ling the water out of the hold vessel up so effectively that she her keel the water If be used to capture Jhe cat asjosjrsjf a w10 a tills cat bd around them scooped them up jri ft p when be commanded a whaler jjr Worm he once drove a school of- f lay of Calomel where they crowded QHeezcd each other in their fright filled etory Mrrel on board in one day without Then drifted away from fish storks and re lated how tit he took the Sutherland to Siam tra e sunn heat caused the cargo to sprout and when he sailed into port the whole shin was a tons o beanvines clear to the top of the masts ho sold the fresh vegetables to the royal fanuly for V ore money than he could have got1 or the dried beans And also on another he had paint- ed tile ship with a reproof naiiit that he had in- vented and whop the ship caught fire she v M for two days until at last there was t of her fireproof iaf that thin shell of paint they drifted fur two weeks they Parnambuoo and hen he had ahothec ship built u igain inside the pint Ajiotbcr in the far North his ship sprang n nd sank right Dear shore when W A k her froze solid it uiii r n out yiin through tae ltakio that t tih rise tiiw title of course be sometimes the marine pft deepwhales is fis moo one her endeavor to outshine every com Pe ant I l t c i A atrtba 1aer bh swam 1 the fish a he saved the ship from rotary seAlark in cage j t t spouted into the air and he har- pooning wllale with lima beans and was Ixcahnoo ljad l ion i c paint i uhed leak she with h 111 lit the ore u o 2 iexes too well whose miff ed rate dowel in on an ape the girt d waved sawfish sawed hi the g c sa t and off tsa t lid by immediate hats ado i when w iittil t o e lie a load eluded off boy not and tilt l r t ty tilled wji en tide u w2tier lit > ¬ > < ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ + < < > < ing now abnobt solid ice she floated easily and tins l teas enabled to sail her trick to Boston where hu sod the jk to au ice company at a goodprofit All dozens of tfcer tiles the captain told asnrays benefit and if the boy was not fully iii roHsed with all the wonders of a seafaring life it o wasnt the captains fault The re suit wastbat Tommy grew for marvels and so wa t the strangest things happened them he was not unprepared One day they were sailing slowly along and near i Asia when on appeared the first sail had seen or weeks them swiftly earning with breeze from Ae S E half E by W- and as ifr cnrne full into view the captain turned pale and his hula bead broke out into a cold perspiration- He muttrjd Malays by Hidlay and then for tq0 men to arm tbein elves as the approach ing ship w a pirate craft WRECKED ON A STRANGE SHORE but two swords and a repl er on the A and realrrii an attempt to TpouTd ana slaughter of his Captain Bftrrett reifponded to the hail of the Malay captain with a salute and the swarmed on board tooktbe valuable portion of the cargo letups a iitliclBfelC Ton 3 boa and and soon tic ships company had the satisfaction of their peaceful de r They could hardly believe their eyes when tl ey saw the Malay craft sail away as swiftly as she had como but the captain was sad and depressed so gloomy in fact that he didnt notice the approach- of a which is a dreadfully fierce windstorm encountered in the waters of the Asiatic CKseten The storm swept up and before they had sails it took them aback and away went every mast breaking off at the deck like matches Then Captain Barrett woke up but all lie could do was to order the mass of wreckage cut away after Giddy Owl rolled like a ltd in the tremendouft eas that broke over and swept her from stem to f pi for two days her erew with little food mid all the skin Then came a calm during wreck drifted along in a current for days and dfty ufrtil every atom of food was consumed and water gave out but they were spared fur torture seas kindness for then they at last grounded on the white sandy beach of a large a Ljtnknown island whose gigantic niouu thins clear to the blue sky ey repebed the shore and found a spring- of c ld and saw that there wero whole for s of breadfruit cocoanut and banana trees so they had BO longer the lost fear Sow delicious tbefe uits tasted to the famished I leave you to imagine when one considers how good even a twocent yellow banana tastes to a boy who never fails to get three meals a day with a few slices of bread and butter be But a1 l when they Lad all filled up takon a long drij of the sweet refreshing spring water Sirat to have a nap out forest rushed a horde of savage Dyaks the fiercest savages ewer mad nd in a trice every man was hand and fool ajer which they were led away along a to the abode of the King of Dyakia a palace built of bamboo and adorned as all are with the beads of people they liftvo war and the captives saw at onco what their ej l was to be STARTLES THE NATIVES But to be slaughtered atomic Thev were tak to a prison and well guarded whfle the Dyak searched the ship for booty and when tho cases of goods were brought ashore the captain wins w so little was to be found He ex- plained tftt had been taken by pirates amt made the Dyak king so mad that ho Jt IA lio so enrj re l at this event that dragr nil te crew at oi but oar Sad taken advantage of a chance to his valise during the exeiteinent and ho secreted his fireeating materiel about him so- tfat inkiest the angry saragts rushed to the prison with th r poisoned spear and daggers to destroy tdfl wi iu t sfepped ojit standing weni Mew out at them a stream of name sis fees wereanmxrcliis too weak an simply priljml end A uiaur- A Kvk in saw and o 1 shout- ed But Giddy hat brew but- t mcr witnis 1y Ul1 tried ny stall whin the rite were growing the ft tweenn s a d laid Iris wall kin TOMMY kd lint qJ tit during which died r worn kill b fore t yaK r iI r- i r 0 the a for f tt neared i tiere were re- sist mir- rors like wet oe P soon se water men tim just dili th rrere not t ship a Tt warm out 4r Owls secure r were tell n ilk t s tton a ¬ ¬ ¬ > < < < < = < = < All of them fled when Tommy stepped fled s s if every Dyak demon they had ever heard of was altar ti and the whole village WItS deserted by all but seventeen hundred dogs belonging there bj Hadley thats a useful gift after all Just keep that ere fire lighted and well have em and pliable as wax Laft in the day many of the natives returned and at cli called out for Tommy and wbecube appealed they kneeling on the ground to their To this agreed on installed ia the bamboo palace but lie aii hiving the captain and the crew with him attendants although ihe Dyaks were at first inclined to resist the demand Well for many a day King Tommy Haviland ruled his Dyak realm but it was not much fun Ho had taken his big box of mirrors into the palace for security and that was all they had saved of the of the cargo what the captain in fact said was the worthless of it all but it really proved the precious as you will shortly sec to rule wisely and teach the savage natives sifew that civilized people value such as bathing cooking their food keeping quiet at murder and torture but the more he preached at hom the Jess they liked it and pretty soon after had watched Him eating and doing all the ordi tit y does they concluded that he was not but merely a clever young man whu had learned a few tricks little they grew to fear him less and soon they would have begun to despise him had not the Elastic commenced his operations again in that island This fQ brful creature lived in a long tunnellike cavern initka mountains that divided the island like a wall It was a hideous wormlike monster bigger than an elephant and with a million legs I guess and the strangest thing about it was that its end or tail was actually fastened in some manner to the rock at the extreme end of its cavern It never came out in the daytime as the least ray of sunlight falling Upon it would have killed it at once but at night it shot seized whatever creature was abroad alter which it snapped back just like a rubber place there to devour at leisure whomsoever it had caught Away at tbo remote end of its cave it sat all shrunk up into shape a pale clammy whitish thing surrounded by legs So elastic however was its body that it could stretch out for a mile twist and turn the trees after a flying frightened savage aiia snap him up in its strange shapeless inoutk m a inkling BY THE lyiULTiPOD And as St softly through the dense forest 02 over the tumbled rocks its thicklypadded feet made no noise to warn any who might be abroad only its dTullygl u htg eye betrayed its presence dark shades The had seized or thirty natives befoi e they came to Tommy and prayed him to at tack the thing with his fiery breath and drive it into Of course Tommy as well as the captain was as- tonished to hear of such a creature as the Multipod- for neither f them had ever read in their Natural History of such an animal wished to learn more of its habits and ap before he agreed to do anything There- fore he climbed a tree at sunset and a long time before anything appeared but just as he was growing tired stiff he suddenly saw the gleam woodland heart was sp loudly that lie feared the Multipod would hear it and look up but ft snorted its long pale wormlike form him jantll its head vanished in the darkness far beyond be heard a wild scream it had caught som unwary Djrok outside of his lint and in another moment he saw the head with tho savage writhing in its shapeless jaws passing beneath perch He fell from the limb ic his fright The Mnltipod disappeared as silently as it hud come and soon he took courage and slid down the trectrunk and ran 1o his palaee When he told Cap- tain Barrett what he had je old mariner was shocked I thought it was all as big a fairy story as tho I used to spin you on board I said he shuddering Why the thing might get any of A be done thats sure Wares no about that We must destroy there a will theres a way exclaimed ror m cepeiin suM J nee him in most r mJ night white people can and to refrain a forthand the twenty its veru waited and of its below IS it silently through tie lDnpn 1S bent 1g ones 1t p and JSQlU thi lust t11i monster f tfJiliU1ed Tommy Where J the Said all l standing me 00 rite was g rt mains mq t thins so that thou nay tiligs Multi had CAPTURED glided oyster like it 3 Lupod n seen doubt > ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > < > > + avagcs- S BECAME THEIR KING DESTROYED A DEADLY BEAST AND ESCAPED VERY RICH the 111 just ponder over some trick r other tfnigbt while asieep std tell yoix hey to do it in the morning the long sleepless night that followed Tommy himself devised a splendid plan to settle Mr llultipod if it were true that a single gleam- of sunlight would destroy the monster arQgai early and of the Dyaks queg regarding the matter and all assured ban that was supposed to be true that s- light rogdfatal to all Than lfe was sure of success and calling some wf the crowtp help him he unpacked all of his looking several to each man after wlrioli be awakened old Captain Barrett and asked him to accompany him to the foot of the mountains robes cave of the monster was to be found Captaiu Barrett stammered for a moment and then said Wall I dunno t I am a brave man and bold but I have the rheumatiz powerful bad and cant walk But the thought of being left behind was too much for the old mariner and finally he agreed to go with the rest and so carrying a few mtrroia they all trudged off followed at a far aud safe a few curious Dyaks wondering wbethoc Tommy would succeed in his project Tommy was aware that there was no danger until they had penetrated into the cavern where the light of tho sun was too feeble to bo effective and there for ho placed the captain at tho entrance He gave him a big mirror and told him to hold it so that the sunshine on it would be directed far into the windings of tho cavern which as I have said was tunnel but twisting and turning in all directions far into the base of the mountain Then advancing into its depths he placed a sailor at a turn in the tunnel with another mirror held so as to catch the light that held by Captain Barrett So he proceeded at each turn a man a mirror reflecting the brilliant blaze of a hot MMI y to the next wan beyond until at last be was only one left and holding a lookingglass agaiusc his chest he advanced boldly along the dark until a sudden strange sound half growl moan far ahead of him caused him to stop KILLED BY THE LIGHT Turning his so that it caugkt the light from the man behind lie flashed a broad ray of UJ6 shine down the tunnel before him and was U to behold the awful thing conning silently towwrfl him with its greenish eyes aflame As the sunlight struck it full in its shapeless fa- it reared its form upward writhed in awful and then fell down in lump on the cavern floor Tommy held the light on it till he was sure it was quite dead and then advanced to it lay a mass of white flabby pulp stretched tie for twenty or thirty feet with its myriad legs kicking out more perhaps like a gigantic cater- pillar than anything else but my how immense and terrible even in death Then Tommy lighted a ships lantern and called all of themen to come and see the Multipod Wh4n they they also lighted lanterns and then Tommy looked about The first thing he saw was an immense pile of gold coins rubies and other precious things the creature had stripped from his victims a d stored in a small room at the side of his ext- ern Thore were seven or eight wagonloads of are so much that Tommys eyes popped out in amazement Then tRey explored the cavern and discovered where the was fastened to the yea by his tail as if he had grown right out of it A fww minutes afterward old George Carmony the shouted Hi Sink my blooming tarpaulins if there aint another way out Sure enough he had discovered a back door ta the Multipo cavern a door that led them out io the other of the mountains Hero was a land that the Dyaks had never visited for the moutttattte were far too high for them to climb even had they dared approach them and this lovely land was quite uninhabited Thoy soon found that they were altogether aof and here and therefore they brought out all the treasure from the cave and it up outsido Then they cut the from the rode and hauled him out also So they stuffed the Multipod with leaves and grass and things and him up in the woods to scare any Dyaks that might happen to coma snooping around to see what had happened to but none ever came because the savages cot eluded that they had been eaten up every one the dread monster They changed their minds wharf they found tLat the Multipod was never seen but the and captain and oasenger of the Giddy Owl never cared what they thought Under tho captains direction they built them- selves a boat fashioning her of great timbers that grow there in plenty and when she was finished they sailed avay i far Bombay with a fair wind from- S S E by NV onehalf 2s which is as fair a as is made both for man and beast and thqy that port without accident or incident having Lad advQntuBes enough s the captain r i several voyages and he certainly ought to know DIVIDED THE V got home they divided the treaa ure of Tommy half the captain a quar the crew poor men who had been glad to toil aloft and alow for sixteen dollars a month got over a million Rollers each so you may just guess what The he set up in the big hall of the house he built and some he will give it to the Museum but if you should happen to be passing his hou p the bell cnd ask to sea it He is al- ways to show it to nice cleanfaced children and it worth seeing I assure 3 ou said gleaming eyes uTd like there hundred logged rul boniec- kMollodl WALT McDOUGALL I 1 eri by nut l i od gl I f f from U iIt mirror a the Threat ennui pen t I tt ti 11 1 Multi j t ci ter and t1 rew the remainder and man in To is worth rii1 well J concluded uncle with u sigh i- ilie Qt j the got rich and after aU mi it wvat really becaui he was a lf not boon to do this trick he have I these cannibal Dyaks that I J f Th oai fain you re in ma- tins I t dis- tance R pas- sage eta t aged cavern treat Mul Pod boat- swain st them crew reach- ed TREASURE they vast belt every flavihuid o c Oliver thin who li r woulI for eaten up by wltiai 1i T see i ¬ ¬ > = + = > =

Upload: others

Post on 31-May-2020

0 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Hrr 1SUNDAY I Good Stories II f I · THE SIAT I L- i i I 1t i ii u c i f i Uti t 1t II f I It I Good Stories f i 1 d r eni- f S LAKE Hrr 1SUNDAY FEBRLARY 1ln r-ti I Wonderful OF A

THE SIAT I L-

ii I 1t i ii u c

i

f i Uti t 1t II f I I It I

fGood Storiesi 1 d r eni-f

S

LAKE Hrr 1SUNDAY FEBRLARY 1ln r-

ti I

= = = =

WonderfulOF A BRIGHT BOYA SHIPWRECKA CARGO OF MIRRORS-A STRANGE ANIMAL

KCUE OLIVER was smoking his pipe on theporch the children came home and hewont indoors with them for he was a mn

who preferred to be with youngsters thanwith grownups As eoon as they had taken theirhats and coats off they flocked around him and askedhim all manner of questions as usual Finally Mabelinquired

you ever see A fireeater Uncle Olivera picture of one on fence down town

Tea he replied Ned I knew one once upon a

Doe be really eat eked Tim

uTJ e i what does be

Well I cant exactly till you He fins his mouthwith cotton filled with some stuff likeItcnzinr and be lights it keeping his mouth closedtight BV that doesnt burn him and breatheihrongJi his nose When he gets his lungs full ofair be just blows it out and that sends forth a flame-

It is very surprising how much fire he can sendforth

Why deesnt it burn his asked MabelHe keep em wet all the time It tares a lot of

practice to become an accomplished fireeater letme tell

Vbat was the mans name that youasked Tim

He a boy and his name was Tommy Hunland He learned the trick from his Uncle ortnerwho was a great performer on the piccolo in a German band never told me how it was done butI hate read about it in a book

Did Tommy Hkvilaad asked TimTot fireblowing but Le became wealthy by

Multipod the Elastic ifnltrpod-On wliats a Multipod Never beard cf that

meant manyfootedOk mean a centipede

OFF ON A LONG TRIPi

No I a wbiek atthaal-higgerthaa an least ibis ow was andit waa the only I beard of Ha iweoveredit in the Wad of TMrph away orf ofAsia

uQh tell us till about it cried the children seiz-

ing chairs and sitting in a circle around UncleOliver v

Well I know as it is a very interestingtory begin Uncle Oliver bemuse its all aboutrannlbais and pirates wrecked snips piles of goldand and awful animals in caves You

like that kind of a storyOh certainly not skid iin as be winked at

his sisters We could not bear to listen to it Hewiggled all ov r as be drew near to his uncle whowent on

Yon see thjs boy Tommy had a bad uncle namedBill Fortnejr as well as the good Uncle Charley inthe B ttcb land and be lived with Uncle Bill whomade him get up at four oclock in the morning tobuild the fire bring in the milk and do everything-that he didnt want to do himself Then all day heworked in Uncle Bills lookingglass factory for hawas the trade

He never received any pay however so he rarelyhad any uiQueylo spend Charleythe gave it to him The funlie liad was in leanring some of the many tricks hisrncle Charley knew Among them was this fire

which be soon was even more adept than

But Uncle Bifl caught him at H day in theslop and gave licking because the slopwasnt insured Fomy of running

way and going wits a circus or something of thekind but just when he was really determined to-

t his undo said to him one dayI am going to make a salesman of you

Theres a ship sailing to the Philippines and youhall go in her with a lot of sample mirrors andiy to sell them over there where I am sure they

need themOf Tommy was delighted but be Hdut

show iTOee fear his uncle would see it and changehis mind He hastened to get ready and next dayras on board the ship which was the Owl

Abs con and commanded by Captain Dave Barrett Here be found that a large packingcase filled

lookingglasses was being placed in the holdHe saw his own name on the box and when lie wentto the captin the latter asked him what was inthe box

Lookingglasses replied Torn

STRANGE DEEP SEA CREATURES

Humph I wonder where ve can sell lbemtBrp-ie dont wear clothes in the countries weriiiJEJjKthey dont need lookingglasses very mudr

Well that dashed poor Tommys hopes lliht istart but he made up his mind to try

possible to sell the mirrors As this was his fir t-

upp rtunity to make his way in the world be de-termined to get rid of them even if he had to sellthem at cost Little did be imagine in what an

manner he would dispose of them nordie he would get

Meanwhile had nothing to do on board ship butroad and watch the great waves and now and theneat tire to amuse Captain Barrett or the crew whichyou may oe spe tickled then all vastly for it was

harming ia theleast

Sometimes when the wind failed and the seav alm a millpond Tommy used to fish

of the ship for the h but usuali v too warm to permit of thatjipvrC cj the crew hid m tht shade of a sailtoile aiuy auci Captain Barrnt reclined beneatham awn g Matching Use ti iiigii h circling butterflyhfei arot IK the craft skimming over water likegwillows r sviftly darting aloft to avoid the blyand ever hungry catfishvibe memr7 of file latter could tchear ii tM Li vbii ho ruined his prcv as act

hen

DidThe

Nodo J

it

lips tknew

captur theI

I

i

ulipod all

tatfat

coast

phg uncle

a t

i

f

ith

H

a wronderful brig to see flames proceedingfrom a lads mouth without

astAp

Hall

Ji8

A Tale

rather

a

tunefire

r iHowwas

get richl

be-

foreMulti

you

fmean was

elep

et ihe

dons

woU t

athaatone

t

seasmmy

the

atoms

t ense

dying> were

the

G

<

>

¬

>

¬

>

> ¬

>

°

HE THREW THE SUNLIGHT ON THE GREAT SHINY CREATUREas the deeptoned bay of the great hulking dogfisbslinking along in the dark shadow of the ship and

hewl of the seawolf Jar down in thedepths lurking there in the hope of falling in withsome iwndeping seaurchin on an errand to his mormaid aaother in the seaweed forest like poorlamenpl Bed Riding Hood Sealions and sea

wftce down there in that slowheavingdeep as as seaelephants and great seacows

bellows could be faintly heard attimes as they roamed across the wide fields of secuQumbers and seaanemones growing there ButTommy rarely caught sight of any of thesecieaturos

At nj when the wafer was with glowingnce as if untold millions of fireflies

were through the waves he sometimes sawthe great fish with windows in their sidesthrough which streamed a brilliant glare or heard

drflinfish beating his solemn tattoo to marshalthe l ote of the sharks and giganticeele tn gather and investigate the strange monsterthat dated above them on the surface for shipsae in the waters of the Pacific so vast thatoceajt

He saw the halflighted waters the sunh and the starfish vicing with

iof n shapes and sizes crowded the

writer and Tommy that with thelight Jit gathering it might bB a fish ballthat wa heW b below him

Ccptem Barrett was ull of stories about the wonders ofdid deep Hour after hour be would sit amispin yarns about strange things which he had seenor whit had befallen his friends

about monstrous barracouta whichbites ouly the tees of swimmers how be had oncebeheld tjH f sea serpent and strange to say it wasnot at while coming from a banquethaw eel attached himself to his shipaaidvdiiis to the compass so that CaptainBarrett toered the ship a thousand miles out of hisway and the Unsociable Islands whirlswere net d hm on his chart how aa bfe s J Merry Grig of Boston letin lot of ttter entered the ship and then clappedthe bo Dde Uacta after which the fish remainedin the bow for days eating the cargo of white

ASPIRATE SHIP APPEARSv

Ife toid Aow anotke of Us the Ann Meaderof Harlem onoB zaji into a school of fish so deep

so tlte vessel was lifted dear outof wfter aw carried seven hundred miles out of

th along day after dayit the Straits of KerfuwileinMhk into the depths tho ship hnd

the suns beat she leaked like

of blowfish and throwing thempity hold where

of air as you perhaps mayif you ever lived near the sea-

ling the water out of the holdvessel up so effectively that she

her keel the waterIf be used to capture Jhe cat

asjosjrsjf a w10 atills cat bd around them scooped them upjri ft p when be commanded a whaler

jjr Worm he once drove a school of-

flay of Calomel where they crowdedQHeezcd each other in their fright

filled etory Mrrel on board in one day without

Then drifted away from fish storks and related how tit he took the Sutherland to Siam

tra e sunn heat caused the cargo tosprout and when he sailed into port the whole shinwas a tons o beanvines clear to the top of themasts ho sold the fresh vegetables to the royalfanuly for V ore money than he could have got1orthe dried beans

And also on another he had paint-ed tile ship with a reproof naiiit that he had in-vented and whop the ship caught fire shev M for two days until at last there was

t of her fireproof iaf thatthin shell of paint they drifted fur two weeksthey Parnambuoo and hen he had ahothecship built u igain inside the pint

Ajiotbcr in the far North his ship sprang nnd sank right Dear shore when

W A k

her froze solid it uiii r n out yiin throughtae ltakio that t tih rise tiiw title of course be

sometimes the

marine

pft

deepwhales

is

fis mooone her endeavor to outshine every comPe

ant

I

lt ci

A

atrtba

1aer bh swam1 the

fish

a he saved the ship from

rotaryseAlark in cage

jt t spouted into the air and he

har-pooning wllale

with lima beans and was Ixcahnoo

ljad

l ion

i c painti

uhed

leak shewith h 111 lit the

oreu

o

2

iexes toowell

whose miffed

rate

dowel in

on an

ape

the

girt

d wavedsawfish sawed

hi theg c

sa

t

and off

tsa tlid by

immediate

hats ado

i when

w

iittil to

elie

a load eludedoff

boy

notand

tilt lr

ttytilled

wji en tide u w2tier lit

>

¬

>

<

¬

¬

¬

¬

+

<

<

>

<

ing now abnobt solid ice she floated easily and tinsl teas enabled to sail her trick to Boston where husod the jk to au ice company at a goodprofit

All dozens of tfcer tiles the captaintold asnrays benefit and if the boy was notfully iii roHsed with all the wonders of a seafaringlife it o wasnt the captains fault The resuit wastbat Tommy grew for marvelsand so wa t the strangest things happened themhe was not unprepared

One day they were sailing slowly along and neari Asia when on appeared the firstsail had seen or weeks them swiftlyearning with breeze from Ae S E half E by W-and as ifr cnrne full into view the captain turned paleand his hula bead broke out into a cold perspiration-He muttrjd Malays by Hidlay and then

for tq0 men to arm tbein elves as the approaching ship w a pirate craft

WRECKED ON A STRANGE SHOREbut two swords and a repl er on

the A and realrrii an attempt toTpouTd ana slaughter of his Captain

Bftrrett reifponded to the hail of the Malay captainwith a salute and the swarmed on board

tooktbe valuable portion of the cargoletups a iitliclBfelC Ton 3 boa

and and soon tic ships company hadthe satisfaction of their peaceful de

rThey could hardly believe their eyes when tl ey

saw the Malay craft sail away as swiftly as she hadcomo but the captain was sad and depressed sogloomy in fact that he didnt notice the approach-of a which is a dreadfully fierce windstorm

encountered in the waters of theAsiatic CKseten The storm swept up and before theyhad sails it took them aback andaway went every mast breaking off at the deck likematches

Then Captain Barrett woke up but all lie coulddo was to order the mass of wreckage cut awayafter Giddy Owl rolled like a ltd in thetremendouft eas that broke over and swept her fromstem to f pi for two days her erew with little foodmid all the skin Then came a calm during

wreck drifted along in a current for daysand dfty ufrtil every atom of food was consumedand water gave out but they were spared fur

torture seas kindness for then theyat last grounded on the white sandy beach of

a large a Ljtnknown island whose gigantic niouuthins clear to the blue sky

ey repebed the shore and found a spring-of c ld and saw that there wero wholefor s of breadfruit cocoanut and banana trees

so they had BO longer the lost fearSow delicious tbefe uits tasted to

the famished I leave you to imagine when oneconsiders how good even a twocent yellow bananatastes to a boy who never fails to get three mealsa day with a few slices of bread and butter be

But a1 l when they Lad all filled up takona long drij of the sweet refreshing spring water

Sirat to have a nap out forestrushed a horde of savage Dyaks the fiercest savagesewer mad nd in a trice every man was handand fool ajer which they were led away along a

to the abode of the King of Dyakiaa palace built of bamboo and adorned as

all are with the beads of people theyliftvo war and the captives saw at oncowhat their ej l was to be

STARTLES THE NATIVES

But to be slaughtered atomic Thevwere tak to a prison and well guarded whfle theDyak searched the ship for booty and when thocases of goods were brought ashore the captainwins w so little was to be found He ex-plained tftt had been taken by pirates amt

made the Dyak king so mad that hoJt

IA lioso enrj re l at this event that

dragr nil te crew atoi but oar Sad taken advantage of a chanceto his valise during the exeiteinent and ho

secreted his fireeating materiel about him so-tfat inkiest the angry saragts rushed to the prisonwith th r poisoned spear and daggers to destroy

tdfl wi iu t sfepped ojit standingweni Mew out at them a stream of name sis fees

wereanmxrcliis too weak ansimply priljml end

Auiaur-

A Kvk in saw

and

o

1 shout-ed

ButGiddy hat

brew

but-t mcr

witnis

1y

Ul1tried ny stall

whin the

rite

were

growing theft

tweenn s

a d laid

Iris wall

kin

TOMMY

k d

lintqJ tit during which diedrworn kill

b fore

tyaK

r iI

r-

i r 0

theafor

f tt nearedi

tiere werere-

sist

mir-rors like

wet oe

P soonse water

men

timjust

dili

th rrere nott

ship

aTt warm

out 4r Owls

secure

r

weretell n ilk

t s tton

a

¬

¬

¬

>

<

<

<

< = <

=

<

All of them fled when Tommy stepped fleds s if every Dyak demon they had ever heard of wasaltar ti and the whole village WItS deserted byall but seventeen hundred dogs belonging there

bj Hadley thats a useful gift after allJust keep that ere fire lighted and well have em

and pliable as waxLaft in the day many of the natives returned and

at cli called out for Tommy andwbecube appealed they kneeling on the ground

to their To this agreedon installed ia the bamboo palace but lie

aii hiving the captain and the crew withhim attendants although ihe Dyaks were at firstinclined to resist the demand

Well for many a day King Tommy Havilandruled his Dyak realm but it was not much fun Hohad taken his big box of mirrors into the palacefor security and that was all they had saved of the

of the cargo what the captain in fact saidwas the worthless of it all but it really provedthe precious as you will shortly sec

to rule wisely and teach the savagenatives sifew that civilized people value suchas bathing cooking their food keeping quiet at

murder and torture but the more he preachedat hom the Jess they liked it and pretty soon after

had watched Him eating and doing all the orditit y does they concluded that he

was not but merely a clever young man whuhad learned a few tricks

little they grew to fear him less andsoon they would have begun to despise him had notthe Elastic commenced his operationsagain in that island

This fQ brful creature lived in a long tunnellikecavern initka mountains that divided the island likea wall It was a hideous wormlike monster biggerthan an elephant and with a million legs I guessand the strangest thing about it was that its endor tail was actually fastened in some manner tothe rock at the extreme end of its cavern It nevercame out in the daytime as the least ray of sunlightfalling Upon it would have killed it at once but atnight it shot seized whatever creature wasabroad alter which it snapped back just like arubber place there to devourat leisure whomsoever it had caught Away at tboremote end of its cave it sat all shrunk up into

shape a pale clammy whitish thingsurrounded by legs So elastic however was itsbody that it could stretch out for a mile twist andturn the trees after a flying frightenedsavage aiia snap him up in its strange shapelessinoutk m a inkling

BY THE lyiULTiPOD

And as St softly through the dense forest02 over the tumbled rocks its thicklypadded feetmade no noise to warn any who might be abroadonly its dTullygl u htg eye betrayed itspresence dark shades

The had seized or thirty nativesbefoi e they came to Tommy and prayed him to attack the thing with his fiery breath and drive it into

Of course Tommy as well as the captain was as-

tonished to hear of such a creature as the Multipod-for neither f them had ever read in their NaturalHistory of such an animal

wished to learn more of its habits and apbefore he agreed to do anything There-

fore he climbed a tree at sunset and a longtime before anything appeared but just as he wasgrowing tired stiff he suddenly saw the gleam

woodland heart was sp loudlythat lie feared the Multipod would hear it and lookup but ft snorted its long pale wormlike form

him jantll its head vanished in the darkness farbeyond be heard a wild scream it had caughtsom unwary Djrok outside of his lint and in anothermoment he saw the head with tho savage writhingin its shapeless jaws passing beneathperch He fell from the limb ic his fright

The Mnltipod disappeared as silently as it hudcome and soon he took courage and slid down thetrectrunk and ran 1o his palaee When he told Cap-

tain Barrett what he had je old mariner wasshocked

I thought it was all as big a fairy story as thoI used to spin you on board I said he

shuddering Why the thing might get anyof A be done thats sure

Wares no about that We must destroy

there a will theres a way exclaimed

ror

m cepeiin

suM J

nee

him

in

mostr mJ

night white people can and to refrain

a

forthand

thetwenty

its veru

waited

andof its below IS it silently through tie

lDnpn 1S bent 1g

ones 1t pand

JSQlU thi lustt11i monster f tfJiliU1ed Tommy

Where

J

theSaid

all

l

standing

me00rite was

g

rt mainsmq t

thinsso that

thounay tiligs

Multi

had

CAPTURED

glided

oyster likeit

3Lupod

n

seen

doubt

>

¬

¬

¬

¬

>

<

>

>

+

avagcs-S BECAME THEIR

KING DESTROYEDA DEADLY BEAST ANDESCAPED VERY RICH

the 111 just ponder over some trick rother tfnigbt while asieep std tell yoix heyto do it in the morning

the long sleepless night that followedTommy himself devised a splendid plan to settleMr llultipod if it were true that a single gleam-of sunlight would destroy the monster

arQgai early and of the Dyaks quegregarding the matter and all assured ban

that was supposed to be true that s-

light rogdfatal to allThan lfe was sure of success and calling some wf

the crowtp help him he unpacked all of his lookingseveral to each man after wlrioli be

awakened old Captain Barrett and asked him toaccompany him to the foot of the mountains robes

cave of the monster was to be found CaptaiuBarrett stammered for a moment and then said

Wall I dunno t I am a brave man and bold butI have the rheumatiz powerful bad and cant walk

But the thought of being left behind was toomuch for the old mariner and finally he agreed togo with the rest and so carrying a few mtrroiathey all trudged off followed at a far aud safe

a few curious Dyaks wondering wbethocTommy would succeed in his project

Tommy was aware that there was no danger untilthey had penetrated into the cavern where the lightof tho sun was too feeble to bo effective and therefor ho placed the captain at tho entrance He gavehim a big mirror and told him to hold it so thatthe sunshine on it would be directed far into thewindings of tho cavern which as I have said was

tunnel but twisting and turning in alldirections far into the base of the mountain

Then advancing into its depths he placed a sailorat a turn in the tunnel with another mirror heldso as to catch the light that held by CaptainBarrett So he proceeded at each turn a mana mirror reflecting the brilliant blaze of a hot MMI yto the next wan beyond until at last be wasonly one left and holding a lookingglass agaiuschis chest he advanced boldly along the dark

until a sudden strange sound half growlmoan far ahead of him caused him to stop

KILLED BY THE LIGHT

Turning his so that it caugkt the lightfrom the man behind lie flashed a broad ray of UJ6shine down the tunnel before him and was Uto behold the awful thing conning silently towwrflhim with its greenish eyes aflame

As the sunlight struck it full in its shapeless fa-it reared its form upward writhed in awfuland then fell down in lump on the cavern floor

Tommy held the light on it till he was sureit was quite dead and then advanced to itlay a mass of white flabby pulp stretched tie

for twenty or thirty feet with its myriadlegs kicking out more perhaps like a gigantic cater-pillar than anything else but my how immenseand terrible even in death

Then Tommy lighted a ships lantern and calledall of themen to come and see the Multipod Wh4nthey they also lighted lanterns and thenTommy looked about

The first thing he saw was an immense pile of goldcoins rubies and other precious thingsthe creature had stripped from his victims a dstored in a small room at the side of his ext-ern Thore were seven or eight wagonloads ofare so much that Tommys eyes popped out inamazement

Then tRey explored the cavern and discoveredwhere the was fastened to the yeaby his tail as if he had grown right out of it A fwwminutes afterward old George Carmony the

shoutedHi Sink my blooming tarpaulins if there aint

another way outSure enough he had discovered a back door ta

the Multipo cavern a door that led them out iothe other of the mountains Hero was a landthat the Dyaks had never visited for the moutttatttewere far too high for them to climb even had theydared approach them and this lovely land was quiteuninhabited

Thoy soon found that they were altogether aofand here and therefore they broughtout all the treasure from the cave and it upoutsido Then they cut the from the rodeand hauled him out also

So they stuffed the Multipod with leaves andgrass and things and him up in the woods toscare any Dyaks that might happen to comasnooping around to see what had happened tobut none ever came because the savages coteluded that they had been eaten up every onethe dread monster They changed their minds wharfthey found tLat the Multipod was never seenbut the and captain and oasenger of the GiddyOwl never cared what they thought

Under tho captains direction they built them-selves a boat fashioning her of great timbers thatgrow there in plenty and when she was finished theysailed avay i far Bombay with a fair wind from-S S E by NV onehalf 2s which is as fair aas is made both for man and beast and thqy

that port without accident or incident havingLad advQntuBes enough s the captain r iseveral voyages and he certainly ought to know

DIVIDED THE

V got home they divided the treaaure of Tommy half the captain a quar

the crew poor men who had been glad to toil aloftand alow for sixteen dollars a month got over amillion Rollers each so you may just guess what

The he set up in the big hall of thehouse he built and some he will give it to theMuseum but if you should happen to be passinghis hou p the bell cnd ask to sea it He is al-

ways to show it to nice cleanfaced childrenand it worth seeing I assure 3 ou

said gleaming eyes uTdlike there hundred logged rulboniec-kMollodl WALT McDOUGALL

I

1 eri by

nut

li od

gl I

f

f

fromU

iIt

mirror

athe

Threat

ennui

pen

t

I

tt

ti 111

Multi

j

t

ci

ter and t1 rew the remainder and man in

To is worth

rii1

well Jconcluded uncle with u sigh i-

ilie Qt j the got rich and after aUmi it wvat really becaui he was a

lf not boon to do this trick hehave I these cannibal Dyaks

thatIJ f

Th

oai fainyou re

in

ma-tins

I

t

dis-tance R

pas-sage

eta t

aged

cavern

treat

Mul Pod

boat-swain

st

themcrew

reach-ed

TREASURE

they vastbelt

every

flavihuid

oc Oliverthinwho

li rwoulIfor

eaten up bywltiai 1i Tsee

i

¬

¬

>

=

+=

>

=