No 658 SEPT 1ST 1911 5 Cents.
FRANK TOUSEY
PUBLISHER
·24
UNION SQUARE.
NEW-YORK.
Issued Weekly—By Subscription $2.50 per year. Entered as SecondClass Matter at the New York, N. Y., Post Office, March 1, 1899.Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1911, in theoffice of the Librarian of Congress, Washington, D. C, by FrankTousey, Publisher, 24 Union Square, New York.
CHAPTER I. THE MYSTERY THAT CAME OUT OF THE MIST.
CHAPTER II. ALICE AND THE CHINESE PRINCESS.
CHAPTER III. LUNG & LUNG.
CHAPTER IV. ALICE PASSES THROUGH THE DOOR OF DEATH.
CHAPTER V. OLD KING BRADY GETS DOWN TO BUSINESS.
CHAPTER VI. HEARD IN THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN DELIGHTS.
CHAPTER VII. IN A TORTURE CHAMBER.
CHAPTER VIII. OLD KING BRADY BLUNDERS AHEAD AS BEST HE CAN.
CHAPTER IX. THE BRADYS GET TOGETHER ONCE AGAIN. BUT THE PRINCESS SLIPS THROUGH THEIR FINGERS.
CHAPTER X. TREASURE HUNTING.
CHAPTER XI. TOO LATE.
CHAPTER XII. CONCLUSION.
One foggy night a few years since at something after two o'clock, agood-sized motor boat containing five men might have been seen cruisingclose in to the water-front line of lower San Francisco.
Three of the occupants were big, husky fellows, who sat idly in the boatlooking like men waiting to be called upon to act and prepared for anyemergency.
A good-looking young fellow in his twenties was attending to engineer'sduty, while astern sat an elderly man of striking appearance andpeculiar dress.
He wore a long, blue coat with brass buttons, an old-fashioned stock andstand-up collar, and a big white hat with an unusually broad brim.
Clearly he was the leader of this outfit, whatever their business mightbe out there on the silent bay in the early morning hours.
He was a man accustomed to command, being none other than theworld-famous detective, Old King Brady, chief of the Brady DetectiveBureau of Union Square, New York.
And having made this statement, we need scarcely add that the young manin charge of the boa