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'tcn cmPloy:d. sotnetiJ r or to frequent urina-C- : j '""ttion V warn of disturbed kidney "ss, J; nt headache, attacks of mi, Up n'shts swelling, out ya feeI weak, nervous. 5, SiS",7?' 11 ' be"er to rely on " Han has won world wide ac-- ". Ait soraetbing less favorably 'Ti' W INSTALLMENT FOURTEEN THE STORY SO FAR: Karen Water-fo-who has come to Honolulu to press her claims to the island estate of Alakoa, learns that she is not an heiress at all, as her grandfather, Garrett Waterson,, Is still alive and on his way to the island. She and Tonga Dick or Richard Wayne, a member of the Wayne family which has been in control of the property since her grandfather's disappearance find they are in love and decide to leave the island of Alakoa together. Out at sea they quar-rel and angered, Dick orders a return to Alakoa. Meantime a native house-gir- l who has stowed away aboard ship is se-riously wounded by her native lover, who suspects her of being unfaithful. Karen accuses Dick of having made love to this girl, Lilua. Dick and Karen continue their quarrel and Dick tells her he has protected her in a serious situa-tion. Now continue with the story. "Protected? What situations?" "What would have happened to your claim on Alakoa if you had been held on suspicion of murder?" Karen's astonished eyes jerked to his face. "Murder?" she gasped. "What on earth are you talking about?" "What do you think my brothers would have done if they had found out that you were with James Wayne when he died?" "But but " "Oh, I know you didn't mean to harm him. Even without the call it excitement of seeing you, I dare say he wouldn't have lasted another twenty-fou- r hours. But you know how Willard and Ernest would have seized upon the fact that you were with him and sought to conceal it. The Investigation would have been an ugly and uncomfortable thing." "I with him?" Karen repeated in-credulously. "Why, Dick " "You see," Inyashi said, uneasy under Dick's stare, "if we send no pilot, Mr. Colt and Miss Waterson will have to stay here." "It comes off and on. You know how he is. He'll be all right when he wakes up. Probably be four or five hours; then he'll 'be himself "Good," Dick said. "Good enough! Now, go cut Hokano loose." Dick went below, still listlessly hunting for his pipe. He was feeling "You see," Dick said, "you're not honest with me even yet. Who did you think picked up the broken lei? Tsura? Dear God! I'll never smell ginger flowers again without re-membering " "Lei? What lei?" "The lei I gave you, that I brought to your room, the night my uncle died. The lei that you wore when you went to see him. The lei that broke, and still lay scattered all over the floor when I found him sitting there, dead." "You mean you mean you've thought all this time " "I picked up the lei; I opened the windows, and let the wind sweep away the smell of ginger flowers, and said nothing. I even respected your own silence, and said nothing to you." "I think," Karen said, "I could have forgiven anything in the world but that. This is too much, Dick." "You see," Dick said, "I believed in you I believed in you as I haven't believed in anything since I can remember. God help me, I be-lieve in you yet! But I can't any longer believe that you are for me." "No," Karen said, her voice strange and shaky, "not for you. Never for you again." "Again? You never were!" "When you came for me, and I ran away with you, from the Seal, I belonged to you as much as I'll ever belong to anybody. More, per-haps. Even when your when Lil-ua turned up in your cabin, in that savage, half-nake- d rig, I was dis-gusted and hurt, but I would have got over it, I think. Only I didn't know you then." "You think you know me now?" "As well as I ever care to, Dick." When the Holokai was anchored again in Alakoa's little bay, Dick Wayne had Karen rowed back to the Seal, from which he had taken her such a little while before. They had been gone less than two hours, yet the circumstances under which he had brought her to the Holokai from the Seal seemed so far away that they might have existed in an-other world. As she left the Holokai he offered her a steadying hand, to help her into the small boat, but she stepped down lightly without his help, hardly glancing at him. They had nothing to say to each other as she left. The Holokai's boat had hardly left her side when Alakoa's shore launch put out from the dock, bringing Dick had ra-dioed the doctor for whom The same Japanese physi-cian who had attended James Wayne came aboard the Holo-kai briskly, looking as gravely wor-ried as his round moon of a face would permit Dick took him below at once. Lilua was resting more quietly, now under the detachedly watchful eyes of the Chinese mess boy and the Filipino cook. "This girl has been stabbed," Dick told Dr. Shimazu shortly Very little has been done. Don t leave her until she can properly be moved." evidently interest-ed The Japanese, by the notion that Dick might have stabbed the girl himself, gave Dick Wayne a shrewd and curious look, but without learning anything, and Dick went on deck. vessel was Garrett Waterson's standing in by now. Already the blasts of her whistle were cXg for a pilot. Dick Wayne dropped overside into the launch it out of the bay in a snor-ted through the boa of the break-ers- , aboard the Sarah. and went with a curly A stocky Norwegianname wasStahl brown beard-- his him at the rail, and quist-- met he went to the paced beside Dick as wheel. . well kick her on Might a, Stahlquist said 81?- - siege, ," Man's in another if woufto't know you probably-eve-you could get him awake. "How long's he sick?' tor a wnue, ana raising new. i qon i know what we're coming to." Dick took the wheel, signaled his engines, and snaked the Sarah in through the coral. He anchored her between the Holokai and the Seal. "You're in for it," Stahlquist en-couraged him. "All the way up, the Old Man's been raving and cussing at you for putting out with the Holo-kai without no orders." "When he wakes up," Dick said, "tell him to keep his shirt on. There isn't anything here to get in a hur-ry about; not now." Dick Wayne went back to the Ho-lokai. On her deck he stood for a few moments, looking across at the Seal, and fumbling in his pockets for his pipe, which had become mis-laid. He was still standing there when Inyashi came trotting to him. "How's the Hawaiian girl who was hurt?" Dick asked at once. "I think she is still all right." "Is she quiet now?" "Most of the time. When she is not quiet, she is calling for this Ho-kano. The doctor gave her a shot of something, I think." "Have somebody cut Hokano's wrists and ankles loose and bring him to me." "Captain, that is dangerous. That man will try to kill you, I think." "Do as I say, anyway." "Yes, sir." Then, as Inyashi start-ed away, he faltered and turned back. "Captain Dick, while you were gone, the Seal sent to ask for a pilot three times. They want to go out now, they think." "They want to go out? Why, then, John Colt must have gone aboard." "Oh, yes, sir, half an hour ago. I thought you knew that." '.'Well did you give them some-body?" "No, Tonga." "No?" "You see," Inyashi said, uneasy under Dick's stare, "if we send no pilot, Mr. Colt and Miss Waterson will have to stay here." A whole lifetime spent in the Is-lands had never fully accustomed Dick to the manner in which every-one managed to know everyone else's business. Just now it unex-pectedly appeared that Inyashi not only knew all the ramifications of Dick's affairs, but had his own con-ception of what was good for Dick. "What Mr. Colt and Miss Waterson do is their own business." Dick said unappreciatively. "There's still time to send them a pilot. Captain Dick. Either Mene-hun- e or Kamaku could pilot those shoals in their sleep. We can send them a man. if we want." "Yes," Dick said, so uncertainly that it was Inyashi's turn to stare, "we can if we want." "If Ramey goes alone he will pile up his boat." "Pile her up," Dick repeated dim-ly. "Yes. that is exactly what he will do. Well, maybe that would be the best thing. Maybe that would be the best thing for us all. There wouldn't be any danger to anybody, I wouldn't think." "No danger," Inyashi agreed ea-gerly. "No danger at all. But I think Ramey will not try." "It's Colt who is deciding what to do. And maybe what Colt does is being decided by somebody else." "Sometimes," Inyashi said cau-tiously, "what people do in a hurry, when they are mad. is a big mis-take." "Inyashi, are you arguing with me?" "Yes, sir." , "Well, get out of here, and do as you are told. Wait! Send a man ashore. Tell him to pass the word on the beach that I'll knock the head off the man who pilots the Seal at any price. Ramey will get no pilot from the Holokai and, by God, we'll see that he gets none from Ala-koa!" "Captain, I have done that." "You've already passed the word on the beach?" "Yes, Tonga; I thought I better take a chance." empty and sunk. He poured him-self half a tumbler of Scotch, drank it off, and deciding this had been a good idea, poured himself another. Dr. Shimazu came into the main cabin from the little stateroom in the stern. "This girl is lucky," he said. "The knife seems to have turned and saved the lung. If it had not turned she would have been killed; as it is, she is not." "Where's the luck in that?" Dick asked sourly. "Can't you even wish a poor Hawaiian girl well?" "The girl is principally suffering from shock," Dr. Shimazu ex-plained. "These Polynesians have a special temperament of their own; sometimes they are nervously ex-citable." He stopped, and stared blankly at the companionway. Two rugged-lookin- g Kanaka seamen had ap-peared, each of them holding onto a wrist ot the huge Hokano. As soon as they had cleared the lad-der, one of them twisted Hokano's arm up behind him in an effective hammerlock; and thus they stood waiting. Hokano's face was expres-sionless, and his eyes dead. Dick Wayne's voice was harsh and level. 'You ought to be ashamed of yourself," he said. "Don't you know how to teach that woman of yours a lesson without half killing her? You get on in there to her, and see if you can get her quiet." Hokano flung Dick Wayne one wild, uninterpretable glance, then, moving unsteadily, he walked back to Dick's stateroom and dis-appeared. Dick drank his whiskey and went on deck. What he wanted was to be quiet, and alone in the dark, like any animal which has been hurt and yet doesn't dare let its wounds be seen. But it seemed that in this night there was no quiet to be had. Dick Wayne had no more than walked to the rail of the Holokai when the Seal's boat was alongside, and there was a great clamoring for Captain Wayne this time from Ramey him-self. "Well what the hell is it now?" "Look, Tonga," the one-eye- d Ra-mey whimpered, "how about (giving a guy a lift here, in a bad fix? How am 1 supposed to get out of this hole? How am I supposed to know where the channel is. in a black night like this? What's the matter with giving a guy a hand?" "Just what is it you want. Ra-mey?" Dick asked, knowing well enough. "Half the boys you've got aboard your tub are Alakoa Kanakas. What's the matter with lending me one to steer me out of' here, be-fore these people practically scalp me. by God? These people want to get going. I tell you, these people are raising hell because I don't jerk my anchor up. What the devil do you expect me to do, if you haven't the common decency to lend a man a?" "Colt burning you up?" "Well, what if he is? Can you blame him if he wants to get his sweetie out of this lousy sink? All I'm asking is " "Tell you what you do," Dick said. "You tell Colt to take a flying jump into the bay. After he's jumped in the bay, tell him to dry himself thoroughly with a rough towel, and put on dry clothes. Explain to him that it's very foolish to stand around all wet." "Damn it, can't you even lend a man ?" "I'm not lending you anything. You're going to keep the Seal ex-actly where she is until it's light enough for you to sound your way out Even then you may pile her up and you know it! It suits me to have you and your customers stay exactly where you are." "I tell you, Tonga, these people " "Steal a bottle of whiskey and go hide on shore. I'll give you no pilot tonight!" (TO BE CONTINUED) Perhaps Joe Was Out to Set a Non-Sto- p Record A Negro called upon an old friend, who received him in a rocking-chai- r. The visitor noticed not only that his host did not rise, but that he continued to rock him-self to and fro in a curious way. "Yo' ain't ill, is you, Joe?" he asked, anxiously. "No, I ain't ill, Mose." There was a moment's silence during which the caller gazed wide-eye- d at the rocking figure. "Den," continued Mose, "why does yo' rock yo'self dat way all de time?" "Well," explained Joe, "yo know Bill Blott? He sold me a silver watch cheap, an' if I stop moving, dat watch won't go!" T 9 9Y rY' Rendezvous Sammy Let's sneak behind the garage and smoke a cigarette. Jackie Too dangerous. Ever since Dad swore off smoking he sneaks behind there to smoke his own. It is said that a man has more sense after he's married. But isn't that rather late? Those Men! "A month ago I was crazy about Jack; now I don't care for him a bit." "Yes, it's strange how change-able men are." s Famous Common Scold & . The most famous woman in the history of the United States to be tried as a common scold was Anne Koyall, whose case came before the circuit court of the District of Columbia in 1829, says Collier's. Upon conviction, a ducking stool was built by the navy department to inflict the usual punishment, but the lady was let off with a fine of $10 and made to put up bond of $50 as assurance that she would, "curb her sharp tongue and shrewish ways." Effects of Prosperity Prosperity can change man's nature; and seldom is anyone caut-ious enough to resist the effects of good fortune. Q. C. Rufus. Yet Unjust He who decides a case without "earing the other side, though he decide justly, cannot be conside-red just. Seneca. I Better to Wear Out ' " is better to wear out than to 5 rust hop Home. |