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Show THE PROGRESSIVE OPINION . I 1 Me A Quiz With jTlaJS. US Answers Offering T J.7 Information on flllOLjLlGl 0 Various Subjects 5. Approximately 50,000. 6. Uncle and nephew. .' - 7. A lover of books. '; 8. Chaucer. 9. Milk is homogenized by put-- j ting it through a machine underj terrific pressure, which breaks up the fat particles in the raw milkj The cream is distributed uniform-- ; ly through the milk, instead of rising to the top. 10. Italy (a chain of mountains).! The Questions 1. What is an abcedarian? 2. What is known as the right of angary? 3. What year saw the ratifica-tion of' the woman suffrage amendment to the Constitution? 4. What Spanish king built the Invincible Armada? 5. Approximately how many children took part in the disas-trous children's crusade in 1212? 6. In what way were Abraham and Lot of the Bible related? 7. What is a bibliophile? 8. Who is called the father of English poetry? 9. What is homogenized milk? 10. In what country are. the Apennines? The Answers 1. A beginner. 2. A belligerent nation's right to seize property of neutrals. 3. The year 1920. 4. Philip II. fU AW The swift twilight of the latitude was closing sharply, but the glasses were still able to bring out every detail aboard the Diesel boat. "Take me over to that stranger boat." Tonga Dick swung over the rail and dropped Into the moving canoe. "Okay, Captain Dick." ' Karen Waterson was still stand-ing by the rail, quiet and alone, as the silent outrigger sliced close. Ton-ga Dick stood up, reached the boat's low rail, and swung aboard. "Stand on and off," Dick told the Kanaka fisherman, "and wait for me." CHAPTER X The outrigger moved off a little, drifting idly. It was the girl who spoke first, 'her voice hushed in the quiet. "I thought you might come over here." Dick Wayne leaned close to her so that their shoulders touched, and held his voice low, hoping that Cap-tain Eamey would not be brought out of his galley. "I have something to tell you," he said. "Something's happened the whole situation is changed. John Colt can't accomplish anything here. The fight is off, and if it starts again it will be on an entirely new basis." She waited, and in the rapidlj thickening dark he could not see what was in her eyes. "Karen," Dick said, "you are noi an heiress; and you have no claim upon Alakoa. You see, Karen youi grandfather is alive." There was a long minute of un easy silence. He didn't expect hei to believe him, at least not at first Shock, incredulity, refusal to accepi the truth he supposed he woulc have to contend against all of thesi before he could go on. Karen's answer astonished hirr. when it came. She spoke in a low drawl. "You know, I rather thought so Dick." ' Having braced himself for an up hill attempt to convince her, Dick was taken aback. "Why how on earth did you know?" "John Colt admitted that one thing might destroy our case and wouldn't tell me what it was. Then yesterday, when you told him thai you could bring our claims to noth ing it seemed to me that he believed you, though he wouldn't admit it. He hardly would have come here if he hadn't feared a new development, would he? So the only thing I could think of was that my grandfather might still be alive, and that you had dug him up." "What do they want up there now?" Dick asked wearily. - "Nothing, Mr. Dick, that I know." Wong was nervous ; there was a flut-ter In his long-bone- d hands as he produced a twisted slip of paper. "I came to you of my own thought Up at our receiving station they keep hearing some ship calling the Holo-k-they can't tell what ship. Its call letters aren't listed no one ever heard them before. We think it may be some outlaw station. At any rate, the call comes in very per-sistently; and we didn't hear you answer, so I came to tell you." "What were the call letters?" "I have them written here." Tonga Dick took the paper Wong offered him and unfolded it. Even before he made put its typewritten characters in the failing light, he knew what ship it would be. "They were still calling when you left the house?" "Yes, sir." - v. "Come here, Wong." Tonga Dick ran back along the deck and dived into the little ken-nel, abaft the galley, which served as a radio shack, and Charles Wong came pattering after him. He clamped on his earphones and care-fully with micrometer delicacy, be-gan to turn the big dial of the short wave receiver; but for minutes there was no result. "He must have shut down," Dick said at last. "If you catch it again at the Alakoa station, you'd better answer and take the " Just then the hunted signal came in, so powerfully that the effect was blasting. Somewhere, unexpectedly close at hand, Garrett Waterson was calling Dick Wayne from the sea. Dick quieted the blocked and clat-tering receiver. "Good Lord He's right on top of us! Yes, he's calling us, all right." Dick's earphones were beginning to zing with thd measured letters of a message that was something more than news. "SAR WIT WATERSON ABOARD QTP ALAKOA 2 HRS." Dick Wayne could not believe his own ears. Angrily he worked his key, sending out a protest "RPT ALL RPT " The message from the sea hesitat-ed and started over again. Abruptly it changed its pace, breaking into a racing chatter. "WHT IN HELL IS MTR U CANT U UNDERSTAND ENGLISH QTP 10 PM STAND OUTSIDE CORAL TO PILOT THRU SHOALS G WA-TERSON QSL?" Tonga Dick Wayne acknowledged with a curt "QSL," and shut off his INSTALLMENT TEN THE STORY SO FAR: Karen Water-son- , convinced by her lawyer, John Colt, that she has a claim to the Island estate ot her grandfather, Garrett Waterson, has come to Honolulu to attempt getting the property. In an efTort to and out something about the Wayne family, now In control of Alakoa, the island, she ac-cepts a date to go sailing with Richard (Tonga Dick) Wayne. Against her wishes he takes her to Alakoa. While James there, Wayne, Dick's uncle and man-ager of the property, is found dead from overwork. While taking Karen back to Honolulu, next day, Dick tells her he loves her but they later quarrel. Dick then sees John Colt and when a com-promise offer to him fails he tells Colt that their Pacific venture will fail. He goes back to Alakoa and tells his that he knows Garrett Water-so- n to be alive. They question his word. Now continue with the story. "Granting that an ordinary man might drop out of sight that way," Willard said, "it still would have been impossible for Garrett Water-so- He was too big, too impor-tant " Dick was getting disgusted again. "No, he wasn't he only imagined he was. Once he was broke, he wasn't of any importance or inter-est to anybody except to you, and to you only because you thought he was a skeleton in the closet. Doubtless this will surprise you, but the fact is that Alakoa is a small, obscure, and unimportant speck on the map, suitable for supporting a few hundred people, and of no other significance whatever. The fact that Garrett Waterson once had hold of it for a while would not distinguish him in the eyes of anybody, except yourselves." Both brothers looked scandalized. "If all this can be proved," Er-nest began, "I mean, if his actual identity can be proved " "Of course it can be provedl It's a plain, demonstrable fact can't you understand that?" "If Dick is to be believed," Wi-llard said, "our worries are over, Ernest. They can go ahead and in-vestigate their heads off and it won't get 'em a thing. And Karen Water-son'- s case against us falls flat as as " "As a bird in the hand," Dick suggested. Suddenly a new angle occurred to Willard Wayne. "I suppose," he said, "since you are working for Waterson, as you say, this boat of yours isn't yours at all, but his is that right?" "Certainly." "Then.'V said. Willard, "whatever business he's in now, he must be enjoying a considerable success. That alone ought to furnish proof that he's competent." "Unfortunately, there's a catch in that, too," said Dick, "and it's a big one. "Just what business is he in?" Ernest demanded. "Where does his money come from? Or is that some-thing else that isn't supposed to concern us?" "It concerns you very much," Dick said. "Well?" Dick Wayne grinned sardonically, even maliciously, and stood up, preparatory to walking out. "Ask Garrett Waterson," he suggested. "If he doesn't feel like telling you, it won't do you any good to know." John Colt, aboard a Diesel boat hardly better than the sampans the Japanese fishermen used, arrived at Alakoa at sunset. Dick Wayne, watching the little vessel blunder and grope its way through the reefs she was sounding frantically with no less than three lead lines knew at once that the one-eye- d Captain Ramey had man-aged to sell John Colt a charter at last, if only for an excursion. Ramey's boat dropped anchor five hundred yards from the Holokai. Evidently Dick's brothers had sent orders to the dock that John Colt should be brought to the house im-mediately upon arrival for Alakoa's shore launch put out immediately, Hokano steering, and took off John Colt. Tonga Dick watched this ma-neuver impassively. There was no longer any danger that his brothers would be bluffed into something by Colt. The decision would rest with Waterson himself, and no one else. He got his binoculars now and focused them upon Ramey's boat. The swift twilight of the latitude was closing sharply, but the glasses were still able to bring out every detail aboard the Diesel boat. The little tramp vessel sat awkwardly on the water, her snub nose tilted upward inanely.' She had a disor-derly faintly disreputable look, but Dick 'knew she concealed a surpris-ing turn of speed. Karen Waterson was leaning over the rail, talking to Captain Ramey. Dick could see the stitching in her narrow hat brim, and the shadow of her lashes. The movement of her lips, while he could hear no least sound of her voice, had a strange effect, making her seem immeas-urabl- y far away. darkness fell, Dick saw Captain leave Karen's side, and in a Ramey or two a light showed u the Xgalley. Tonga Dick smiled a fiUie without much humor, as he that Ramey had deduced from this been left in the lurch by H cook. boat put out from Now the shore SB tar Holokai'a rail. "He'll be here soon, Karen very soon." She considered that, her eyes on the disappearing horizon. "It will be strange to see him. I suppose 1 will see him, won't I? It's going to be like meeting a ghost. He's been such a vague, misty, sort of gigantic figure, overshadowing everything for so many months ever since John Colt first convinced me that I might have a right to Alakoa. A great, legendary figure, lost in the past. And now, to actually see him, face to face it's very surprising." "Who knows what standpoint he will take? Garrett Waterson has al-ways been a man given to extreme views. For all I know he may jump to the conclusion that he would like to recover the island, and hand it over to'you." "To me? After I've tried to prove " "Why not? Garrett Waterson's lat-er years have been bitterly lonely. It seems to me very likely that he will wish to do just that. Certainly John Colt will undertake to show him exactly how it can be done; Colt will be ready to handle all details Waterson needs only to make a de-cision, and the whole thing is as good as accomplished." "You mean my grandfather could recover Alakoa?" "He's in perfectly sound mind. But he can have himself shown in-competent if he wants to God knows he's eccentric enough." "But Dick that's fraud!" "It's just what you and John Colt started to do in the first place." (TO BE CONTINUED) generator. "Garrett Waterson's power yacht Sarah will be in in two hours," he told Wong, "and Waterson himself is on board." Charles Wong, stumbling after him out of the radio shack, looked as if he had seen a ghost; obviously he had been able to hear, and to understand, the international code. "Do do you want your brothers to know?" "It doesn't make a particle of dif-ference, either way." Charles Wong waited a moment, and seemed about to say something more; but changed his mind, and lowered himself over the side into the waiting boat.. The launch chattered its way back to the dock, and presently, after its voice had died, there came across the water the sound of a racing automobile engine as Charles Wong, handling his car badly, raced through the village toward the hills. Dick stood for some minutes with his hands on the rail, staring at the darkening sea. Roughly checking known distance against the relative speeds of the Sarah and the Holo-kai, he estimated that Garrett Wa-terson must havepointed the Sarah north no more than a few hours after Dick had set sail with the Holokai. Hurriedly Dick Wayne's eyes swept the bay. An outrigger canoe, sailed silently in the light air by a single Hawaiian spearman, was coming in across the still water from a day's fishing beyond the reefs. Dick sent a low whistle across the water, and the outrigger sheered in close to the side of the Holokai. Gems of Thought CO NEAR is falsehood to the truth that a wise man would do well not to trust himself on the narrow edge. Cicero. Dost thou love life? Then do not squander time, for that is the stuff life is made of. Franklin. The stone that is rolling can gather no moss; Who often removeth is sure of loss. Tusser. Bad men will excuse their faults, good men will leave them. 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Salt Lake a I? s mw)(m Q Most large organizations today have skilled men Q One o the chief services of advertising to you as a whose job it is to create a public opinion favorable to consumer has been in pointing out the manufacturers the organization and its products. This is known as the and merchants who deserve your good will It has done CSSs0iL WnlS! OM f m0St telling ou e 81017 of good8 md . policies and then letting you judge for yourself if Q But the peculiar thing about it,., . they are worthy of support, only comes to those who deserve it. In other words, your asking the public for good will is'm enough: the busi- - Q Advertising sjiows you exacdy where you can buy, ness must be worthy of that good will through giving with perfect assurance that here you will find a man good service, through selling good merchandise, through who is worthy, a product which is honest, a price maintaining fair prices. which is right. The Sistine Madonna The Sistine Madonna, some-- j times called .the finest picture, ever painted, was executed by Raphael at the request of the Black Monks of San Sisto whose chapter house was in the little town of Piacenza. The elector of Saxony bought the picture from the monks and took it to his home-land. Since that time the origV nal has been in the Royal gallerjj in Dresden. One Dozen Thoughts Twelve Things to Remember 1. The value of time. 2. The suc-cess of perseverance. 3. The pleasure of working. 4. The dig-nity of simplicity. 5. The worth of character. 6. The power of kindness. 7. The influence of ex-ample. 8. The obligation of duty. 9. The wisdom of economy. 10. The virtue of patience. 11. The improvement of talent. 12. The joy of originating. Marshall Field. jj Elevation and Merit There is merit without eleva tion, but there is no elevation with-out some merit. La Rochefou-- t cauld. J How It Is Bim Oh, you mustn't blame ie for my ancestors. c Tim I don't. I blame them for you. j Way of Ease i It is much easier to be critical j than to be correct. Benjamin Disraeli. |