Fo -- THE BAILY BRITISH WHIG | |" THE GIRL IN THE SECOND CABIN " ee = BYE IRATH 5 Copyright, 1926, by G. Howard Watt. - - and fis brother wers at the ringsids {Ship, while his murss listened a'- [and be asked it as a particular | tentively. Then for a little while * |favor. He never could do emough | they sat silently contemplating each | for me after that." other. "S80 you became a nurse?" "Well, we know each other, any- yA \ad ES White Pine Lumber. We carry choice stocks from the nt mills. Nice, well-manufactured, carefully dried lumber A variety of sizes and lengths. ! Go about if in the right way, and even the most obstinate corn ean be got rid of. Cutting, or so-called corn solvents allow the corn to re- appear, painful as' ever. The right way to get rid of corns is to dip your foot into a footbath containing Radox Bath Salts. Radox forms a protein salt of the actual corn itself. This-so softens tM8 OFT that It can be lifted out bodily. 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'Phones 99 or 2837 Eres Creamery Butter .. "aaa Be J legoflamb ............ 50. Lamb Shoulders ........180¢ Lamb Stews Wanesssnvess 180 Pare lard ..ivuuiioan.a. life Al Point ........... Oc. Beet SRsssanmens Pe. Roast couvve soeavediBe Roast ...onv Saves die 31 Goods ..... § for Be. a gh if ih - i Ey i i i ; | I els meets + Who fascinates him. ; if i was him," added Keeler, shu!- fling his feet. "You mean "I met the best of them, sir, ¥f I 'do say it-- and most of them I put away." Keeler straightened in his chair as he made the announcement and assumed a certain air of dignity. "You were a fighter, you mean?" "For upward of fiye years, sir. One of the light heavies, after i grew out of the middleweights." Trask was beginning to under- stand things more clearly. Keeler's resemblance to a gorilla was sud- denly explained, and he wondered why it had not occurred to him before. He now recalled little imei- dents, guch as the affalr with the young man who refused to sur- render his camera film. The Tennessee Tornado was try- ing to assume an air of meekness, but pride in his Past was ill-con~ cealed, now that the cover had been stripped from it. "And what made you give up the game, Keeler?" "The best of us have to quit some time, sir. A man can't fight all his life. When it began to go the other way around---when they started in putting me away, instead of me them---why, them I began lotking around for something else Mr, Trask. I was never champion. you know; but--well, I was pretty fair in my time, sir." The guardian of the sick man paused and seemed on the verge of a smile, "The man down at the gate there, sir," he observed . complacently, "used to be in the profession him- self. Name is Dunigan now---and was when he was born--but for a while he was known as Two-Round Tommy. You never heard of him, sir? He had quite a reputation, af- ter his own way. He never won a fight." ~ The Ex. "Yet they called him Two-Round Tommy?" queried Trask Iincredui- Husly. "Because he never lasts more than two rounds," explained Keeler sol- emnly. "The reason he's such a friend of mine, sir, is that I let Him stay three rounds once. His father WOMEN SACRIFICE HEALTH There ars ambitious women every- where who, in their anxiety to keep their homes neat and attractive and their children well clothed and fed, continually overdo and bring on ail- ments as evidenced by headaches, backache, nervousness, irritability and aches and pains which accompany female ills. For over fifty years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has been the one dependable remedy to restore over-worked, sick and ail- ing women to health and strength. Thousands of women bear willing testimony to this fact. SAGE TEA KEEPS YOUR HAIR DARK Gray hair, however handsome, de- notes advancing age. We all know the advantages of a youthful appearance Your hair is your charm. "It makes or mars the face." When it fades, turns gray ajd looks streaked, a few appli- cations of and Sulphur enhances its ticura ul To et Trio a _--S - "Just 'an orderly in a hospital at first, sir. You see, I was handy in taking care of the vi t cases." "1 can imagine it. Be WE quiet them with no great trouble. Although the best scrap I ever had in my life, sir, was with a sick maa. He was 'out of his head a bit. And, will you believe it, Mr. Trask, when they brought him around his mind Was as straight as a string?" "And then you went with Dr. Van Nbrden?" "He took me out of the hospital. sir. Put me on difficult cases and things Mke that™ "You mean to say you liked that sort of work?" "Well esough, sir. It's a fair lv. ing. The work's easy enough, ex- cept---well, except in a case like yours, sir." "Have you had many like me?" "Never in my life!" exclaimed Keeler earnestly. Trask grinned. "Did you tell Miss Sands anything about the Tennessee Tornado?" Keeler was plainly shocked. He looked at his patient with reproack- ful and surprised eyes. "Why, no, sir! That's nothing for a lady to know, Mr. Trask. I would n't have her hear of it. You'll not say anything about it, I hope?' "Not a word. But how about Captain Ferriss?" Keeler became again. "But you understand how that is, Mr. Trask. I couldn't tell her I'd been a fighter. And it wasa't any better to say I was a nurse. I had to be somebody, sir. So I did the best I could." embarrassed Artistic Lying. "Have you. ever been to any of those places that you romanced about?" "Only to Australia, sir. IT fought there for a year. But travelling there and bck sort of gave me an idea about the world generally; that and reading about it." "Well, you did an artistic job of lying, Keeler. I'll compliment you on that. But what did you expect to gain by it? You don't imagine that Miss Ban "» "You mever can tell, sir. Some- times they take a fancy to adven- tures. But, of course, I should ex- pect to tell her before I married her." "Married her!" Trask gasped the echoing words. "You mean to sav you've got the nerve to think that she'll marry you?!" "There's always a chance," murmured Keeler. taken a lot in my time, sir." Trask burst into laughter, but he was not wholly mirthful within. He felt. a sneaking sympathy for Keeler, a sort of irresponsible - admiration for his vaunting duplicity. fighting "I've case himself?" "She's a very fine young lady, sir," observed Keeler, resentful of the laughter. "Oh, absolutely. I'm with you there. But don't you see what a tre- mendous fall you're coming to, Kee- ler, when you have to tell her the truth?" "I suppose 80," sald the nurse with a sigh. "I expect it's partly hap. pened now." "Because I called you 'Keeler' in- stead of 'Ferriss"?" Keeler nodded. "Well, it's a standoff," sald Trask. "You called me "Trambull.' Where does that leave me? And she saw right away that we knew each other." : 'Keeler awakened from a trance and displayed renewed Interest in his patient. He remembered that he was still without an explanation. "I don't understand about you, sir." he sald. "I've laid my cards down, Mr. Trask, or Mr. Trumbull. whichever it is. Would you mind giving me an idea about yourself?" "I'm a hired man the same. as you, Keeler." "And your right name is Trask?" "William Hamilton Trask. Do you remember the man who came aboard with me, that you first saw at the club? F Keeler nodded. "That was Trumbull, your pat- fent" i ir "B® "He simply put it over on you, and the doctor, and his father and everybody else concerned. He hired the thing happened, Mr. Trask: it wasn't playing square with me" "But you draw your pay just the same" - ° i rl R 7 i Ed if Ey § £ 5% as anually 'able 1s " After all, was fe in any better how, Keeler," remarked Trask. "So what's to be done about it? I sup- pose I'll have to keep on being call- ed 'Trumbull' while ei Pmehan PR froe-ta SEH [Canny "It looks like it, sir." "And go around fin that eom- founded chair? I'm getting tired of that." "It wouldn't do to recover the use of your legs too soon," sald Kee- ler cautiously, "You must axe {it gently." "Of course, in the second cabin it's all right," mused Trask, consol- ing himself. "I can be exactly who I really am." "It's best for you not to go there again, sir." "Why? Keeler cleared his throat and hesitated. He liked this able-bodied invalid who had been committed to his charge, but he was afraid ' of him--when Sidney Sands was con- cerned. "It's like this, sir. I called you 'Trumbull' down there, and it might be hard to explain. And then there's the things I said about you to Miks Sands. I'm sorry I did it; but it's done. I didn't know who you were, of course." "But I'll explain all that to her." "Mr.--Trask! You'll not give me away, sir?" There was keen alarm in Kee- ler's voice. He leaned forward .in his chair and thrust out his hands in an involuntary gesture of sup- plication. "But I called you 'Keeler,' didn't in" . "I'll manage lo explain that, sir," said the nurse hastily. "I'll fix that all right. You leave it to me, Mr. Trask." "You mean to tell me that you propose to go on parading as Cap- tain Ferris'?" "What else can I do?* "Keeler, you're shameless! I won't permit it. You've got no right to palm off such stuff on an tnno- cent girl" "Well, I wouldn't want to be dis- respectful, Mr. Trask, but doesn't that make about an even break ba- tween you and me, sir?" "Certainly not! I've told Miss Sands who I really am. ,i'm not trave.ing under a false flag." "I--I wasn't thinking of her, sir," sald Keeler, with an apolo- getic cough. "It was Miss Kent I had fo mind." Trask was jolted. It was as If he bad run headlong into .a' stone fence. . "You see," added Keeler, press- X ! < Im in, ghis| the usual ointments. * work. - : A on des pg id reports about Zao oh ey did. car atrial. To relief, the balm soon cansed to set in. All inflammation and matter was gui removed y Zam-Buk, and it the sore without leaving a scar. "Again when | fell over a steel fender and injured my knee badly, Zam-Buk alone saved me, My daughter, a nurse, was of the opinion that only an tion could remove the mass of inflam. mation and pus. But I in pinned my faith to Zam-Buk, and it cleansed and healed the wound." All druggists and stores sell Zam-Buk at fifty cents yr hye Equally valuable for eczema, i' cuts, burns, 1 FF: & ] etc. ing his point eagerly, "it's the same between yca and Miss Kent as it is Between me and Mids Sands. If it's wrong for me, it seems as if it ought to be wrong for you, sir." "Keeler, this is blackmail!" "Now, Mr. Trask. You surprise me sir. I'd not think of such a thing. I was only trying to point out that --well, that it was about six of one and half a dozen of the other. And there's no real harm done, either, so long as you stick to your story here and 1 stick to mine there." "Yes. But when I ses Miss Sands again, how about explaining affairs between you and me?" "Won't Miss Kent do for sir?" he pleaded. Trask laughed. "I like to roam around, Keeler," he said. "What harm is there in it? Besides, how am I going to get rita of that dragon?" "That's a hard one, too," admitt- ed Keeler sadly. "But I'll help you all T can there." "Anything to keep me from. go- ing back to the second cabin--is that it?" "I wouldn't like to put it that way, sir, but " "Are you jealous of me, Keeler?" "Mr. Trask!" "But you act as if you were." Keeler seemed to be suffering misery. He turned an appealing look upon his patient. "It looks like the. only real chance I've ever had, Mr. Trask," he blurted. "But if you're going in for it, I--well, it's unfortunate, sir Now, this Miss Kent is a very fine young lady, sir." "Unquestionably." "And she's handsome, too," add- ed Keeler. "And rich, 4 hear. And I'm sure she takes a great interest in you, Mr. Trask. It seems to me, sir, that your future's made, if you You, " I4 sells on sight and is bound to pleases } carpenters and workmen who take pride in their COAL, LUMBER AND WOODWORK, BAY AND WELLINGTON STREETS, KINGSTON, ONTARIO Private Branch Exchange Phone 1671. {besa CO. LIMITED don't mind my saying it." Trask gazed upon his keeper with amusement and admiration. "You've 'become a sudden cham- pion of Miss Kent, Keeler." "I always try to speak well of the ladies, sir." "In short, you want me to kdep away from Miss Sands?" Keeler was silent and wuncom- fortable, Trask studied him briefly, then shook his head. : "Sorry, Keeler, old man, but can't be done." Keeler groaned. "That being the situation, how is it between us? Peace or war?!" in- quired Trask. ' "Good heavens, sir! It'll never be war. I've taken a liking to you, Mr Trask. We--er---we may be rivals, ir; but there'll be no war between us. But I'll ask you, sir, to give an- other thought to Miss Kent Before you decide. She's a wonderful young lady, Mr. Trask." "Thanks, Keeler; I'll think about it. Meantime, who am I---while I'm in the first cabin?" "You're Mr. Trumbull can't be helped now." "And I keep right on being an in- valiq?" it That "It's better, sir. There'll be explanations required then." "And you expect to keep on ing 'Captain Ferriss' down ow "Unless you give me away, "Well, how am I going to plain calling you Keeler in of Miss Sands?" "And how are you going plain my calling you 'Mr. bull?" countered the guardian. Trask frowned. "It is something of a puzzle. admitted. "If you want my opinion, Keeler, I think we're in Dutch--downstairs. Keeler nodded his head fully, signifying his fear that was hitting very close to the There was a knock at the t room door and as Keeler arose | answer it he made a swift signal} Trask, who dropped hastily into § wheel chair. A moment of whispel ed conversation between the Bn and somebody outside followed, then Keeler stepped on deck closed the door after him. Hé was gone for several utes. Whea he returned his 4 was moist and his eyes anxious, (To Be Coutinued.) 4 A Flavour all its own Quaker orn Flakes Ny N\ He GROSVENOR an Adem Design of Rare Beauly Good Taste decrees this harmony of design in your table service Featured in the Displays During OMMUNITY PLATE WEE IN KINGSTON - Oct. 30th to Nov. 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