the mrATTA Sunday bee: may 33, idis. 1W. Featuring Miss Pearl White. Mr. Arnold Daly Tha Famous Belantlfla Mr. Edwin Arden eh. r-1 WRITTEN BY ARTHUR B.' REEVE Tha Well-Known Novelist and the Creator of the "Graif Kennedy" Stories Dramatized Into a Photo-Play by Chaa. W. Ooddard. "".;: Author of "Tho Perils of Pauline." Everything you read here todat ron can ee In the fascinating rathe Motion notnre-a at the MoUon IMrt are Theater this week. Next Sun day another chapter of "The Exploits U Elaine and new Path reels. Copyright. 1MS by the Htar Co. All For eign Rights Reserved. aysMtawla f Freviaa. Chapters. Tha New York potior ar. mystified by a series of murders and other crimes, IThe rr1m-1ral clue to the criminals la a I warning letter. wM-:h la eent the vlctlme. I aimed with a "clutching hand," Tho Uteat victim of tli myrterlous aswessln iJa Taylor IW!ge. tha wealthy Insurance I'nmiueni ina naugnter, kaajnei, employs Craig Kennedy, the famnue .ckffitlflo dc. teetive, to irr to Unravel tha myatery. What Kennedy arcompllahee la told by his friend. JamMttn. a nnwinrwr man. Kach chapter deals with a new plot aaatnat the Uvea of KmnMjr and Elaine, but each tlma tha maator criminal Is defeated by tha marvelous eKTTi of Kan il. fv. l"' Kennedy discovers the (Clutching Hand to ba Elaine's trusted lawyer Pennett. With Hnntt rone Elaine snd Kennedy ar confronted by Wu Fang; a Chlneaa (criminal. His continuous plotting aaatnat their lives bring new oerila to Elaine, and call for greater exltl on the part of "n P11" the kidnaping of klalne to revenge tha loaa on Long bin. He acrompDahea this by first kld- rapine the podge chauffeur. At nlaht hiaina la put on board a achooner which la returning to China after unloading a cargo or opium. A carrier pigeon aivM the uluo for locatlna the oi.lum. and Klnlna la saved by a United Wjitea revenue I 'J,kmJ" I wlrele telephone Invented by Kenned)-. fH4PTF XXIt. 1 A Stern Chase Wu rang did not let a nlirht pans after tha capture of h! most trusted lieutenant, Jxnf sin, without planning revenge. Enrseed beyond measure at tha auceeas with which Kennedy had protected both Hlalna and hlmaelf from his machinations, b decided on a most dantardly coup. It was nothing loaa Jhan taking advantage of Ma position at the ho4 of tha power ful Chlneaa criminal band and using tha Sana by whlrh he 'was smuggling opium, tha drug banned even In his own country. George, (he Dodge chauffeur, had Just returned to the garage In tha rear of tha t house with the car and was working over it. Ha wss so Intent on locating strange noise In the engine that ha did not sea the serpentine eyes of Wu as ha peered Ir.to the gnjreeo through small window. Oeorge was bending closely over tha en i fine as be speeded It up to sea what was the cause of the rattle, when tha door of tha garage opened quietly. On tiptoe, Wu and . the young mechanician, a man named Johnaon. slipped In, Johnson car rying am automobile robe. The next moment tho two haJ leaped upon the defitnsvlcaa , fleorge. Johnson threw the robe over his head, while Wu wound him about with n rope. He was completely and Instantly put out. Just then, working as If by the clock, for such was the precision of Wu's plans, a closed car, muffled down, slipped up to the garase door. Thoy hustled tha un resisting George Into tha car. Johnson taking the place at the wheel and 'Wu sitting on guard In back with George, bound and almoat suffocated. George waa loyal. If anything. Threats and brlbca had no effect on him, even . after he had come to in Wu's secret den. "There 1. paiwr, pen nnd Ink." threat ened Wu. -Write what I tell you." "Take the pen." directed Wu. adding, as aeorge took it mechaulcallr, "writs." Mlea IkmIkc: While vlsldng my sister In ln lali nd City last night after 1 lft the arK. I had an accident and sprained my ankle. My friend. Johnson, who brinsa this note, will dme you fur a few clnti until 1 am able in le out Keepeetruily, OKOHOIC. Isn't that too bad'" ampathlscd . rialno. handing the note to Aunt Jose phine. "Is it a bad epralnT" "J'retty bad. Miss.' replied Johnaen, . deferentially. ' "Vou va had experience?" queried Aunt . Josephine. "Oh, yes'm," replied Johnson. "Five . years. Here's my license." "I think you'll do," nodded Klalne. "Jennings, will you show Johnson how to get to the garaaeT" For a long time Kennedy had been perfecting a miniature wireless tele phone of his own Invnctlon and tha ac tivities of Wu Fang now caused him to beaten his work. "You see. Walter." Kennedy explained, setting a little black bog on tha labora tory table. "I've got this thing duwa to an. irreducible minimum. It'a the moat compact affair Imaginable. PeeT I ooea . tie top of the box. I lift up these miniature aerials of the Inverted L type. Here Is the transmitting apparatua. there the receiving, all tuned. 1 prees this : lever." He paused. At the other end of the table stood an exact duplicate of the first ln.iruiin-rtt- Aa he eiressed tha lever tho buxser In the other telephone sounded. "I'm going to ask you, Walter." ha went on, folding, down tha little aerials and shutting up the box, "to take this other InMrunwiit over to Elaine." He placed the wireless telephone In a bug and a few nilruU-s later I left tho laboratory. It must have been Jet at that tints tliat It occurred to Craig to play a prtvrttcal ka on me and at the same tin, teat hU Ineeotton. He went over to tie Jk in tha laboratory and, laugh ing to hlinnelf, piesed the lever. I knew sJmoat Instantly, what was tha jutaltur. Ttiat was all rtarht. But I was not the only one who heard tha busacr. j 'ifce policeman, only a few yards away, lard It, ad took a step toasrd me, Here Elaine Dodge "Craig: Kennedy" n.iuil. . -i...i TTT. T vv ii- r a.iiiT t . n . . aatr vnminai eyeing me suspiciously, as ha would an anarchist with a clock-work bomb. "What have you got In tho bag?" ba demanded, For a moment I felt very uncomfort able. Wou.d he bnl eve meT . "I've got a wtreleea telephone," I re plied, mustering up all the assurance of whlrh I was capable. "Someone Is ring ing the bell." "Aw g'wan," ha doubted gruffly, more skeptical than ever. "Tell it to tha Judge." 1 tried 'to laugh It off. But Kennedy kept rinsing the bell and by this time a crowd had Collected. "But." I remonstrated, "let ma show It to you." Tha officer could not decline, though he waa more than aver auaptcloua. I opened tho bog, took out the little wlre- leas telephone box, opened It, and raised the aerial. ' "Confound you, Craig." I called, "you've almost got me pinched for a red." "Say, ran that ohatter," began tha po ll neman, looking at ma as If he were not sure now but that I waa Just a plain nut. Try It y-jureelf," I urged, handing him tha receiver. Ha took It gingerly as if it might ex plode.- but his face waa a study as ho aotually heard coming, as If from no where, a peal of laughter from Kennedy, followed by an elaborate explanation. "At leaet, Walter," Crel aDoloaiaed. with pride, "you must admit now that It works." "Oh, 11 works all right," I replied, somewhat cooled down. 1 went the rest of my way unmo lested and waa finally admitted to tha Podgs house by Jennings, who was evi dently engaged In Instructing a new ser vant in his duties. "Good morning. Mr. Jamteeon.". Blalna greeted, adding as she caught sight of tha bag, "Not going to leave us, are you?" "No," I replied. "I've brought you a preaont from Crnlg-a, wireless telephone. You sea, ha aays that If you will keep thlo with you wherever you go. you can always communicate with him." How Interesting." sha exclaimed. "Yes," I agreed, relating the joke which Craig had played on mo. and. as briefly as I could. I explained tha work ing of tha telephone to both Elaine and Aunt Josephine. Out in the Atlantic, tossing over tho choppy seas, a dingy old schooner was tacking hsr way toward New York har bor. The captain, Jack Gregor. waa a disreputable looking man. as were both hln craft and his crew of mixed whites and Chinese. He was a brutal faced mnn, whose whiskers did not Imply hirsute adornment, but sheer hostility to rasors and the deoenciea of life. i Oregnr had coma out on deck and stood there graslng off at where the land ought to be. h h..l just finished scrawling a note on a piece of paper, I reeling on the after-cabin roof, when one of the men reached down and from a small wooden cage took a struggling white carrier pigeon. They fastened tha note, rolled up In a sort of a quill, to the bird's leg and let the bird loose. It circled up, then, straight . aa an arrow, darted off landward. "They'll be glad to know we're safe and so near," nodded Greaor. "And con. found any revenue men that stand be tween ua!" In a room In a tenement Wu Fang and several other Chinamen were seated, talking and smoking. U waa not Vu's headquarters, but a poorly fu-nlehed place. Outside a nearby window was a large box which had a small sliding door on the outside, arranged so that it fell al n.oat at a touch, working a little signal flag on the back of tha bog .toward the room in which tha Chinamen were sd. Now and then as they talked they would glance at thla box. Suddenly there was a flutter of wings outside. A pure whit pigeon seemed to glide Into the box and, aa tha tiomtng bird did so, the door automatically shut It was a cage such aa Is used for carrier pigeons. The little flag in the room moved and th. Chinamen crowded about the box. aa Wu opened It. reached In and caught the bird. Carefully ha took the meaeage from the bird's foot. Aa one of them placed the bird In another bog and ivset the trap Wu unrolled the paper and read: 10 A. M. Inlles southeast of Bsnriy Hook. Will drop anchor off Btaten leland tonight "You will let ma know if any later meaaago comes V directed Wu to one of his men, aa, a moment later, the Chinese master criminal left the tenement Cautiously ha made his way to tha secret entrance to his own apartment He had scarcely entered when a China man, who had evidently been waiting for hlra. rose and bowed. It waa Hop Ling, the proprietor of the opium d m. "la there any newa yet. masterT" ha asked. "Yes. Uregor la landing your opium tonight. I ll have a girl for him to take back to Shanghai with hbn where aha caa be soM." The optun dealer bowed "be ready at dark tonight" added Wu as the man Wft Kennedy bad begun to get closer vn the trail of Wu and. having dispatched me to Elaine with the wlrelesa telephone, it occurred to him that he might siwnd a few hours profitably sleuthing about Chinatown aeurchlng for ' clues to the serpent lis paused onto by aa eleoUlo light ft v ii nee om ii - T r 8 ha mevad over pole to watch a gangster saunter past. Twice the fellow had walked np and down tli street, and Kennedy, after yeing him narrowly, had fancied that thoro waa something familiar about him. though he could not placo Mm. As the gangster slouched by, he lurched over to tho electric light pole and Ken nedy felt his hand touched by that of the gangster. He ( was more than' sur prised to feel something like a piece of cardboard surreptitiously sKoved Into his hand and be clutched it. Tha gang ster paael, and aa he did so, Kennedy looked after him, then went over and read: "CAPTATN JOHN BRANAIRD, . V. 8. Secret Service." Written underneath the engraved name was, "Follow." Blowly Craig followed. Bralnard en tered a sal'ion ty a side door and seated hlirnelf In a back room. A mo ment later, Kennedy slouched In and sat down at the same tablo. Bralnard nodded and CraJg extended his band quietly. Ho looked about. They were alone. "What brings you down hereT" asked Kennedy In a low tone. . "A big shipment of opium is going to be landed 'tonight and I'm trying to locate the Chinese gang back, of It Think you can help meT" . . "Anything to do with that hop Joint up tho street?" Bralnard nodded. Would it clue possibly to Wu Fang? prove ' "I'll help you," agreed Kennedy. For so vers I minutes they talked lay ing out a plan. Finally they paid the chock and rose to go out. Aa they reached the aide door a Chinaman passed. Kennedy drew Brsinard back, "What's the matter?" whispered tho Secret Service man. "Did you see that Chinaman?" ra- turned Kennedy. "That's Hop Ling. lie ', runs the opium Joint. I think he's worth shadowing." j Keeping discreetly In tho rear of tho j Chinaman, Kennedy and Bralnard fol-; lowed until Hop paused before a ram-; shackle tenement. No sooner had he dis-' appeared Insldo than Craig and Bralnard advanced, careful that they In turn were! noi '"OWed' They entered and went upstalra. At last they came to a dcor outside which! they pauaed to listen. At least two, per haps more, Cblnajuon were talking in aide. 'Can you make oat what they are say ing V asked Bralnard. "Something about birds, returned . I . . " ' wm lner' i viiij i wo. uii. ruin me aoor. i jogemer incy catapulted themselves at tho door and It flew open. Instantly, be- h2L !..n:.Tl -C"i,1 ?.?.V'r ; end Bralnard were on them. One rushed for a window, smashing It with a chair! tn.l Irvln. i tx aul ri i jt v. i .. and helped corner th. other who turned ! out to be Hop IJng. It was the work of I only a moment to snap the bracelets on tha two and cover them with a gun. I "What'a that?" demanded Bralnard, looking at the box In the window, as Kennedy moved over toward It "A pigeon trap. I suspect" Crete 're-'. plied. "Let's wait." j Finally Wu directed one of his men to They sat there for several n-lnutes. Bvl- et f algnal. a flashlight on the end dently the Chlneae had been waiting for of tba Jetty, while he strained his eyes something. Craig felt that watting might ' through the darknesa for some answer pay. lug signal. At last he waa rewarded by the sound I had not reckoned wrong. Far out of a flutter outside. A click followed ; ver the water came an answering signal aa the little door shut trapping the ; 'rom the schooner. pigeon. The signal flag In the room j 'Good!'' exclaimed Wu with aatlafac moved. i tlon, aa he turned and picked his way Kennedy looked at It a moment then carefully opened the door In the back of the trap and aelstd the bird. From the qulH on the leg he 'took a tightly rolled note and read: S P. ii. Will be off Van Dort Jetty In two hours. Gregor . What di It mean? Threats. Impreca tions; nothing could extract a word from the two Impassive riaonera. "Come," ordered Kennedy sharply of Hap Ling, not for a moment let ting- his vexation show In hU fare. "Walk ahead of ma" Two of the gang had been eaptured, but Wu seemed as far away as ever. He marched Hop along sullenly. . while Bralnard kicked the other CrUnamea to hla feet and followed. They did not have far ta get. Baaroely a block away stood a policeman and Craig waived to him. Quickly, Craig produced cards of Wen. ttfUailon and they left their handcuffed prisoners with the understanding that they were to be held until full charges could be made against them. At the first telephone pay station -i v 'f .'5 V"l -:''; fearfully, at far away aa aha could to tha Craig turned In and called up the labora tory to which I had returned. 1 think Tvo got the best clue yet, Walter," he called "You remember Bralnard? Well I want you to meet me at the Battery, where a revenue cutter will be waiting. Bring along that wire less telephone, too. Ion't forget" I hung up the receiver excitedly and tucked the little black box under my arm aa , I hurried out. Elaine had dectdrd to motor down to the country home of one of her friends Who lived on the shore of New Jersey and. accordingly, ae the afternoon called the garage and ordered Johnson to have tho car ready. Johnson was courteoualy on the Job. and when Mare had pecked Elaine's rips. Jennings carried them out an' placed them in the tar. "We'll go over the Staten Island route, across tho Tottenvllla ferry." directed Elaine aa she came out of the house. Johnson touched his hat and a mo ment later the car started. How far they had gone she did not pay much attention. . but sha knew the roads well. They had come to a fork, and Johnson veeered off to the left In stinctively; Elaine knew that th. ,.. hand road waa the more direct, and she touched a little signal that summoned tho driver. i"ing me wrong road." she oauea. "uo to the right." "I think you'll find the roads better this way. Miss Dodge." persisted John son. It was, however, merely a ruso on his part to gain time and give some of Wu's men an opportunity. For, as the car approached the fork, two roughnecks, hidden behind a roi-k In the shrubbery, had been straining their eyes down the road, and at the approach of the car had drawn back closer under cover. Johnson stopped some hundred feet or down the wrong road past the rock In answer to Elaine's signal, As Elaine was becoming vexed at John- iok'i first show of stubbornness, she suddenly felt strong arms circling her, while a huge, very dirty hand pressed with irresistible force over her mouth, She struggled, but It was of no use 'To the Van Port Jettv." growled one roughneck. "They'll be there soon." Qulcklr. inhnmn .w , .i to the lower hav alri. nf , , stead of the New Jersey ferry. e a It was very lata In the afternoon. I did my best to get down to the Battery I with tho wireless telephone to meet Ken. ;ncdy and Bralnard, bot it was dark be fore I got there. j hurried down to the dock. I saw that they had already boarded tho revenue cutter and were waiting 1m Pnv. was a fairly sisable craft j n.uini .i.o .uuani Hnq we rait off. The wind blew in keenly from the bay and we spun down the harbor, keep- 'h""P UOk0U, fr any uc'ou ... Already Wu Fang and a couple of lite "euten,nU nad on down to th" vn ,)ort J",tv- No meaeage had been ro- cetved from Gregor, but they felt sure tnal ne would be there with the schooner. back up the dork, On he went alone until ha came to one of tho deserted manttorui of a generation or two ago, which lined the shore at that point. There In a yard beside it stood Elaine's car, ' "Where la the white girl?" asked Wu, calling Johnson. "In the house, master," replied the mechanician subserviently. "Walt for me here, then," nodded Wu. Wu Fang came In silently and moved over close to her. He said not a word, but an evil smile spread over his sinister faoe as ahe shrank back from htm. , Meanwhile a yawl had put out from tha schooner loaded with cans of the precious contraband drug and had pulled up at the old stone Jetty and dock. Chinamen hastily unloaded It and started up to the house laden with the heavy tlna Aa Wu stood before Elaine, the China men carrying the dope tlna entered and began piling them up In an old closet In the room. At laat they finished put ting It away. "AU la done, master," bowed one who seemed to be lesder. Wu nodded, then turned to Elaine. All 11 . rfm i r porthole. "Go!" he hlaaed. retains: hU finger and pointing to the door. Trembling, she obeyed and Wu Fang and the two toughs followed, one. of the Chinamen picking up her suitcase. Across tho almost untravelled road they forced her, and down on the stone dock, every footstep dogged by Wu and his emis saries. "Get Into the boat," Wu ordered. Bhe climbed down Into the dirty yawl and the Chinaman tossed her sultcsso after her. "If you see that for any reason she is about to escape," added Wu aavagely, "do away with. her.' The yawl tossed up and down on the rough swells ; that came In from the ocean,' as the powerful arms of the sail ors pulled her all through the blacknesg to the schooner. There Elaine was lifted over tho rail and forced across tho deck, down into the murky, lll-amelllng hold. It milt no difference to Gregor whether he carried a cargo of contraband or a white lave. In his gruff voice he bellowed orders for getting under way, while the Chinaman, half pushed Elaine Into a cramped room amidships. He set down tha suitcase and w'th a I grunt and a scowl left' locking tha door and shuffling along tho passageway to a steep flight of steps to the deck. Elaine paced up and down her narrow prison, distracted. Suddenly she pauaed a moment va her eye fell on tho suitcase. There flashed through her mind the message ' had given her from Kennedy. . She) almost seined the suitcase and tore It open with nervous fingers. "Oh-wllI it work-will it work?" she breathed In prayer to herself as she lifted cut tenderly the little wireless telephone. She opened It. pulled np the little orrtals. and pressed the lever. "Hello hello Cralg-hello!" It was her last chance. Would It work? e e e By thla time we had come in the rev enue cutter to the old dock that was known as tha Van Dort -Jetty. Aa we swung around to It. with Ken nedy and Bralnard, I leaped out Wa gesed about hunting- for signs of the opium smugglers. "Bee" I cried. Kennedy bent down, and almost Ike a trained hound, began to follow the prints shoreward. Bralnard Joined us aa wa followed Craig. The footprints led up from the dock to an old, deserted, dilapidated house We paused a moment before it .Just then a door opened and a Chinaman appeared. With a cry he darted back, but wa were at him. There were others inside, too. but they were esstly overpowered. In the room they had keen packing opium tlna,' evidently to be removed to various hop Joints. Prodding the reticent Celestials, we re- Bg-i',',,, IBisaajiiiiujiaTMiLiliJl-.LMtiaiiWIt'.lltW' 1'MFW'RJ-aJHI.MeitwniiMLjgaii. ajjj ..j.my ajiiii j . . , .nan. m minn.ua j3ej HsrploKs off Hiaiime With Edw n Awlen as ; "THE CH1XESK MASTKH CRIMINAL" Hesse Theatre em Theatre SOUTH OT.1AHA 1528,So. 13th St. Every Wednesday Episode No. 20 Today May 30 j Episode No. 22 ..June 2 Best Projection in Ths City lr.&MD Theatre HiGholas" Theatre I 1ElhoruDridanyy Council Bluffs, la. Episode No. 21 Juno 3 Episode No. 15 June 1 D I A 171 0 N DTHEATRE mQME ?(1SatrC Bvery Tneeday. BpUoae sTa. BO, Jnaa 1. LOTH f?OP Thoatro 17t!l a"d y,nton S- 3212 N. 24th Street EpiSOdO NO. 21 JUflC 1 . plsoao we. to, foa. a. j ALAMO THEATRE Ep,,o5o'NHo?n9a Fortstjun j For Bookings; Virite Path. Exchangs lac. 1312 Farnarn St. Omaha Neb- Movirag A DETECTIVE NOVEL AND A MOTION PICTURE DRAMA Presented by Tnls Newspaper in Collaboration With the Famous Pathe Players. traced our steps to the Jetty, Bralnard's men carrying the opium. At the dock we loaded our prisoners and the con traband on 'the cutter. It was plnln that although we had rap tured the dope, the ahlp which had brought It had escaped and. worst of all, Wu had again nlippeil through our fingers. Bralnard gate the order and we left the wharf. As we stood gaxlng from the cap tured opium to the prisoners, Bralnard was visibly elated. "Shake," he said laconically to Craig. Just then a buxs. aa if a bell had rung. startled ua. It was an unexpected that I j ex.lalmed. although the next minute 1 renllxed that It was from the wireless telephone which Craig hsd asked me to bring from the laboratory. Kennedy seised the box, opened It hsatlly, and clapped the little receiver to his ear. "Hello hello yea, this Is Craig. Where are you what?" But at - Cralg'e next words, I myself gasped. "If you can get a light" he almost shouted, 'thrust it out of the porthole to guide us. But we'll find you anyway. Keep up your nerve." . We crowded about him. "Bralnard a pair of glasses quick," he cried dashing to the bow of the cutter, "and full speed down the bay." Briefly, as he swept the horlson ahead, he repeated the tale of Elaine's kid napping. We strained our eyes. "That'a It Bralnard more speed!" cried Craig at last. Far off, almost out on the ocean, we could see a tiny twinkle of light slowly waving back and forth. In her prison, Elaine had talked to Craig, afraid to raise her voice too high. As she heard Kennedy's Instructions, she replaced the rrcelver snd rose quickly to her feet from beside the suit case. She looked about There was a dingy oil lamp suspended from a beam of the deck above. She seised It and ran to the porthole. Back and forth she waved It as far as her arms would permit. As the schooner now slipped along! Gregor, who had left the man at the wheel, was gasing off, not' particularly happy at the prospect of not touching a port for a long time again. Suddenly he became aware of a peculiar, though slight gleam on the water. He leaned over the rail further. Below, and a bit forward of him, he could catch a glimpse of a light moving along the ride 'of the boat. - "Confound that wench!" ho muttereel In a 'sudden fury, turning and seizing up a boat hook lying on deck. liaising It, he leaned far over the rail. Then he brought the boat hook down suddenly on the lamp, smashing It Into a thousand bits as they hissed into the water. Elaine drew back in horror. In her hand waa merely the handle of the lamp. It seemed as If her last hope had been blasted. "Cap'n look over the stern to port" cried one of the men on watch. "It's a revenue cutter," growled Gregor. lowering his glass after a quick scrutiny of the mysterious craft. "Crowd on more sail start the auxiliary motor." He volleyed forth his orders hoarsely. Instantly the deck was In an uproar. For the moment, In their anxiety to es cape, they . seemed to have forgotten Elaine all except the Chinaman who had been set to guard her. Silently he drew from his blouse a knife and slipped down the companionway. i Elaine heard him pause at the door aa he looked again at his knife. Then tho lock turned. The door creaked. But she had propped a chair well and it held. Tho Chinaman at the door redoubled his efforts. He seized v fire axe hang ing nearby and attacked the door with that, hacking furiously. One after another, the table, a cheat, everything 'movable, Elaine piled up against the door as It splintered. But It was of no use. She moved over fearfully, as far away as ahe could to the porthole, and looked at the black water, as ahe leaned far out then up at the deck only a few feet above her. The door crushed In. The Chinaman, infuriated, caught Just a glimpse of her through the porthole, turned and rushed for the stairway. In the commotion, Elaine had actually come over the rail unobserved. But she Pictures- , know that ahe could not be that waj I Ion; Jut then the maldencd face of tha Chinaman appenred at the hntch. A moment later his lithe body wormed H eelf out on deck. As he came nearer. Klalne retrested further toward Gregor. "Oh sir,'' ahe pleaded, "save me! I have done nothing!" Grrtror, one eye on the approaching revenue cutter, the other on his ship and crew, had not seen her till then. "Get out of the way," he growled, roiiRrhly pushing her aside. "Save your self." The Ch'naman came a step nearer. 1 P'ld. 8he Hed alon- tne dark. i iif-re in me anroims was a maaer. in desperation, she seised a rung, swung heraelf around, and started up. Her relentless pursuer followed, hand over hand, clenching the knife In his forth. The're waa no eacnpe. A moment ahe trembled aloft. Then from a crosatree, she jumped, diving far out Into the water. The China man followed. Hand over hand he churned the waves after her. a a We were now nearing a low raklah craft. Though we signalled It. they paid no attention. Instead, we could hear the chug-chug of an auxiliary gas engine. Bralnard sent a shot across the schooner's bow. Still It did not stop. In stead, the top sails broke out in splta of the gale and It headed away faster. Another shot flashed out from our gun. Thla tlmo a spar waa carried away, as the searchlight playing on the schooner clearly showed. We were rapidly gaining now. "Brainard-stop firing for heaven's ake," shouted Craig from the bow. "Look!" AVe followed his finger as he peered forward tensely. There In the rigging, hanging perilously, was Maine. She was standing there holding a Chinaman at bay. Suddenly we saw her draw herself up and deliberately dive Into the waters The Chinaman eived also. Hand over hand he went after her. We watched, speech leas. Kennedy turned and selxed the rapid fire gun. whirling it around and aiming carefully. The Chinaman was a powerful swim mer and was rapidly gaining on Blaine. We could even see the gleam of the knife In the searchlight Carefully, Craig sighted the gun. The mistake of a hair's breath meant life or death. Not a minute too soon the shot rlcochetted over the waved The China man's arms went up In mute surrender. His head sank below the surface of the water. Instantly, Craig and I were leaning far over the side of the cutter as, with power off. she slipped along, close to that figure swimming in the cold, black., water. Neither of ua paid any attention to Gregor'a frantic signals of surrender aa Bramard covered the achooner. As we passed, Craig reached over and caught Elame, lifting her bodily into our boat "Oh, Craig!" she gasped, as Kennedy, wrapped his greatcoat about her. "Bralnard some hot drinks quck," he ordered as he carried her, half fainting, to the cabin. "Thank heaven for the wireless tele phone," he muttered as he worked franti cally to bring her around. "No it was the inventor that did It," she murmured, looking up at him, safe. (To Be Continued.) . The M retina;. It was the first time they had met. Save for a gray, overcast sky, and heavy rain or snow, the day was perfeot. He came along rapidly, as waa his wont, looking neither to the right nor the left, but gawping at the sky like a rube. Much more slowly, she approached from the opposite direction, walking daintily, as usual. She saw him. "How handsome he 1st" she thought. "How big and bold and strong looking! And how rapidly he moves!" , But If he aaw her he gave no sign. A little bird hovered in the air far above. "He seems In such a hurry!" she sighed. And, really, he was going some. It waa then, for the first and last time, they met. The little nanny goat went aalling over a picket fence with a hurt look on her piquant face, while the Fast Mall for New York sped onwards. Detroit Free Press. 4 'f .1 V 1