MW7VW rmet t-m wmwwn n-TiyjB-" EVEIsTtfG LEDGER-lPmLADELPHTA, SATURDAY, JULY 15, 191G. T by EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS AUTHOR OF THE TARZANandMARS STORIES IBsEgiiI5K I loll- lr 1 i r t IfiM.. HJl V , A KA I U I. ! i" n tMmf i M?Xi IVj TvflLsVNKdSil&iBr-r "4flMv ' r CHAPTER I In Chicago BILLY BYItNE was a product of the streets and alleys of Chicago's great West Sldo. From Halsted to Bobcy and from Grand avenue to Lake street there was scarce a bartender whom Billy know not by his first name. And, In proportion to their number, which Is considerably less, ha know tho patrolmen and plnln-clothos mon equally well but not so pleasantly. His kindergarten education had com menced In an alley back of a feed storo. Hero a gang of older boys and mon waro wont to congrcgato at such times as they had nothing olso to occupy tholr time. As the Bridewell was tho only placo In which they over held Jobs for moro than two consecutlvo days, they had considerable time to devoto to congregating. They wero pickpockets and second-story men. mado and In the making. AH wero muckers, ready to Insult tho rtrst woman who passed, or pick n quarrel with any stranger who did not appear too burly. By night they piled their real vocations. By day they sat In tho alley behind tho feed storo and drank beer from a bat tered tin pall. Tho question of labor Involved In trans porting tho pall, empty, to tho saloon across the street and returning It, full, to tho alley back of tho feed storo was sotvod by tho presenco of admiring and onvlous llttto boys of the neighborhood, who hung wlde-ayed and thrilled about theso horoC3 of their childish lives. Billy Byrne, at 'six, wan rushing tho can for this noblo band, and Incidentally pick ing up his knowledge of lifo and tho rudl monts of his education. Ho gloried In tho knowledge that ho was personally ac quainted with "Eddlo" Welch, and that with his own ears ho had heard "nddle" tell the gang how ho stuck up a guy on West Lake street, within 60 yards of tho 28th pre cinct police station. Tho kindergarten period lasted until Billy was ten; then ho commenced "swiping" brass faucets from vacant buildings and celling them to a fonco who ran a junk shop on Lincoln street, near Klnzle. From this man ho, obtained the hint that graduated him to higher things, so that at IS he was robbing freight cars In the yards along Klnzlo btreet. It was about this same tlmo that ho commenced to find pleasure In tho feel of his fist against tho jaw of a follow man. He had his boyish scraps with his follows off and on ever since he could remember; but his first real fight camo when he was 12. He had had an altercation with an crstwhllo pal over the division of tho returns from some freight-car booty. The gang was all present, and as words quickly gave placo to blows, as they havo a habit of doing In certain sections of tho West Sldo, the man and boys formed a rough ring about tho contestants. Th,o battle- was a long one. The two were rolling about In tho dust of the alley quite as often as they wero upon their feet exchanging blows. l There was nothing fair nor decent nor scientific about their methods. They gouged and bit and tore. They used knees and elbows and feet, and but for the timely presenco of a brickbat beneath his Angers at the psychological moment, Billy Byrno 1 would havo gone down to humiliating i dofeat. As It was the other boy wont down; and for a week Billy remained Chidden by ono of tho gang pending the report from the hospital. 1 When word came that the patient would e, Billy felt an lmmenso load lifted from s shoulders, for ha dreaded arrest and Axrlence with the law that ho had hrned from childhood to deride and hate. course, there was the loss of prestige hat would naturally have accrued to htm could he have been pointed out as "tho guy that croaked Sheehan ;" but there Is always p. fly In the ointment, and Billy only sighed and came out of his temporary retirement. I The battle started Billy to thinking, and the result of that mental activity was a determination to team to handle his mitts I scientifically people of the West Bide do not have hands; they are equipped by ( nature with mitts and dukes. A few have I paws and flippers. I For several years he had no opportunity to realize his 'new aream ; out wnen ne was about 17 a neighbor's Bon surprised his little world by suddenly developing from an unknown teamster Into a locally famous lightweight. The young man had never been nfflUated with the gang, as his escutcheon was defiled with a record of steady employment So Billy had known nothing of the sparring lessons his neighbor had taken, or of the work he had done at the downtown 'gymnasium of Larry Hllmore, Now, It happened that while the new 'lightweight was unknown to the charmed circle of the gang, Billy knew him fairly well by reason of the proximity of their respective parental back yards, and so when tfthe glamour of pugilistic success haloed the young man, Billy lost no time In basking In the light of his reflected glory. He saw much of his new hero all the following winter. He accompanied him to many mills, and on one glorious occasion occupied a position In (he coming champion's corner. When the prize-fighter toured, Billy con- tinued to hang around Hilmore's place, running errands and doing odd Jobs the while, and almost unconsciously he picked up pugllstlo lore and absorbed the spirit of the game along with the rudiments and fine points of Its science.' Then his ambition changed. Once he had longed to shine as a gunman; now he was determined to become a prize-fighter. But the old gang still saw much of him, and he was a familiar figure about the saloon corner along Grand avenue and Lake street. Purlng this period Billy neglected the boxcars on Klnzle street, partly because ha felt that he was fitted for more dignified -employment, and also for the fact that the "railroad company had doubled the number of watchmen In the yards. But there were limes when he felt the old yearning for ex citement and adventure, fhese time were usually coincident with an acute financial depression on Billy's change pocket. Then he would fare forth in the, tlU watch of the night with a cnupia of boon companion and roll a souse or iick up swvm- Jt wa upon en occasion of this nature that an vn occurred which Ws fated. f later t harge the entire course of Billy n Lyr w if e, Vpoa tha West Side the oWr gacgi ure Jealous of tho sanctity of their own terri tory. Outsiders do not trespass, with Im punity. From Halstead to Robey, nnd from Lake to Grand, lay tho broad hunting preserves of Kelly's gang, to which Billy had bren almost born, one might say. Kelly owned tho feed store back of which tho gang had loafed for years, and though himself n respectable business man, his namo had been attached to tho pack of hoodlums who held forth nt his back door as the easiest means of locat ing and identifying its members. Tho pollco and citizenry of this great territory were tho natural enemies and prey of Kelly's gang, but as tho kings of old pro tected the deer of tholr great forests from poachers, so IOlly's gang felt It Incumbent upon them to safeguard for themselves tho lives nnd property which they considered theirs by dlvlno right It Is doubtful that they thought of the matter In Just this way, but the effect was tho samp, And so It was that as Billy Byrno wended homeward nlono In the wco hours of tho morning after emptying tho cash drawer of old Schneider's saloon and locking tho weep ing Schneider Into his own Ico box, ho was deeply grieved nnd angered to sco rank outsiders from Twelfth Street beating Patrolman Stanley Lasky with his own baton, tho while they simultaneously strovo to kick In liln ribs with their heavy boots. Now, Lasky was no friend of Billy Byrne's, but tho oillccr had been born nnd raised In the district nnd wa3 attached to tho Twenty-eighth precinct station on Lako Street nenr Ashland Avenue, and so was part and parcel of tho natural possession of tho gang. Billy felt that It was entirely ethical to beat up a cop, provided you con fined your efforts to thoso of your own dis trict, but for a bunch of yaps from south of Twelfth Street to attempt to pull oft any such coarse work In his bailiwick why. It was unthinkable 1 A hero nnd rescuer of less experience than Hilly Byrno would have rushed mel odramatically Into tho midst of tho fray, and In all probability havo had his face pushed completely through tho back of his head, for tho guys from Twelfth Street wero not of tho rnh-rnh-boy typo of hood lum they wero Bad men, with an upper caso B. So Bill crept Btcalthtly along In tho shad ows until ho was qulto closo to them, nnd behind them On tho way he had gathered up n cuto little grnnlto paving block, than which thcro Is nothing In tho world harder, not ocn n Twelfth Street skull. Ho was quite closo now to ono of tho men him who was wielding the olllcer's club to such excellent disadvantage for tho olllcer. Ho raised the paving block only to lower t silently and suddenly upon tho back of that unsuspecting head "and then thcro wero two." Before tho man's companions had realized what had happened Billy had possessed him self of tho fallen club nnd struck ono of them a blinding, staggering blow across tho eyes. Then number three pulled hl3 gun and fired polntblank at Billy. Tho bullot toro through his left shoulder. It would havo sent a moro highly organ ized and nervously Inclined man to tho pavement, but Billy was nolthcr highly or ganized nor nervously inclined, so that about tha only Immediate effect It had upon him wan to mako him mad. Before ho had boon but peeved peoved at tho rank crust that had permitted theso cheap skates from south of Twelfth street to work his terri tory. Thoroughly aroused, Billy was a wonder. From n long lino of burly nncestors ho had Inherited tho phystquo of a prlzo bull. From earliest childhood ho had fought al ways unfairly, so that ho knew nil tho tricks of street fighting. During tho last year thero had been added to Billy's nntural fighting ability and Instinct a knowledge of the scientific end of tho sport Tho result wns something appalling to tho gang from Twelfth street Before that gink could pull the trigger again h(s gun hnd been wrenched from his hand and (lung ncross tho street, nnd he was down on tho grnnlto, with a hand as hard as the paving block scrambling his facial attractions beyond hopo of repair. By this tlmo Patrolman Lasky had stag gered to his feet, and most opportunely at that; for yie man whom Billy had dazed with the club was recovering. Lasky promptly put him to sleep with the butt of tho gun that he had been unable to draw when first attacked, then he turned to assist Billy. But It was not Billy who needed assist ance It was the gentleman from Bohemia. With difficulty Lasky dragged Billy from hla prey. "Leave enough of him for the Inquest," pleaded Lasky, When the wagon arrived Billy had dis appeared, but LaBky had recognized him, and thereafter tho two nodded pleasantly to one another upon such occasions as they chanced to meet upon tho street Two years elapsed beforo the event transpired which proved a crisis In Billy's life, During this period dils existence had been much the same as before, lie had collected what was coming to him from, careless nnd less muscular citi zens. Hehad helped stick up a half dozen saloons. Ho had robbed the night men In two elevated stations, and for a while had been upon the payroll of a certain ward boss and done Btrong-arm work for $25 a week. By day he was a general utility man iifTtfrim;:rtmiiftiafl?s "Orders is out to get you, and if I bout Larry Hilmore's boxing academy, and time and time again Hllmore urged him to quit drinking and live straight, for he saw In the young giant the makings of a great heavyweight But Billy couldn't leave the booze alone, and so the best that be got was an occasional five-spot for ap pearing in preliminary bouts with third and fourth rate heavies and has-beens. Vet during the three year that be had hung about Hl'more' he bad acquired an envl able knowledge of the manly art of self defense. On th night that thing really began to happen in the life of BUly Byrne, that estimable gentleman was lolling in front of a saloon at th? corner ox j-aae ma juivey. '.fUe dips hat congr ated nightly jhese. BBTTBnTBmmirr "-"' ' iiKimmt mhhiuimtu.i u.mm...i..,il , .l ;-rr-mr,.-,v m . in uL..i,..L.i.ij jiii.miJtunmilffll1 II1 IH HHWTrTi. ..1IIL -'TTrai -J "Avast, there," under the protection of tho powerful poli tician who owned tho placo wore commenc ing to nssomblo. Billy knew them all, and nodded to them as they passed him. Ho noted surprise In the faces of several ha they saw him standing there. He won dered what It meant nnd determined to ask tho next man wl)o evinced oven muto wonderment at his presenco what wns eat ing him. Then Billy saw n harness bull strolling toward him from tho east It was Lasky. When Lasky saw Billy he. too, opened his eyes In surprise, and when he camo quite closo to tho mucker he whispered something to him, though ho kept hlB eyea straight nhead as though ho had not seen Billy, at all. In deference to tho whispered request Billy presently strolled around tho corner toward Walnut street, but at the alley back of the saloon ho turned suddenly In. A hundred yards up tho alley he found Lasky In the shadow of a telephone pole. "Wotlnoll are you doln' around hero?" asked tho patrolman. "Didn't you know thot Sheehan had peached?" Two nights beforo old man Schneider, goaded to desperation by the repeated raids upon his cash drawer, had shown light whpit he had again been Invited to elevate his were you I'd beat it, nnd beat it quick," hands, and tha hold-up men had shot bun through the heart Sheehan had been ari rested on suspicion. Billy had not been with Sheehan that night. As a matter of fact, he never had trained with him, for, ' ce the boyish bat tie that the two had waged, there had al ways been lll-feellns between them. But with Lasky's words BUly knew what had happened. "Sheehan eaya I done It, eht" he ques tioned. "That's what h eaya" "Why, I wasn't within a rolls of Shnel der'a that bight" protested BUly- jThe Ueut thinks different." said Lasky Hel be only to. glad to. eoajt yo, for f. jroae always been Voo slids hj get jslekea. I cried tho captain, and ho swung tho heavy before. Orders Is out to get you, and if I was you I'd beat It, and beat it quick. I don't havo to tell you why I'm handing you this, but It's nil 1 can do for you Now, tnko my tip and slide, though you'll have to go soma to mako your getaway now excry guy on tho force has got your pedigree." Hilly turned without a word and walked east In tho alley toward Lincoln Mrcct In Lincoln .Mrcct Billy wulkcil north to Kln zle. Here ho entered the railroad yards. An hour Inter ho was bumping out of town townrd tha West on a fast freight. Thrco weeks later he found himself in Frisco. Ho had no money, hut tho methods that had so often replenished his depleted ox chequer at home ho folt would bervo the samo purpose hero. Being unfamiliar with Frisco, Billy did not know where best to work. But when, by accident, he stumbled upon a street whero thero wero many ealoons whoso p.i trons were obviously seafaring i on, ho was distinctly elated. What could bo better for his purposes than a drunken tailor'.' Ho entered one of the taloona and stood watching a game of cards, or thus ho seemed to bo occupied. As n matter of fact, his eyes ucio constantly upon tho alert, roving about the room to wheroxer a man was In the net of paying for a round o! drinks, that ft fat wallet might bo located. Presently one that tilled him with long ing rewarded his careful watch. The man was sitting at a table a rhort distance from Billy. Two other men were with him As he paid tho waiter from a well-Ailed pocketbook ho looked up to meet Billy's eyes With a drunken smilo he beckoned to the mucker to Join them. BUly felt that fate was overklnd to hltn. and he lojt no time in heeding her call. A moment later ho was sitting at the table with tho three bailors, and had ordered a drop of redeye. The stranger, who was cross-eyed to a marked degree, was very lavish In his en tertainment Ha scarcely waited for Billy to drain one glass before he ordered an other, and once after Billy had left the table for a moment he found a fresh drink awaiting him when he returned his host had already poured. It for hltn. It was this last drink thut did the busi ness. CHAPTER II The Half moon WHEN Billy opened his eyes again he could not recall, for the Instant, ery much of his Immediate past. At last he remembered, with painful regret, the drunken sailor It had been hla Intention to roli He felt deeply chagrined that his right ful prey should have escaped hUn. Ho couldn't understand how It had happened. "This Frisco booze must be something fierce I" thought pilly. His head ached frightfully, and ha was very sick. So elcl$ that the room In whleh he )ay seemed to be rising and falling In a horribly realistic, manner. Every time It dropped it brought, Billy's stomach nearly to his mouth.' BUly shut his eyfs. StUl the awful sen sation. BUly groaned. He had never been so sick In all bis life before, and my. how his poor head dur hurt) Finding that U seemtd only to make matters worse when he ctaMd his vy3. Jiilly ,ppene4 ttiew uKatn, 'uq lsS.Kti ubjut ttw room in wnuit'oe stick ho usually carried full upon tho lay. Ho found it a stuffy holo filled with bunks In tiers thrcc-decp around tho sides. In tho centro of tho room was a tablo. Abovo tho tablo a. lamp hung suspcu'ed from ono of tho wooden benms of tho celling. Tho lamp arrested Billy's attention. It was bwlnglng back and forth rather vio lently. Tills could not bo nn hallucination. Tho room might seem to bo rising and falling, but that lamp could not socm to bo swing ing around In any such manner If it wero not really and truly swinging. Ho couldn't account for It. Again ho shut his eyes for a moment. When ho opened them to look again nt tho lamp ho found that It still swung as beforo. Cautiously ho slid from his bunk to tho floor. It was with difficulty that he kept his feot. Still that might bo but tho ef fects of the liquor. At last ho reached the tablo, to which ho clung for support while he extended ono hand toward tho lamp. Thero was no longer any doubt. The lamp was beating back and forth like the clapper of n great bell ! Where was ho? Billy sought a window. Ho found borne llttlo round glass-covered i ules near tho low ceiling nt one side of tho room. It was only at the greatest risk to life and limb that he managed to crawl on oil fours to one of them As he straightened up and glanced through he was appalled at the sight that met his oyes. As far oh he could see there vas nothing but a tumbling waste of water. Then the truth of wtiat had happened to him broko upon his understanding. "An I was goin' to roll that guy I" he muttered in helpless bewilderment "I was u k'oln' to roll him, and now look here wot ho's done to mu I" At that moment a light appeared above as tho hatch was raised, and BUly saw the feet anil legs of a large man descending the Udder from aboe. When the new. comer reached the floor and turned to look about his eyes met Billy's, and Billy saw that it was his host of the previous eve ning. "Well, my hearty, how goes It?" asked tho stranger. "You pulled It off pretty slick," said Billy. "What do you mean?" asked the other with a frowp. "Come off," said Billy j "you know what I mean." "Look here," replied the other coldly, "Don't you ferget that I'm mate of this ship, an that you want to speak respectful to me f you ain't lookin' fer trouble. My name's Mr. Ward, an' when you speak to me say 'sir.' Understand?" Billy scratched his head and blinked his eyes. He had neer before been spoken to In any such fashion at least not since he had put on the avoirdupois of man hood. Ills head ached horribly, and he was s(k to hla stomach frightfully sick. His mina was more upon bis physical suf fering than upon what the mute was saying, so that quite a perceptible Interval of time elapsed before the true, dimensions of the affront to his dignity commenced to per colate Into the befogged and patn-racked convolutions of his brain. The mate thought that his bliuter had bluffed, the new band. That was what he had come below to accomplish. Ex perience had taught htm that an early lessouftn discipline and subordination saved unplefjant encounters in the future. Hi also tiad learned that there. 14 no better ttme fu put across a UuJX of pu ntura back of Billy's head. than when the victim is suffering from the after-effects of whisky and a drug. Men tality, vitality nnd courago are then at their lowest ebb. A bravo man often Is reduced to tho pitiful condition of a ellow dog when nausea sits astride his stomach. But the mate was not acquainted with Billy Byrno of Kelly's gang. Billy's brain was befuddled, so that It took soma time for an Idea to wiggle its way through, but his courago was all there, and all to tho good. BUly was a mucker, n hoodlum, n gang ster, u thug, a tough. Whon he fought his methods would have brought 11 flush of shame to tho face of his batanlc majesty. He had hit oftener from behind that from before. He had always taken every ad vantage of size and weight and numbers that ho could call to his assistance. He was an Insulter of girls and women. He was a barroom brawler and a saloon corner loafer. Ho was all that was dirty and mean and contemptible and cowardly In the eyes of a brau man; and yet, notwithstanding all this. Billy Hyrno was no coward. Ho wa3 what he was because of training and en vironment He knew no other methods no other code. Whatever tho meager ethics of his kind he would have Ihed up to them to tho death. Ho had never squealed on a pal, and he had never left a w ounded friend to fall Into tho hands of the enemy, the police. Nor had he ever let a man speak to htm as the mate had spoken, and get away with it, und so, while he did not act as quickly as would have been his wont had his balu been clear, he did act But the Intei al of time had led tli mute Into an erroneous conception of Its cause, and into a further rash show of authority, and had thrown him ott his guard as well. "What you need," said the mute, ad tanclng toward Billy, "Is a bash of the beezer. It'll help you remember that you ain't nothln' but a dirty landlubber, an' when Jour betters come around ou'll " What Billy would hae done In the presence of his bettois remained still-born In the mate's Imagination in the face of what Billy really did do to his better, as that worthy swung a sudden, vidou3 blow at the mucker's face, Billy Byrne had not been scrapping with third and fourth rate hedvles and sparring with real, live ones for nothing The mate's fist whistled through empty air, the blear eyed hunk of clay that had seemed such easy prey to him was metamorphosed on the instant into an alert, cat-like bundle of steel sinews, and Billy Byrne swung that awful right with the pile driver weight that eten the Big Smoke himself had acknowledged respect far. straight to the short ribs of his antagonist With a screech of surprise and pain the mate cvumpled In the far corner of the forecastle, rammed half way beneath a bunk by the force of the terrtflo blow. Like a tiger BUly Byrne was after blm, and dragging the man out into the centro of the floor space, he beat and mauled him until his victim's -yolla echoed through the hip from stem, to stern. , When the captain, followed by halt a dozen seamen, rushed down the ceropanion way he found BUly sitting astride - the prostrate form of the mate. His great fingers circled the mans throat, and with mighty blows he was dashing the feUow'a head against the bard floor. Another moment and murder would have been complete ' Avast there '" cried the captain, and as though, to punctuate fcti wtcark. Jia gvnmB the heavy Bttck he usually carried full upon the back of Billy's head, It was that blow that saved the mate's life, for when Billy came to he found him self In a dark and smelly hole, chained nnd padlocked to a stanchion. They kept Billy there for n week, but every day tho captain visited him In an attempt to show him the error of his way. Tha medium UBcd by the skipper for Im pressing his Ideas of discipline upon Billy was the largo, hard stick. At Iho end of tho week It Was necessary to carry Billy above to keep the rat from devouring him, for the continued beating nnd starvntlon had reduced him to little moro than an unconscious mass of raw bleeding meat "There." remarked the skipper, as he viewed his work by tho light of day, "I guess that fellow'll know his place next tlmo an officer an' a gentleman speaks to him," That BUly survived Is one of the hitherto unrecorded miracles of the power of matter over mind. A man of Intellect of Imagin ation a being of nerves would have suc cumbed to shock alone, but Billy was not as these Ho slmoly lay still and thoughtless, except for half-formed Ideas of revenge, until nature, unaided, built up what the captain had so ruthlessly torn down. Ten dnjs after they brought him up from the hold Billy waa limping about the deck of the Halfmoon doing light manual labor. From the other sailors aboard he learned that ho was not the only member of the crow who had been shanghaied. Aside from a halfdozen reckless men from tho criminal classes who had signed volun tarily, cither because they could not get .a berth upon a decent ship or desired to flit as quietly from tho law zone of the united States ns possible, not a man was there who ( had been signed regularly. They were as tough and vicious a lot as fate had over forcgathored In one forecastle, nnd with them Billy Byrne felt perfectly nt home. His early threats of awful ven gennco to bo wreaked upon the mate and skipper had subsided with tho rough but sensible advice of his messmates. Tho mate, for his part, gave no Indication of harboring the nssault that Billy had mads upon him other than to assign the most dangerous or dlsagreeablo duties of the ship to tho mucker whenever It was possible to do so, but tho result of this was to hasten Billy's nautical education, nnd keep him In excellent physical trim. All traces of alcohol had long sines vanished from the young man's pystem HIs face showed the effects of hl3 enforced abstemiousness In a marked degree. Tha red, puffy, blotchy complexion had given way to clear, tanned skin; bright eyes supplanted tho bleary, bloodshot things that had given tho bestial expression to his face In tho past. His features, always regular and strong, had taken on a peculiarly refined dignity from the salt air, the clean life, nnd tho dangerous occupation of the deep-sea sailor, that would have put Kelly's gang to a pinch to hnvo recognized tholr erstwhllo crony had he suddenly appeared In their midst In tho alley back of the feed store on Grand avenues. With tho now lifo Billy found himself tnklng on a new character. He surprised himself singing at his work he, whoso wholo life up to now hnd been devoted to dodging honest labor, whoso motto had been: "Tho world owes me a living, and it's up to mo to collect It" Also, ho was surprised to discover that ho liked to work, that he took keen pride In striving to outdo the men who worked, with him. nnd this spirit, despite the sua. plclon which tho captain entertained f, Billy since tho episode of the forecastle, went far to making his life more endurabls on board the Halfmoon, for workers such as the mucker developed Into are not to bs sneezed at, and though ho had little Idea of subordination, it was worth putting up with something to keep him in condition to work. ... j It was this lino of reasoning that saved Billy's skull on ono or two occasions when his Impudence had been sufficient to havo provoked the skipper to n personal assault upon him under ordinary condltlonsvSqulnt Kye Ward, having tasted orBUly's medicine once, had no craving for another encounter with him that would entail personal con flict. Tho entire crew was made up of ruffians and unhung murderers, but Skipper Slmms had had little experience with Beamen of any other Ilk, so he handled them rough shod, using his horny fist and the short heavy stick that he habitually carried. In lieu of argument. But with the exception of Billy the men all had served before tha mast In the past, so that a ship's discipline was to a certain measure Ingrained In them all. Enjoying his work, the life was not an unplensant one for the mucker. The men of tho forecastle were of the kind he haft always known there was no honor among; them, no virtue, no kindliness, no decency. With them Billy was at home h scarcely missed the old gang. He made his friends among them, and his enemies. He picked quarrels, as had been his way sines childhood. His science and hla great strength, together with his endless stock of underhand tricks brought him out of each encounter with fresh laurels. Presently he found it difficult to pick a fight his messmates had had enough of 1.1m They left him severely alone. These battles, often bloody, engendered no deep-seated hatred In the hearts of the defeated. They were part of the day's work and play of the half brutes that Skipper Slmms had gathered together. There was only one man aboard whom Billy really hated. That was the passenger, Divine: and Billy hated him, not because of anything that the man had Bald or done to Billy, for he had never even so much as spoken to the mucker, but because of the fine rtothea and superior air which marked him plainly to Billy a a member of that loathed element of society a gentleman. Billy hated everything that was respect able. He had hated the smug, self-satisfied merchants of Grand avenue. He had writhed n spirit at sight of every shiny, purring automobile that had ever passed him with Its load of well-groomed men and women A clean, stiff collar was to Billy as a red rag to a bulb Cleanliness, success, opulence, decency spelled bu ons thing to BUly physical weakness ; and he hated physical weakness. His idea of Indicating strength and man liness lay In displaying a much of brutality and uncouthness as possible. To assist a woman over a raudhole would have seemed to Billy an acknowledgment of pusillanimity: to stick out his foot and trip her so that she cprawled full length In It, the hall-mark of bluff manliness. And so he hated, with all the strength, of a strong nature, the Immaculate, couiv teous well-bred man who paced the deck; each day smoking a fragrant cigar alter bis meals. Inwardly he wondered what the ,dde was doing on board such a vessel as the Halfmoon, and marveled that 0 weak a thing dared venture among real men. Billy's contempt caused him to nqttcs Divine more than he would have been ready to, admit He w that the man's fac3 was handsome, but that there was an unpleasant shiftiness to his brown eyes. Then, entirely outside of hla former rea sons for bating the man. Billy m to loathe him Intuitively, a oaf who was not td be trusted. HfSiip Continued in Monday's attkjj