SYNOPSIS James Lambert tries in vain to dissuade his beautiful foster-daughter Leonora from marrying Don Mason, young ‘‘rolling stone, whom he likes but of whom he disapproves according to his conventional business-man standards. He tells her, ‘Unless a house is founded upon a rock, it will not survive Leonora suspects the influence of her half- brother Ned, always jealous of the girl since the day his father brought her home from the deathbed of her mother, aban- doned by her Italian baritone lover. Don arrives in the midst of the argument, CHAPTER I—Continued Le “I've a clean bill cf health, sir. When I was a kid of nineteen and carried a message from a wonder- ful English girl who had stayed at home because she was going to have a baby, to her husband sta- tioned in China (a man, by the way, whom you'd have been proud to introduce to Nora), and found the fellow living with—Well, I won't go into details; but it gave me a jolt which wasn't easy to forget. I've rubbed elbows with a lot that’s sor- did, Mr. Lambert, but I've hurt no woman. Balance that, please, against my depleted bank account.” “Well, Daddy?” Nera prodded after a moment. “This is all very well,”’ responded James, ‘‘all very commendable; but it doesn’t change the financial as- pect of the case. Suppose,’ he said, turning to Don, ‘‘suppose you per- suade this girl of mine to marry you. What assurance can you give me that, unless I continue to sup- port her, she won't during the next hardship?” “Only this,” said Don, and held up two strong, browned fists. It was an argument more eloquent than words, but the older man re- fused to see it. For a moment there was a silence of the crackling fire and rain beat- ing against a window at the far end of the big room. Then James said quickly, as if to get it over: “I sup- pose you know that Nora is not my daughter—I should say, my legal daughter?” Don nodded. “What he means, Don,” explained Nora, throwing a perfectly amicable glance to James, *‘‘is that I'm not entitled to one penny of the Lam- bert fortune mind, darling, tactful chance fully.” “I'm still here,” eyes smiling at her. Watching the young people, James stirred uneasily. “Nora misunderstood me,” went on. ‘‘She often does, though 1 think she knows I wouldn't be un- Just to her. If at my death her brother inherits more than she does, it’s not because I adopted him le- gally when 1 married his mother, but because he's helped build up the business I started as a youngster. What I referred to was—See here, Nora, suppose you leave me alone with this young man.” A laugh of merriment bubbled from Leonora. ““Poor Father! You can’t get used Dad's giv to vamoose g you a grace- said Don, story, darling: how when you went at the call of my poor, dying, de- serted mother and found me, a gangling six-year-old whose birth record named you as my father, you took me home and treated me ex- actly as if I were your own, though you knew, with no shadow of a doubt that I was the child of—"" “Leonora!” She raised her head, meeting his shocked eyes gravely. “Well, Dad, it's true, isn't it? 1 had to tell him. Don knows what an angel you've been to me, and that I'd do anything on earth for you short of giving him up. You really shouldn't ask me to do that, you know.” ‘““Not when I believe it’s for your own happiness?’ asked James, Then, as the girl shook her head, he added: “Well, clear out, both of you. I've got to think things over. Clear out.” CHAPTER Nl It was long past midnight when James Lambert went upstairs. “Thinking things over’ had been a devastating process that led him back to his first amazing glimpse of Leonora, her thin little legs dangling forlornly from a straight-backed, uncomfortable chair beside a bed on which lay the body of her mother. He had come in answer to a fran- tic telegram, the first word Iris had vouchsafed him since the note he had found after she went away. But he was too late, She had been dead almost three hours; and ever since (the woman who ran the rooming house said afterwards), the child had sat there, refusing to move, to eat, to cry, holding tight in one small, clenched fist a scrap of paner which she had promised her mother to give to ‘‘the dear, kind father” who was coming for her, and to no one else. James never forgot the shock of Nora's presence in that silent room. While he stood below on a sagging, littered porch, the landlady had told him that his wife ‘“was gone, poor soul,” but because he was expected “the body’’' had not been removed; and added, remembering the little girl: “She's in the fourth-floor-back, Mister, and if you don't mind I won't go up. My heart's not good and them stairs is something aw- ful.” James did not want her to go up. He was about to look upon the face of his dead wife, the woman who had betrayed him, but whom he had never forgotten nor ceased to love. He was vastly stirred—stirred and horrified that she had been living in so sordid a place. he had pictured her sharing a life of luxury with her Italian lover—had even attend- ed the man's concerts in the futile hope of catching a glimpse of his beloved amid the audience. It was plain now that the fellow had de- serted her—damn him!—left her to die in poverty and among stiran- gers... Ascending those steep and narrow stairs, James Lambert's heart pounded with indignation. His whole form trembled as he stepped into the gloomy room. Out of deference to the dead a shade at its one small window had been partly low- ered, and, closing the door, he stood for a long moment with his back against it, breathing heavily. So this was where his adored Iris had lived—and died! The man’s sad eyes dragged slowly around the place, avoiding instinctively the bed where lay all that was left of some- God, what The dim light could not hide what seemed to James its dreadful poverty: the broken win- dow stuffed with an old skirt; the sagging bureau propped with a block of wood; the shabby rug, a small, mute pair of shoes beside a chale , . . His stricken glance came to the bed at last, and seeing that rigid sheet, hard tears that had been suppressed for seven years, suddenly blinded him. More shaken than seemed possible after hand, he saw-Nora! Wholly unprepared for her pres- ence, even for her existence, James was for the moment without speech; but something about the patient, drooping figure—the soft, gold hair like that of his lost Iris, gripped him strangely. He came still nearer, ing eyes. “Whose—whose little you?” he questioned, knew the answer. “Mamma’s,” said Nora looked up wearily. “Are you father—the dear, kind father who's going to take me—home?"’ *“She told you that?” he asked, and his voice trembled. *“Yes," said the child. Then, quite without warning, her mouth worked pitifully, dreadfully. Her small, cold hand extended the crumpled paper. ““She—-she gave me this—for you. I—-I'd like to go home now, please, if you don't mind. It's bedtime, isn't it?" I'm pretty tired.” And then, strange calm breaking, she wailed suddenly: “1 want Mammal I—1 want Mamma!” Her tears were the best thing that could have happened, for both of them. In comforting Nora, James himself found comfort. For those painfully scrawled words on the scrap of paper tore his heart. De- serted only a month before her baby was born, too proud to appeal to the husband she had wronged so griev- ously yet giving the child his name because she had no other, Iris had at the last turned to him, asking protection for her little Nora. Nor did she ask in vain. From the moment when James lifted the heartbroken, lonely child into his arms, Leonora had never lacked a father. Indeed, the knowledge that Iris had known he would not fail her, was the man's greatest com- fort. Nora was barely six years old at the time. She grew into a happy, sweet-tempered little girl who accepted the good things which came to her without question, and often without thanks. They were a part of life. The bare, cold room where she had kept her unchildlike vigil, became at last only a vague memory, a memory dimly painful of something she must have dreamed. Not until a tragic day when she was thirteen did James Lambert realize that the child had accepted him lit erally as her own father. He re- turned from business late one after- noon to find her sitting alone in the twilight. This was unusual, for Nora loved gaiety and young companions. He asked, puzzled and a bit wor- ried: “What's the matter, dear? Not sick, are you?” “No,” she answered. ‘1 was try- ing to—to remember." Her voice was husky, and, still troubled, James came nearer. “Remember what?" “Things,” said Nora. “Things about—about my-—"' She hesitated, looked up at him; and it seemed to her foster-father that the girl had left childhood far behind in the few hours since they had last met. “Tell me,” she said, “was Mamma really are he girl though a—a bad woman? Aren't you my father? Is that why Ned hates me? Don't 1 belong to anyone—anyone in the whole world?" “My God!” cried James, pro- foundly shocked. ‘‘You belong to me! Where did you hear . ” Then, as upon that other day of tragedy, Nora's self-control gave way ana the story was sobbed out in those loving, fatherly arms that had never failed her—the old, old story of hearing the tale from some spite- ful playmate. Perhaps, James pon- dered as he held her close, per- haps Nora had been growing a trifle arrogant. Ned had complained on more than one occasion that his lit- tle sister ‘‘put on airs.” His father had thought the comment mere jeal- ousy on the boy's part; for despite the ten years’ difference in their ages, Ned was jealous of Leonora. tT ug Bir haber 7 mall “She gave me this for you.” Well, he sighed, his girl other nor got along time had come when must learn the truth, though it would hurt them both; so, as ten- derly as such truth can be told, James told her. Nora had gone to boarding school after that; then to college, where Then came Europe, a gorgeous, colorful six months to Nora—a lone- ly, dragging time to James. And on the way home, because her com- insisted on taking a one. ever since, James Lambert told himself, had been ‘‘eternally hang- ing around the house,’’ that is, when during his absences the fellow had written every day; and Leonora, who took a Pullman chair for an | | Corinne that Nora was ‘pulling the wool over Dad’s eyes.” Well, James pondered, perhaps he had spoiled Leonora. He closed his eyes as from the room beyond drift- ed the tender, haunting strains of a Chopin Nocturne. Nora was play- ing, and, much as James loved to listen, this gift of her musician fa- ther subtly disturbed him. It was late when he went to bed; and in the morning he gave Nora his ultimatum. “If I'm to consider your happi- ness, my dear, there's but one way out. I'll give that boy a job. 1 don’t say that he must keep it for a lifetime; but he must prove that he's got the stability to stick at some- thing that will support you. A year ought to show that, Nora; and you're both young. If at the end of that time he has saved money and shown himself even fairly efficient, I'll say no more.” “Even if he throws up the job next day?" asked Leonora. Her father looked at her, his eyes a trifle hard. “You think he would?” “I think,” she answered, speak- ing thoughtfully, ‘that a year in an office—especially in Ned's office, will finish Don, Father." “You feel then, that my proposal is unfair?" Nora glanced up, a wistful smile lighting her face as she responded: “Not as you view things, Daddy. But to Don it will be—well—a year out of life. What would you do, I wonder, if I ran away with him?" “l should disinherit you,” said James, and meant it. Then, as she remained silent: “Is that what you're considering, my dear?” Don accepted James Lambert's offer “1 fear 1 won't make a successful office worker, sir; but I can try,” he said. And James responded with unfeigned heartiness: “That's all 1 ask.” To Nora the young man was more explicit, “Remove at “Your at is, worried frown once,"’ told her sternly father's right, of course-—th right from his own viewpoint if 1 can't serve a year for you, Nora, I''m no good We'll make a game of it, beloved-—mark i a calendar, and when the time is up we'll forge our chains and sail away together, that he off each dav on ‘Into the sunset's turquoise marge, ‘ . To fairyland Hesperides, Over the hills and far away . ar" He kissed her, and lifting her chin to look into her eyes, saw with satis- faction that the smiles which had vanished from them were back again His girl wasn’t know, Don vowed, the jail sentence that She wasn't to realize that his only rea- to the sorrow that any trouble with adventures in towns where there wasn't even a clean hotel! “I: is." Ned the day before, “an infatuation beyond my understanding.” “And if she marries him,” Ned predicted, “you'll be supporting ‘em all their lives, Dad. Don Mason is no good. He's a rolling stone.” It would have been some satisfac- tion to the girl in question had she known that James told her brother brusquely to ‘“‘mind his own busi- ness''—that he would look after Leo- nora. It was seldom indeed that his much-loved son caused this some- what fiery man to lose his temper; but now he was worried, and Ned's well-aimed criticism touched a ten- der spot. So the younger man had gone home rather disgruntled to tell young man could not see himself a part of the hustling throng which jammed the subway every morning. The thought of joining it turned him And there was Ned! If anyone had accused Ned Lam- bert of being inconsiderate of his sister's lover, he would have scoffed at the idea. Not until years later when life bad somewhat tempered Ned's cocksureness, did he suspect that his habit of pausing beside Don's desk to observe his work, much as a teacher keeps an eye on the progress of a stupid pupil, was gall and wormwood to the younger man. He did not guess that his me- ticulous suggestions drove Don mad —that when an occasional error did occur, it seemed to the harassed youth that Nora's brother took ironic pleasure in detecting it. (TO BE CONTINUED) Cold flames, perhaps a step toward the long-sought goal of cold light, have been discovered by soviet physicist, Dr. N. N. Semenoff, of the Institute of Chemical Physics at Leningrad, who has won interna- tional fame though still under forty, observes a writer in the Detroit Free Press. The existence of ordinary hot flames depends on the fact that many chemical reactions which ought to take place do not do so be- cause of a mysterious reluctance of atoms to combine. The oxygen of the air, for example, should react instantly with the carbon of fuels or with the iron of bridges or build- ings. It is fortunate for mankind that these reactions happen reluc- tantly. If they did not most things in the world would vanish instantly in flame or ashes. For several years Dr. Semenoff has been studying what chemists call chain reactions, in which a pre- liminary chemical reaction acts to assist another one. The rusting of iron in air is not unlike this. A first reaction of the iron with the elements of water acts to cause a slow combustion or burning of the iron into rust, in much the same way that iron will burn rapidly and explosively if highly heated. Ordi- nary coal gas also refuses to burn unless the reaction is started by heat but by adding a very small amount of a chemical called phos- phire Dr. Semenoff is able to make the coal gas “burn’ at a tempera- ture only about half as high as or- dinarily is necessary. Some light is produced even by this chilly gas flame, but not yet enough to be of practical importance fer illumination. Caterpillars Can Hear This statement has been made be- cause experiments have shown that these insects have the ability to hear; for certain sounds result in sudden movements of the body. Hairs that absorb sound are pro- vided in place of ears. In experi ments, when these hairs were coat- ed with shellac and noises were made, the caterpillar did wot re spond. By RUTH WYETH SPEARS oo het H ERE an embroidered piainiy s nowr with contains other borders stitches just embroidery 1 y - A - light and a rande ¢ strands ol of this Spac eo nere type. as they should are be done in dark color. Use six-strand tions are—dark and lighter thread on white green and green material blue pale yellow—deep and brown on pale pink. material- light yellow on on both mats and napkins from right side with make two stitches in the dark A, catching Thread a blunt thread, color, the tapestry the light thread and weave igh the running stitches keep- ing needle pointed to the left as Next, weave back again, as C, still pointing the needle to the left. received Spears’ book on » Home Decorator, No. 2 is now ready. Ninety em- broidery stitches; fabric repair- ing: also table se gs; gifts; and many and the children. If you like hand- work you will be pleased with this unique book of directions for every article illustrated. Postpaid upon receipt of 25 cents (coin pre- ferred). Just ask for Book 2, and ; M Spears, 210 S. 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