COPYRIGHT CHAPTER XI—Continued RR Nora laughed, and Jim Perkins, finding his voice at last, exploded: “Well, I'll tell the world you can play, Mis’ Mason! I never heard nothin’ like it except over the radio; and if you ask me, you've got that feller named Hoffmann beat to a frazzle!”’ Leonora arose from the packing box to acknowledge his honest trib- ute with a curtsey; while Don sug- gested: ‘‘Give them some more, Nora, before they leave,” and for twenty minutes Nora played to as appreciative an audience as any artist could desire. Indeed, the Portland men would accept only the minutest payment for their serv- ices. “It wa’n’'t nothin’,” declared the older man as they arose to go. ““Nothin’ at all; and the music was pay enough anyhow. Wasn't it, Joe?” “Joe,” still dazed, assented with a mute nod. They departed munch- ing Nora's molasses cookies, and, Don told her (when Tom Littlefield had returned to the box stall which he was converting into the north end of a “banquet hall”), with ‘‘their souls refreshed.” And next morning, as if Fate were really trying to make up for past unkindnesses, Don received a note from the editor of an American weekly, to whom he had sent one of his “Letters from Cape Town.” long-felt want. coming year. received from England for the same material, was almost dazzling; and they both appeared to go a little mad. Nora rushed to the piano, while Don, to the exceeding joy of his small sons, proceeded to dance the Highland Fling. When the music ceased and he dropped breathless into the red lac- quer chair, Tom Littlefield, who had arrived during the commotion, in- quired if he should call the doctor, “or are you comin’ out o' that con- aniption fit all right alone?” In answer Don tossed him the in- credible check. “That's yours, Mr, Littlefield. You can blame that innocent strip of paper for this vaudeville act of mine which was put on merely to cele- brate the fact that, for the time be- ing, anyhow, the dark cloud of finan. cial worry has vanished from the horizon. We're sane again now, and I'll get back to the shingling if that's what you want.” Not until the last possible mo- ment did they leave the place. Nev- er had they left any place with such regret. The weather had been almost miraculously perfect for that time of year, a fall long remem- bered by the natives. Tom Little- field, possessed of minute directions from Leonora, planned to go on with the work when other jobs were scarce. “It'll be a real life-saver to me, Mis’ Mason,” he assured her. “There ain't much doin’ here come wintertime, and I get restless. I'll be more’'n glad to keep an eye on the place and do a day's work now and then; and when you come back next spring things’ll be ship-shape. I declare, I—I'm downright sorry to see you go.” “And I'd give almost anything to stay, Mr. Littlefield,” Nora con- fessed. ‘‘After all, there's no place like home, is there?—and I've nev- er had one of my own before. Not for worlds would I have Mr. Mason suspect it, but I don’t mind owning up to you that I dread to leave.” She did; yet a happy winter with Constance Venable (who had sold the ill-fated island where Carl met his death, and for financial reasons was staying abroad indefinitely) lay just ahead. Things were going ex- tremely well when they returned to Maine for another summer; and as a complete surprise Nora discov- ered not only running water in her box stall kitchen, but a small and shining bathroom, the result of an intrigue between her husband and the old Maine builder. Not until that summer did she hint to her father of this permanent abiding place. Going to the beauti- ful antique desk which they had purchased of ‘“‘our egg lady,” as the boys called her (‘“Because,” the woman explained when Don told her honestly that it was worth much more than he could give, *“‘them antique dealers is makin’ my life miserable anyhow, and Mis’ Mason never forgets to ask after my sick boy’’)—going to that desk Nora con- structed the postal card that was to play an important part in her life some three years later. Glanc- ing over her shoulder as she fin- ished it, Don smiled a bit sadly at what he feared was merely an- other disappointment. It was, he observed, a fantastic postal. First came the verse from which the old notary had quoted the day they signed the deeds. Be- low this Nora had written her ad- dress, followed by: “If taxi is un- CHRISTINE available, take trolley car to end of line and proceed as follows,” after which was a tiny map drawn in red ink. She said, turning to look up at Don: “That verse about the shin- ing palace is an invitation, and if it arrives when Dad’s in a relenting mood, he may accept it.” Don said nothing. It sometimes troubled him that in all these years Nora had never lost hold of the con- viction that her father would reach a moment of surrender. Person- ally, Don didn't believe it, not after the old man's silence when in- formed of the arrival of his name- sake, James Lambert Mason. It was hard for Don to forgive that silence when he recalled how, spent with the hours of fear and anguish, Nora had looked up at him from her narrow berth on that storm- tossed ship, to say: “If—if it's only a boy, dear, so we can name him for Father, I sha'n’t mind—any- thing. It—it will bring us togeth- er.” Well, mused Don, turning away from his wife's eyes, it was a boy, and it had not brought them one inch nearer. Jimsy was more than three years old, and his grandfather had not expressed the slightest in- terest in his existence. It wasn’t “There's our theater ahead now.” in Don to comprehend how anyone could be so stubbornly resentful so unkind. Impatient at the situa- tion he once said as much, and Nora answered: “It's not just that, Don. You see, he loved my mother above anything on earth, yet she hurt him unspeak- ably. And, though it wasn't my fault, perhaps, I hurt him, too. 1 think he doesn't dare let me get near him any more. Don’t you un- derstand? He's afraid of being hurt again.” So she mailed her postal, hoped for a time, and then decided that the hour of relenting had not come. But despite this disappointment Nora was very happy that summer. Don was always glad to remem- ber how happy she had been. As the months passed, her new home became almost as perfect as she dreamed it could be; and even Tom Littlefield admitted that the *‘ball room’ was not too big. “And it's cozy, isn't it?” prod- ded Leonora, determined to make the old carpenter give in. “0, it's cozy enough,” he as- sented, albeit grudgingly; “but I still think, if you was to ask me, Mis’ Mason, that it's all out 0’ pro- portion to the size o’ the kitchen.” “But we don’t live in the kitch- en,” Nora retorted. “And I ain't ever heard o’' any- body livin’ in a ball room, either,” snapped the old man. He was a frequent caller, as was the notary at the Port. The latter had a standing invitation to Sunday dinner, which was quite as likely to be served on the beach as in the banquet hall. Afterwards he would find his way into the big liv- ing room and browse among the books, sometimes reading aloud from his beloved poets to Nora, sometimes reading from “Peter Rabbit” to the boys. ‘““He’s as good as a grandfather,” said Don one Sunday afternoon when he found the old man with both children mn his lap; and then wished he hadn't spoken because Nora's face clouded at the words. The summer drifted by. Septem- ber came, and with it the chance Don was hoping for, something he had kept secret from his wife fear- ing to cause her disappointment should it not work out. For Nora had hinted to the little boys that Santa Claus might possibly bring them a ‘‘baby sister,” and Don was determined that their mother should not be dragged to Europe if such a step could be avoided. He knew that the “Letters from Cape Town" had proved even more popular than the American editor expected. a ’ PARMENTER -— There was no reason to think he would not be amenable to the sug- gestion that there was a vast amount of interesting material on their own West. Don planned a se- ries of articles called ‘‘Seeing America First,” submitted the idea, and waited impatiently for the ver- dict. Not knowing that the great man was away on a vacation, the letter seemed long in coming; but it brought good news. The editor con- sidered this plan ‘“‘most interest- ing,” and requested that Don stop off in Chicago on the way West to consult a personal friend of his who had been over the ground recently and might give him some valuable data And would he plan so that the first article could be run in February? Nora wept with relief when she heard the news—Nora, who so sel- dom gave way to tears. “I've been dreading so awfully to start out again,’”’ she told him, "but this is different. If, as you say, we can stay at San Diego until after New Year's, everything will be easy. I can settle you somewhere, and then go to a hospital for the event. And next spring we can come home for a long summer. Don’t mind my crying, Don. It-— it's only the heavenly relief.” “You poor dear nomad!” said Don tenderly. And then added: ‘If all goes well, darling, we'll install a furnace here next summer so we can stay as late as you want to in the fall.” “1 believe,” smiled Nora, wink- ing away the last of her foolish tears, “I believe you've discov- ered the advantages of a home yourself, Don!" CHAPTER XII They reached Chicago on a bleak November morning. Wind was blow- ing across Lake Michigan in wintry gusts, and the weather man pre- dicted snow. It came, a blizzard out of the north. For two days they were storm-bound in a boarding house run by an old nurse of Con- stance Venable's—one of the many whom Carl's unfailing generosity had helped. On the third afternoon when the city was digging out of snow drifts and the sun was making a half- hearted effort to show its face, their hostess said: "Why don't you two go for a little walk? I'll look after the children. I'd really like to; and a breath of outdoor air will do you good.” “Come on,” said Don, brighten- ing at the prospect of some activ- ity. “If you get tired, Nora, we'll drop in at a movie for an hour.” “That's right," urged the woman, glad to be of service to these friends of her beloved Venables. “You'll find a theater three blocks down. It's a cheap place, opened only a week ago; but it'll do to get warm in." “Sure!” agreed Don, “and a lurid picture won't hurt old folks like us!” The wind sprang up again as they started out; and the sun, discour- aged, retired behind a cloud. “I guess three blocks'll be about enough!” Don laughed as they ducked their heads against the weather. “Those Italian winters have spoiled us, Nora; but I hear we're liable to fry in Arizona. That's one place I haven't been, my dear, and I'm crazy to see it. There's our theater ahead now. Looks cheap all right. I bet the snow’'s packed solid behind that false front roof. There's weight to this snow, Nora. I hope—"" What Don hoped was lost in a gust of wind that fairly blew them into the lobby of the theater. WXNU SERVICE “Perhaps we'd better go right back,” gasped Nora. “The wind is certainly getting worse. It wouldn't surprise me if it stormed again.” ‘Me, either; but you're complete- ly out of breath, dear. Let's get inside and rest for a few minutes. It'll be easier going home with the wind at our backs, you know. We can sit in the last row, Nora, and slip out any time we're bored. You need to rest after that fight with the elements.” This was sane logic, so they went inside. “Looks as if all the kiddies of the neighborhood had come in out of the storm,” Don whispered as their eyes grew accustomed to the dim- ness. “Why didn't we think to bring the boys?" Nora smiled. Don always regret- ted his sons’ absence when other children were in evidence. She said, softly: ‘They're better off where they are. There's such a crowd, and the air is terrible. Why!—Why what-—"’ Her voice rose a little. Her head lifted. Later Nora was to remems- ber that she had thought herself ill because the whole building seemed to tremble and the roof looked as if it were crumbling up, slowly. The most curious sensation, a sort of chill, ran over her—all in a sec- ond, of course, for Don was already on his feet, holding her wrist in a grip that tortured. Just as they reached the lobby the crash came. And then a cry went up behind them—a cry that was to ring in Nora's ears for months. It sound- ed, she thought, like an awful and terrifying wave of protest from a single throat . They were in the street , . . Al- ready a throng of morbid onlookers had gathered People (Oh, fortunate people!) were pouring out of the doomed theater Po- licemen, dozens of them, it seemed to Nora, sprang up like magic . . . Firemen were there, trying to rope off space . pushing them back. It was then that Don, who had been stunned into a horrified si- lence, roused himself with a convul- sive shuddér. He turned to Nora— looked down into her upturned face —stared into it so curiously that she grasped his arm, crying: “Oh, thank God we are safe, Don!" And still he looked at her . . . An ambulance gong sounded . . . Somewhere beyond the rope a wom- an screamed . . . A man pushed by them, wild-eyed, dishevelled . . . Above the tumult a child's terrified voice cried out: ‘Mother! Where's my mother?” . . Don said, still staring down with that extraordinary gravity: “But I must go back, Nora. Those children «+ . They might beours . . . I've got to help . . . You must go home now, darling. Go home to the little boys. They need you . . . Don't you see that—that I have got to help?” Before she could say one word, he stooped—kissed her—was gone, eluding the quick grasp of a fire- man-—unheeding the shout of protest from another. Those feet, those buoyant feet which had borne Don so joyously on his adventures, were bearing him now on still another, bearing him swiftly, swiftly, lest they falter . . . Nora was standing there three hours later when they brought him out. Three hours of horror—three hours of numbing cold—three hours of torment. He was the last to come, his broken body carried ten- derly by two firemen. Nora, close to the ropes, cried out at sight of him: “Don! Dearest! I'm waiting for you. I—-I am here, Don!" (TO BE CONTINUED) The natural enemy of the crow is the hawk. Blackbirds, bluebirds, swallows, and at times robins, will fight them viciously. However, the crow is smart—smarter than most of the feathered world—in that he will fight only when backed by a company of his kind. Virtually all other birds and animals hunt alone. The crow will feed alone, but when trouble arises he begins caw- ing for help and a whole platoon of his companions is soon on the scene to help. Because of these gang methods, however, the crow furnishes excellent sport for the shooter because he is easily de- coyed. Anyone armed with a crow call can have excellent sport calling and shooting the black robbers. There are several ways in which to hunt them, advises a writer in the Chi- cago Daily News. A stuffed or live hawk or owl is an excellent decoy. The decoy takes some time and quite elaborate preparations. Once the roost is lo- cated the shooter should watch the line of flight of the crows and build himself a blind in a woods or field in line with this flight. Then around the blind he should stake out decoy crows, silhouettes or stuffed imi- tations of the black birds. When the flight to the roost starts in the afternoon the shooter occupies the blind, calls lustily at the ap- proach of the crows, and decoys and kills them much as a hunter kills waterfowl. Crows, conservation departments declare, are excellent eating, Grant Not Interested in War Ulysses S. Grant, one of the strangest characters in all history, made a mess of everything he un- dertook till near middle-age, to be- come commander in chief of the Union armies and President. And perhaps the oddest thing in the odd story of an odd nature was his life- long distaste for the military life in which his reputation was made. He always disclaimed the calling of warrior, and when visiting kuiope after the war he told the astonished Bismarck that he took no in in military affairs, . . - wo m——— a Basic Dress 1482 O YOU need something new to dawdle in or to dress up in? Here are two new designs, one for play and one for afternoon, that | are so smart you really should | have both. 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