CHAPTER XIII—Continued we] Be The ocean was not visible from here, but the salt of it was in the air, and James heard the roar of waves breaking against rocks. As the sun disappeared behind a cloud the old man stopped, laid down his bag and buttoned his coat higher about the throat, shivering a little. In summer this road would be alive with tourists, he supposed. It was deserted now—a man-made strip of macadam that seemed curiously out of place between the rocky pastures which bordered it on either side. Strange, James Lambert mused as he started on again, that 24 hours ago he hadn't dreamed of being here. Strange too, that despite the uneasiness he felt at seeing Nora, he was happier than he'd been for years and years. After a time he found himself hurrying a little. That “short half mile” which the con- ductor promised, seemed very long. Yet he couldn't have missed the place. This was a lonely stretch of road with no lanes leading seaward. He stopped again, drew Nora's post- card from his pocket and was study- ing it minutely when a voice star- tled him. R. F. D. man?” Moving a step or two James saw that the voice belonged to a small boy who had, apparently, been swinging on a rustic gate, half hidden from view by a clump of fir trees. There was a mail box too. This must be the place! The old man’s heart-beats quickened as he responded: “I haven't seen anybody since I left the trolley. Are you—"' Then, all because a sudden breeze had blown the boy's hair away from his forehead, the question died on James’ lips. Where had he seen a forehead and hair like that? he asked himself, some half-forgotten memory stirring to life. Ah! now he recalled it! The door to his own library—a tall young man stand- ing upon the threshold, youth incar- nate . “You're kind of out of breath, aren't you?” the boy was saying. “I guess you've been hurrying. If you're tired why don’t you sit down on that rock? It's a good smooth one. Mother sits there when she's waiting for the postman. 1 he'll bring the money this She'll be pretty discouraged doesn’t, b'lieve me.” James asked, as he availed him- self of the proffered resting place: “So your mother expects the post- man to bring some money?” The youngster nodded, his eyes very serious. ““She’s been expecting it for more’'n a month, and she's pretty 'sturbed about it. A lady that lives in the biggest house at the Port summertimes, owes it to her for teaching her little girl to play. Moth- er’'s a swell piano player; and she's a swell cook, too. Are you going to Norton's, Mister? It's quite a walk.” “I'm not going to Norton's,” re- plied James. “How old are you, sonny?” “I'll be six and three quarters before very long,” was the prompt answer. “What's your name, please?” James, doing a hasty sum in men- tal arithmetic, failed to respond, He said: “Then you must be" “I'm James Lambert Mason," put in the boy. “I'm named for my grandpa, but I've never seen him. It’s sort of funny not to know your own grandfather, isn’t it? But I've heard a lot about him and seen his picture. It's on Mother's desk. Do you know, if you weren't so old and didn’t have so many wrinkles, you'd look something like him. That's queer, isn’t it? Gee! here comes the postman! I hope he’s bringing Moth- er’'s check!” Eyes on the eager face, James echoed this hope; but the mail car- rier merely tossed out a paper; and the old man saw with conster- nation that his grandson was fight- ing tears of disappointment as he picked it up. “Was it a big check?’ The ques- tion was a kindly effort to make con- versation. “It was—e-normous,”’ replied the boy, and swallowed. “It would buy two tons of coal, and coal’'s expen- give. Last winter we burned wood and Mother got pretty tired tending the fires. Dwddy said he couldn't stand seeing her do it. Besides, now he cam"t move fast any more he's awl'ly cold. Days when the wind blcws off the ocean he doesn’t get warned up at all. I've got to go now, Mister; but you can sit there as long as you want to. It's our rock.” “Thanks, sonny; but I think I'll make a little call on your mother.” The child's face lighted. “Goody! We don’t have much company. If you'll put your bag on this side I'll help you carry it.” “It's not heavy,” James told him. “Why—why can’t your father move fast any more?” “Because he's a hero!” The boy lifted his head proudly, and again James seemed to behold a tall young man standing in his own doorway, if he blue “Mother's told us about it heaps of times. It's one of our best favorite stories. You see, Mother and Daddy were at a movie and the roof sort of caved in and lots of folks were hurt and killed, children, and their fa- thers and mothers too. That's sad, isn't it? Well Daddy grabbed Moth- er and got her out all safe; and then he went right back to help the others. Mother says he went where no one else would go. He saved a life.” “I see,” said James. ‘‘And—and where was your mother while he— saved it?" ‘“‘Sne was out on the sidewalk near as they'd let her get. There was deep snow everywhere, and pretty soon it began to snow some more and the wind blew dreadf'lly and she thought he'd never come. And when he did come two real kind fire- men were carrying him; but he was hurt so hard he couldn't answer when she called. I was a little boy “But she couldn't wait for him.” then so I don't remember very much about it; but I remember one thing!” “What was that?” James asked as the child looked up in expecta- tion of the question. “It was next morning. A lady wanted us. We jumped right up and ran into her and Daddy's room and Mother hadn't got up yet and what do you s'pose was there beside “I can’t imagine.” “A baby! We thought Santa Claus going to bring her, but she little sister Iris!" “Irig!"’ At something in the old man's voice his grandson glanced up, puz- zled. “Yep. It was my grandma's name. It's the name of a flower too; and Daddy says my little sis- ter's mere like a flower than any- thing he ever saw, ’cept Mother. But we boys don't think Mother's one bit like a flower. She's too useful.” “Well!” said James. The Nora he remembered might have been likened to a flower, but she surely wasn’t useful. “Don’t you think Iris is a pretty name?’ queried the little boy. “Yes, yes,” James murmured, but hardly knew what he was say- perhaps, at that scene of tragedy . snow driving against her face : . waiting waiting . . . Dread in her heart and her babe about to be born . . . He had to force himself back to the present as the boy said happily: “That's our house! See the roof over beyond those pine trees? You wouldn't think it was a barn once, would you? It's a swell house now, Mother calls it our shining palace.” “I see.” The old man’s heart was thudding unaccountably. “Is—is she at home now?” “Nope. I mean no, sir. She's way down the beach with Daddy, and Donald, and my little sister. You see, Mr. Perkins the ’spressman gave us an old wheelchair that belonged to his grandma, so now Daddy can go most anywhere. We push him down to the water when the tide goes out, and he walks back, going real slowly. Last year he couldn't walk hardly at all.” For a moment James was filled with a sense of horror. Confined to a wheel-chair—that boy who had found life in an office stifling! It was unthinkable! They had reached the house, and feeling suddenly very old and very tired, he said: “I'll sit down on the steps, sonny. You tell you mother—well, tell her it's someone who knows her father.” “You mean my grandpa? Gee! She'll be glad to see you! It's get. ting cold now, isn’t it? I guess you better come inside.” He had opened the door, but James stood for a moment regard- ing the exterior. So this was Nora's “palace,” this weather-beaten old stable, a relic of more leisurely days when people drove horses in- stead of automobiles. And it wasn’t, he mused, even an attractive sta- ble! To be sure, the casement win- dows gave it a pleasing look, and the front door possessed a certain dignity; but there was one of those abominations known as a cupola on top! Indeed, his namesake, seeing that this unexpected caller was pausing for a view of the ‘swell house,”” came back to point out the cupola with pride. “That's our watch tower! We can see the enemy approching for miles and miles. Did you notice the win- dows? Daddy and us boys are crazy about the colors. Come on in.” And as James followed him: “This is a gorgeous room, isn't it? Mr. Little- field says it's miles too big; but we don't think so. You see, it's the ball room." ‘Indeed?’ responded James. “No, it's not too big, and as you say, sonny, it's—gorgeous.” It was; yet looking about him cu- riously, James Lambert pondered on what made it so. The place was shabby enough in a way. The build- ers’ paper with which the walls were covered, was stained in places. A big chair needed upholstering. But on the wall opposite was a rug that would have done honor to a.Rajah’s palace! James went forward, touch- ing the beautiful thing with reverent fingers. “We picked that up in Persia,” said the little boy. His grandfather smiled at the odd- ly old remark. “You did?" “Well, I didn't, "zactly. I've never been there. It was Daddy found it; and it's a magic carpet. That's why Mother wouldn't sell it to the rug man from Boston. You see, Daddy can lie here and look up at it, and then he remembers things—like the queer place he found it in and, oh, you know-'speriences he's had in foreign countries. It makes him happier. No one would sell a magic carpet, would they?" “I suppose not," said James: and thought: “What was it Nora told me about memories?" “It's very old,” went on his name- sake. ‘Older than I am; and so was Mother's di'mund came way from South Africa. She and Daddy were on their way home with it when I as born. Did you know I was born on the high seas?” “You were!" Nora had never written about that. “Yep. Mother was sort of expect- ing me, but she thought I wouldn' come till they got to England. Dad- dy says I'm the only fellow he ever knew per—personally, who was born on the high seas." The small boy stopped to struggle into a scarlet sweater. “When I get back,” he promised, “I'll show you the watch tower if— if you're young enough to climb a ladder. I've got to run now and find Mother . . . Oh, I forgot!” He turned at the door, evidently re- membering his manners. “Just make yourself at home.” “Thanks,” smiled his grandfatk: ¢, “I believe I will.” that ial CHAPTER XIV So Nora's father was left alone in her “shining palace.” He stood by the fire, letting his eyes roam slowly around the “ball room.” It was an unusual room, a room of extraordi- nary beauty; yet James had never seen anything just like its curious blending of poverty and riches. In one corner stood a baby-grand piano. He was glad that Nora had kept up her music, but—a baby- grand, when the stuffing was com- ous. Evidently this improvident cou- ple believed in spending when there was anything to spend. That rug now-—that bit of cloisonne—the Rus- sian candelabra on the mantel. Only real money could procure such things. The old man moved forward, passing his hand over the lacquered chair, its mother-of-pearl inlay shin- ing dimly. Leonora had written him about that chair at the very first. Something her husband had picked up during his wanderings. Japanese, of course. No one surpassed the Japanese when it came to lacquer. His own Chinese cabinet (of which James was rather proud) couldn’t for one minute compete with work like this, he admitted honestly. And here was a nest of tables to match it. Beautiful! Those tables belonged in a museum; yet on the smallest stood a set of tiny dishes, put out, evidently, in anticipation of a doll's tea party! Did Nora's children play with things like this? Extraordi- nary! James turned again, his eyes caught by a painting of a clipper ship above the fireplace. That was a ship! One could almost feel the wind filling its sails. A Venable, of One would recognize it any- ad been erstood. them course. where. Well, Carl Venable } a friend of Don's, he und The picture may have cost nothing. Too bad the artist had been cut off in his prime-—a man with a gift like that. It was a mar- velous painting—worth a great deal of money; yet here it was in a room where the bookshelves were nothing but boxes, packing boxes piled one upon another and stained to match the woodwork. Books, books, and still more books. A pretty penny they must have spent on books, two; and yet, Nora's father al- most with reluctance, the books fur- those aa could—gave it varied bindings made a camel's hair shawl his mother used to wear How they blent with the fine old rug that hung above them! Well, softly he must sit down for a while. That walk from the car had tired him unaccountably. Despite its worn upholstery the big chair by the table looked inviting; but he must get nearer the fire—stretch out on the davenport a moment. James paused, staring down at what he had taken for a divan. Why, world but a pew out of some old church! Wo- ever heard of putting such a thing into a living room? And yet—by George! —it seemed to fit the place —belong here! What beautiful carv- ing on those old posts. One seldom saw such work in these days. Well, this was certainly the strangest yet. A pew out of some old New England meeting house! But it looked sur- prisingly attractive with its thick crimson cushion and pillows of the same warm hue. And it looked comfortable. “A great deal more comfortable,” James told the empty ball room, ‘than those modern, overstuffed affairs one can't get up from without a helping hand.” For a tired moment the old man gat down and closed his eyes, won- dering wearily if this strange home of Nora's possessed a guest room. His sense of humor, grown rusty since she went away, lifted its head as he soliloquized: “Perhaps they'll allow me to curl up in the watch tower!” James chuckled. “The enemy in the wa‘ch tower would be something new!” Then remembering that the boy had said his picture was on Nora's desk, he forgot his weariness and arose briskly. {TO BE CONTINUED) the Although a healthy and organical- ly sound race, Eskimos are serious- ly susceptible to ailments which or- dinarily cause white people only minor discomfort. Before the com- ing of the white man, says London Tit-Bits Magazine, they knew noth- ing of such ills as colds, influenza, and other kindred ailments, and there had been no need for their bodies to build up a resistance to the attack of these diseases. Con- sequently the arrival of the first whaling and trading vessels each season was followed by widespread outbreaks among the natives, often with disastrous effects. Today the medical services in the Far North take particular care upon the arrival of vessels to check the spread of these diseases. Modern hygiene has been a contributing fac- tor to the physical well-being of the natives, and by instructions about proper diets doctors have reduced considerably the number of deaths from dietary causes. A most strik- ing success has been made in the correction of methods of feeding in- fants and older children, with the result that happy-faced, vigorous children now form a considerable portion of the population. Medical care for the dwellers in the Far North is provided by doc- tors, pitals, and for thousands of miles along the Arctic coast of the Do- minion, in fair weather and in foul, medical officers in the service of the government bring their healing art to the Eskimo citizens. Indians, half-breeds, and indigent whites are also given medical aid. Winter and summer patrols of hundreds of miles are not unusual, and nearly every mode of transport known to the North country, such as airplane, steamboat, motor boat, canoe and dog-sled has been used to extend this service. Much Water to Grow Sugar As about 4,000 tons of water are required to grow one ton of sugar, some of the cane fields in the less rainy sections of the Hawaiian is- lands are obliged to maintain ex- tensive and costly irrigation sys- tems, says Collier's Weekly. One of these sugar-cane plantations uses, throughout the summer, about half as much water as is consumed, dur- ing the same period, in the city of Philadelphia. i Star Dust * Pearl Was Canny * Gargan Reduces * “Willie” Flops ee By Virginia Vale PEARL WHITE'S death 4 brought out an odd fact, when her father denied that she was forty-nine. She was forty- she had just tacked on a few years, long ago, ‘‘to keep ahead of Mary Pickford.” A woman who interviewed the se- larity was talking about her recent- I'll never for- see her one reading a " throwing it around. get, either, going to day, and finding her It seemed odd, too, that Warner Oland, who so often played the vil- lain in Pearl White's pictures, should have died soon after she did. He was famous in those days, but of course his great success came with his creation on the screen of the character of ‘Charlie Chan.” armcrirsfnm “The Crowd Roars’’ not only gives Robert Taylor a chance to give an excellent performance; it also brings Bill Gargan back to us in a good picture, minus some 20 pounds. Leslie Howard sent for him to come BILL GARGAN d and play in “Alias Mrs. be- made a hit in the new But the name of be * which he is producing, If you've seen Hedy Lamarr In “Algiers’’ vou probably have won- dered whether she will be one of our A-1 movie stars in a year or so, or will just be making pictures that are nothing special. And if you've seen the announcement that Josef von Sternberg has been engaged to direct her first picture for Metro, probably you're still wondering, Of course, Mr. von Sternberg may not have been responsible for slowing Marlene Dietrich down so that she seemed to be doing nothing but stand around, but sometimes he's been blamed for it. Ch There are a lot of good pictures at large nowadays; better make a list of them. Include “The Crowd Roars,” “Alexander's Ragtime Band,” “Mother Carey's Chickens,” “The Rage of Paris,” and, if for- eign pictures come your way, “May- erling.” ene Charlie McCarthy has been such a success on the air here that the British Broad- casting company tried out the idea lie of their own. called the “Willie And was a Which puppet really is. Incidentally, another Edgar Bergen that, no matter how popular you are, there's always a time ahead when the public grows tired of the same old thing. isin ODDS AND ENDS—W atch W. C. Fields make a comeback as author of, and actor in, “You Can't Cheat an Honest Man lonting 4 ture together again . . . ing to turn still act in a picture occasionally—and is in England . . . After having too much excitement, seeing too many people, and a eh . emple was awfully g to end her vacation and get back home « « « Lots of people didn't believe that Simone Simon would really sail off to France without signing a new though the aniy siniract hat seemed to one appearance al a Now York might club. © Western Newspaper Union, HOUSEHOLD QUESTIONS Left-Over Juice.—Save the juice from canned pineapple and the to use when making fruit punch. * ® * Clean With Soda.—If there is a constant smell of burning when cooking is going on, examine gas burners. They are probably filled with sediment from “boilovers.” * \d * Economy Note.—Pieces of rib- bon that come on gift boxes may in making shoulder Cut them Putty That Sticks.—To make small quantity of white lead; mix thoroughly with the putty. When the grocer says be prefers DWIN be is speaking with cuthority. He bas hundreds of insect killers from which © make his choice. Do as the grocer does choose DWIN to kill insects In your home. It is also effective for many plant insects in the garden. DWIN is first choice among millions of customers from coast to coast, Copyright 1038. BALDWIN LABORATORIES, ING, Bosgerwws Fo BIN HOUS L ; Vain Learning How vain is learning unless in- How Women in Their 40's Can Attract Men Here's good advice for a woman during her change (usually from § o 52), who fears she'll lose her appe 0 worries sbout hot flashes, y, dizzy spells, Upset nerves and » Get more {resh E. Pink ound, especially f t helps Nature bull up physical resistancs, thus bheips give more vivacity to enjoy life and assist calming jittery nerves and disturbing symptoms that often accompany change of life. WELL WORTH TRYING! Faith's Own Give to faith the things which belong to faith.—Ba WORMS quickly removed from children or adults by using the famous remedy, Dr. Peery’s “Dead Shot’ Vermifuge. No castor oil or anything else is needed after taking “Dead Shot.” 50c a bottle at drug- gists or Wright's Pill Co., 100 Gold St., New York, N. Y. Give to the Living The living need charity than the dead.—Arnold. more Were you ever alone in a strange city? this newspaper is so important to you. NOW is a good time to get to... KNOW YOUR NEWSPAPER