SYNOPSIS Jeb Braddon, young and fantastically successful broker of Chicago, Is Infatuated with Agnes Glenelth, beautiful daughter of a retired manufacturer. Rodney, a doctor. In love with Agnes, visits his brother Jeb. Rod plans work at Rochester. Jeb suggests that he make a try for Agnes before leaving. In Rod there Is a deeper, obstinate decency and much sterner restraints than in Jeb. Agnes believes to be happy, a girl must bind herself entirely to a man and have adorable babies. Rod visits Agnes and tells her of his great desire but realises it can never be fulfilled. CHAPTER I?Continued ?2? "You can send me, if you will, with Simmons; but you?let me kiss you now." Never with such tenderness, never with so much strength restrained, had a man's hands clasped her. His bands nnon hpr shoulders he drew her to him; she lifted her lips and kissed him. Once; that was all; he did not try to repeat It. "Again, Rodney," she whispered, reaching up. "You don't repeat?death," he denied her. . . . Agnes moved about the empty house, gazing out at the snow. She could do no differently about Rodney; she did not love him. She felt for him with a keen pity which had no equal in her mee'ings with men; but she did not desire him. Was love?desire? Was that the decisive sensation in your life? Was admiration for a man. sympathy for him, caring for him, nothing in comparison? Did no qualities In you or in him count, unless you desired him? Flames were leaping and snapping from maple logs freshly laid on the huge stone hearth of the hall; and the green glass eyes in the pair of Jaguar heads on the wall opposite gleamed their reflection of the dancing fire. Five years ago her father had shot the jaguars in Brazil, having suddenly found need to cease to be a manufacturer of electrical equipment and to become. Instead, a hunter set upon traversing tropical- jungles to kill something dangerous and savage. Among other trophies, he had brought these back, installed them here, and dubbed them "Hansel and Gretel." This house, which had never been as happy as the home on Easter Lane, had descended undeniably after that. What had happened in this house? iiU^ua, u>c nine oncuiaH uiaiu, appeared. She was a lady's maid shared by Agnes and her mother; a slender, golden-haired, bright-cheeked, Impulsive type of Swede. "Mother's returned?" Agnes asked her. "Oh, yes! Mr. Judson Braddon just phoned. He said to tell you he was coming out. He will drive." Twenty miles through this snow! thought Agnes. Jeb would. "Also Mr. Gleneith has returned to the city. He will be home on his train." Mother! thought Agnes. "Do you require me. Miss Agnes?" "No. Look after Mother, Rogna." "Oh, I will!" The two girls gazed at each other, both knowing. Agnes shut her eyes and saw, not Rod on his train traveling away from her, but Jeb forcing his car toward her through the snow. She could see him strain and laugh and swear when he skidded, but come on, on, on to her, whatever tried to hold him. Even In her Imaginings, he stirred her. Come on, Jeb! Ob come on! > "Rod?dear, dreaming Rod. I'd like to love you! I would; but I don't'.' It wasn't the fact that Jeb was making money, and Rod nearly none, that widened the difference between them. For Rod was right about It; money did not rule desire. Money might be one of the factors that destroyed It. Money?or at least the epoch of their marriage in which the most money had come? was separating her mother and father. Before a mirror on the other side of that wall between their rooms, her mother frantically was trying tc make herself more attractive to Father, and to look yonnger. ... But Bogna would watch the rouge, Rogna would not let Mother look ridiculous to Father when he came home At last Father came. Baskerville the huge boar hound, had affection ately knocked his hat off, and he carried it crumpled. Cravath, the butler, had opened the door. " 'D evening, Cravath. . . . Hello Light One!" - ^ * ' ' RAGONS DRIVE , YOU U EDWIN ' BALMER WMW ' fiuT f Copyright Edwin That meant her and no one else. Always, as long as she could remember, It had been Father's greeting. Light One! Dark One! His two daughters?his two babies, once. Beatrice always had been dark, like Mamma; Agnes light, like himself. He bent and kissed Agnes now. "Hello, Light One!" he repeated. "How's Dark One?" "Oh. she's fine. Father!" "H*v're the busters?" "Father, they're wonderful!" "Good. Where's your mother? In?" "Vne IToFhor* clio'e In" "Good." Agnes liked to have him linger with her, but the thought of her mother, waiting for him, tortured her. There had been a time when. If she had not met him at the door, he would have leaped up the stairs, two steps at a time, to find what was the matter. ^ Now he stood, back to the fire, without impatience. He had been away for a*week in New York City; and his daughter, swept as she was with affection for him, and with pride in him, and with gladness in all her memories, could not down disturbing doubts. What had he "done" in New York during seven days?and evenings and nights? He was full of feeling; and how good-looking he was! He was now within two years of fifty, and he didn't appear forty. He honestly didn't. His hair was as youthful as Agnes' own. He differed from hers, however, in having a crinkle In It which made it take tousling well. His clear healthy skin was almost youthful yet. It was like hers, white except where the glow of him showed. He was always shaven. Father and daughter shared the same blueness of eye and straightness of nose. Indeed, in the fullness of her lips and the turn of her good little chin, Agnes was a delicate refinement of him. He was six feet straight, distinctly more than aver age height. There was no mark of deterioration upon him. It was plain that his impulses and his ne^ds for closest, emotional contacts had not fled or even retreated. Plain, too, it had been for some time, that they had failed him here. What was he "doing"? What had be done? "Don't think about it," instincts warned her. He swung about to her. "When I was in New York, I got out of something I got into awhile ago; and I made half a million. . . . Tell me what you want, little Light One." "I don't want anything, Father," she answered before she realized how much she was disappointing him; for she was thinking once more of her mother. He would offer to buy her, too, anything she liked; but this balf-million additional in his hands would not help Mother at all. "Bob?" they both heard her voice. "Bob? Are you home?" She had come to the top of the stairs and was calling down. ^gnes saw him start slightly. "Hello, Tricie," he called hack. "Wait up there. Coming!" They screened their first meetings, these days, from their daughter. And he started for the stairs. Headlights played on the windows and swung away as a car skidded to a stop. Jeb came in, cold and stamping and all alive. She was his goal, this girl above all others and all else Id the world tonight, was the sole object he sought, and nothing could keep him from her. That was how Jeb made you feel when you faced him. "Hello, Glen!" He held her, making her palms press his. "Hello, Glen!" "Jeb, why did you drive tonight?" He laughed, and his happiness at the triumph of this arrival thrilled down her arms from her palms held to his. "I had to. Are you glad, a little?" "Oh, yes, I'm glad, Jeb!" He ripped open his overcoat and threw It off. ! "Rod came?" he asked. "Yes; he came. He's?wonderful, , Jeb. Wonderful." "But you couldn't do It?" said , Jeb. "No, I couldn't do It" The four were alone at dinner. Her mother and father had dressed, . for they were going out. There . was always, in these days, something for them to go out to, if they wished; and tonight, though he was . Just home, they utilized this escape , from their evening together. , She was forty-seven, for she had been twenty-two when she had borne Bee the Dark one, the daughter like herself. But Bee, after ''' ' / '" : w: - " J. THE STATE PORT PI1 barely three years of marriage and two babies (as Mother had had) was not now as happy as Mamma had been for the twleve years In the "little" house where she had been a bride. Was happiness shortening? What ended It? "We're together! Isn't It good to be together, together so!" That was how the old house had felt. Here It was gone. Most particularly tonight it was gone from Father and Mother. You could feel no cur rent of closeness. Across the table Jeb sat. He was happy to be here, and to have her here. He was in business clothes, as he had come from his office. He and Agnes were not to go out, to seek escape from themselves tonight. Quite to the contrary! Why did conversation drag so? Her father mentioned Insull to Jeb. "Stronger every minute," Jeb said. "I'm putting all my people into MidWest Utilities." There Mother sat, alone, no longer the closest, most necessary person to any one. Her figure, once so slender, was by no means heavy. She had lovely hands, beautifullyshaped fingers with almond-like nails, which Agnes had inherited. Her skin, though not dark, was less fair than her husband's, and It needed color now. They had gone out together, Simmons driving them. The leaping blaze In the drawing-room had burnt down to red-glowing charred iogs that lay lazily on the andirons. Jeb gathered Agnes against him. "Don't fight It," he said. "It's no use. It's over for them. That's all." "Why's it over, Jeb?" His arm about her also claimed her right hand with his. He fitted her slender fingers in between his, as he liked to do, and clasped palm to palm. "Because It's over; that'll all any one can ever say, . . . There's just so much In the cup, sometimes, I think, Glen. You can sip it all your life, afraid ever really to taste It; or you can dare to drink It down. That's whai they did, I figure from what I've heard from you. They had It all; they took it all, tipped it empty together. If he'd died, or she, ten years ago, It'd been a break for the poets; true love for a lifetime. But why bother about such a thing, Glen? Do you want it?" "What?" Agnes said. "Love for a lifetime. Tepid tasteless stuff you can bear to sip and never need to gulp down. Do you want It? By God, you'll never get it from me. I've had girls. Glen, but "Tell Me What You Want, Little Light One." never one like you. What we'll give each other will be beyond telling. 1 don't know how long It will last; and neither do you. And I don't care; nor do you. We'll have it? we'll have it all while we're young. We'll lip up the cup?won't we?? and drmk the whole damn thing down while we're living. "Do you dream your mother today would trade what she'd had for anything else she ever beard of? ( He thrust his free arm under her knees and claimed ber close. With his lips over hers, he whispered. It taunted and tantalized ber. "What is it. Jeb, what are you saying to me?" "The line?don't you know it?? that Francois Villon wrote, dear, for himself and his friends the night before he was sure they were all to' be hanged. 'Men, brother men, that after us live, let not your hearts too hard on us be'." "But why do you say It?" "Why, Glen? Because we?Glen ?we are going to be married." And then, at last, he kissed her. Beatrice Mrreforth had had a sunbath built in her home. The enclosure under the quartz glass roof was like a little Japanese room, with softly padded straw mats fitted together to form the floor, and with a slightly raised section, laid with thicker and softer mats, for lounging upon and sunning. Here, In the soothing sun, you could play with your boys' round, strong little bodies, and imagine them men?great men, splendid men. 4 jOT, south port, n. c? c Inspiring, Important and thrilling When you did this, you omitted Imagining them like their father. They must be more than Davis ever would be. Davis, your husband, who was only thirty but for whom vou no longer held illusions of greatness, though you loved him. Of course you loved him. He lacked something that, for one, Jeb Braddon had. Jeb, who had been at "the house" last night, as Beatrice had learned when she phoned her father after dinner, to say hello. How much farther had Agnes and Jeb "gone" last evening? Bee wished that Agnes would hurry over. There she was! They faced each other In the sun, but Agnes immedi- i ately bent to the babies. Bobble < kissed back on her cool cheek after ' she kissed him; she swept with her i lips the soles of Davy's chubby little i feet, one after the other. "How's Jeb?" asked her sister, 1 seating herself before her. i Agnes held to one of Davy's feet. "All right, Bee," she answered. "Did you go anywhere last night?" "Not us. Father and Mother went ' to the Stinsons'; but we stayed ' home," said Agnes a bit breathlessly. "What'd you do?" demanded Bee. ' "Bee, I guess Jeb and I got sort of engaged." ' "? ?i- ?i-.-i < i3cuii a bil/A- Jtrincu up. uuu i you know?" "I know he said we were, Bee." Beatrice quickly touched a bell behind her. "They've been long enough in the sun," she decided suddenly, and bundled her babies Into robes. When the nurse knocked, she handed the children out. "All right now," said Bee, dropping to the mat. "I'm going downtown to have lunch with him today." "But are you engaged? Did you say you'd marry him?" "I didn't; for I didn't know I would. I don't know now." "You mean you don't know whether you warn to?" "I guess 1 want to marry him, Bee." "Then what In heaven Is It you don't know?" "What It will be like to be married to Jeb," said Agnes. "I didn't want to talk to Mother about It, at all. She's too unhappy. You aren't." "No," said Bee quickly. "How was Father when he got home?" "No different." "But you and Jeb?" "He thinks we ought to get marrlprl ns nnick ns we can arrange it. Ob, Bee, I never, never had such a " day. Rod came In the afternoon." "Rod?" "I can't tell you about that. I can never tell anyone about that! . . . Then Father came home; and Mother was making ready for him. . . . Bee, they'll separate when I get married, I know." "Then I should think you'd hardly rush off and marry." Agnes started when she met Jeb. How much more hers, since last night, was this man at whom women gazed; and for whom they turned, after they had passed. He took her away In a taxi, and still saved the tension of their restraints. He named a restaurant where a few of their set were sure to be. So they sat side by side at a little table, looking out upon the wide, gay room. So many people gazed at them; and Agnes knew that they whispered to each other: "There's Jeb s Braddon." Agnes' hand on the seat beside 2 her touched his, and his closed on a hers briefly only. "Nothing today," he told her, "or c more 1" c More than last night? What could t he mean? Marriage today? Had he e a license in bis pocket? o They left the restaurant, and c Agnes watched the women looking t up at him; he watched the men's o eyes on her, and was very satisfied, d He took her into a tax? and gave i an address on the North Side. h "I'm going to show you a build- e Inn nian " Via t/ll/1 tmr than "nrhoro f 1UJ-, VI^U| in. IVIU IK-I lliVU| ?? IIV.1 C >I figured you and I would start." a "Oh!" "I spotted It for as?you with me t ?long ago." c The building was a tall, new a apartment structure of splendid a spread and height, with an agent in b the ground-floor offices only too b glad to show them through. c Of course some one might enter f and recognize them. That made it d more exciting; yet it was disturbing a enough to step into an empty apartment, and having Inspected the t front rooms, follow a pattering little spectacled man into another t chamber, and have him turn to Jeb v and you and ray: "If you like sep- r arate rooms, here are two perfect ones with a bath between. On the t other hand, if you prefer the same room, this is beautifully adequate E for twin beds, and of course for a double." v (TO BE CONTINUED) y ?- y Obtaining Salt There are several principal means ( of obtaining salt. The simplest of q these is by the evaporation of ser. water. A more important method t Is to sink wells to the salt depos- ^ its. force water into them to dis- s solve the salt, then pump It out h again. On reaching the surface the mixture Is discharged Into settling tanks where clay and other matter is allowed to settle, after which the brine Is pumped into evaporating ? tanks from which the water is boiled oft. 0 A, rEDNESDAY, JULY 1, 19 Improved 1 SUNDAY International II SCHOOI -:- LESSON By REV. P. B. FITZ WATER. D. D.. Member of Faculty, Moody Bible Institute of Chicago. ? Western Newspaper Union. Lesson for July 5 THE COMING OF THE HOL' SPIRIT IN POWER LESSON TEXT?Acts 1:6-9; 2:1-11 52-38 GOLDEN TEXT?But ye shall re leive power, after that the Hoi; Shost is come upon you: and y shall be witnesses unto me both li Terusalem, and in all Judea, and li Samaria, and unto the uttermos part of the earth.?Acts 1:8. PRIMARY TOPIC ? Jesus Keep His Promise. JUNIOR TOPIC?A Promise Mad ind Kept. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOI TOPIC ? New Power Through th Holy Spirit. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADUL'j TOPIC?Empowered for the Worli Task. I. The Missionary Program (1 5-8). The work incumbent upon th Church is witnessing to Christ's gra ;ious salvation to all the nations \fter this is done, there wiil fol ow the preaching of the gospel o :he kingdom by converted Israelite [Acts 15:14-17; cf. Matt 24:14) This was not clear to the disciples :herefore they put the question 'Wilt thou at this time restore thi ringdom of Israel?" The Divini dngdom shall be established, bu lot until after the gospel of thi ;race of God is preached and thi >ody of Christ is completed. 1. In Jerusalem (v. 8). This wai lone by the twelve Immediately fol owing Pentecost. 2. In Judea and Samaria (v. 8) This was done by the disciples aftei he hands of the prosecutors weri aid on them. Not only the twelvi >ut many others took part in this. 3. Unto the uttermost part of thi iarth (v. 8). Beginning with tlu "Yes?so did his wife." 1 ~~ .-'.i ' .-v_- 'A..;... j ,1 irst foreign missionary enterprise his work has been carried on witl arying degrees of success till th< >resent time. II. The Coming of the Spirl1 Acts 2:1-11). The power of the early Churcl fas the Holy Spirit. The watch ford of God's mightiest mei hroughout the centuries has beei ngt by might, nor by power, bu >y my spirit, saith the Lord 01 losts" (Zech. 4:6). 1. The time (v.l). It was on h< lay of Pentecost. By "day of Pen ecost" is meant the feast whicl fas held fifty days after the war* heaf was offered (Lev. 23:15, 16) t was observed by presenting tw* oaves made of the new meal (Lev 13:17). These loaves were bake* fith leaven, while leaven was rig dly excluded from the passovei east (Lev. 23:6). 2. Upon whom the Spirit cam* T- *> Cf. 1:13-15). The twelv* ind others to the number of 120 The coming of the spirit was noi nerely for the twelve but for al 'el'evers, all the members of th* >ody of Christ. They were In on* dace with one accord waiting foi he fulfillment of the Father'! romlse (Luke 24:49). If the churcl fould be with one accord In on* dace, wonderful blessings mighi till be expected. 3. The marks of the Spirit (vv -4). These marks were externa ind Internal. a. External, (l) The sign of t nighty wind. There was no wind >nly the sound thereof, suggestint he all-perversive, life-giving Influ nee of the Holy Spirit. (2) Tongues >f flame. Each of the 120 was rowned with such a tongue Th* ongues show the practical purpose lf the Spirit's gifts and the fire in lieates his purifying energy, purg ng away the dress and making fi| lis witnesses. (3) Speaking in for dgn tongues. For these humble mlileans thus to speak caused greal mazement. b. Internal. This is seen In the ransformation wrought in the dis lples. They now have great cour ge and self-possession. Peter, who little while before was cowerin? lefore a Jewish maid, now with Hon toldness stood before the thousand* 'f Jerusalem, and a little later be ore the chief rulers of the city and leclared unto them that they' had aurdered their King. III. The Converting Power of th. ioly Spirit (Acts 2:37-42). Many people were convicted of veere ^a't^T 3'??? repented and ^ere baptized. This revival wa? eal because as 1. They continued steadfast fr he apostles' teaching (y 40) rm, :ld e-w cold or'run a,ter everv iew teacfler that came a inn. 2. They continued in fellowship rith the apostles (v. 42). The surest ray to grow is to keep fellowship rith Christians. Spiritual indiffernee is sure to follow the neglect of he fellowship of the brethren in Ihrist. 3. They continued in the use of he means of grace (v. 42). They roke bread together. God has Intituted certain ordinances in his iouse, and those who are genuinely onverted will avail themselves of heir use. 4. In prayer. The apostolic hurch was a praying church. The ihristian life cannot be lived wlthut prayer. 36 J New Version of Shirl That's Attrac Bride?Dear, what is the true defl. nition of a groom? i Hubby?Why, a groom is a man . who takes care of dumb animals. Guide Po.t ! 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