14 HOME ANT) FARM MAGAZINE SECTION By Geo. Ban McCutcheon HOME AND FARM MAGAZINE SECTION SERIAL. A Fool and His Money Copyright, 1913, By Geo.' Burr MeCutcheon, . SYNOPSIS OP PBEVIOTJS S INSTALLMENTS. $ In the opening instalment! of "A $ Pool ind His Money," Geo. Barr Mo- Cutcheon'i charming novel, serial Q righu for which have been specially obtained for the Home and Farm Q Magaiine Section, we learn of John Bellamy Smart, the young man who i telling this story. He has just 4 written his first novel, and at the $ same time has fallen heir to an im- 4 mouse fortune left him by his uncle. 9 After a visit to London, Smart j takes a trip on the River Danube. After finding an old-world town, he !iverg an ancient castle, which uo j purchases from its owner, the Count. With his secretary, Poopendyke, he $ takes possession of the immense structure, which is supposed to be tenanted only by the caretaker and his family, the Schmicks. Later Smart $ finds a woman who is in possession of a wing of the castle that is barrod 5 to him. She grants a brief interview, but refuses to leave. The servants J appear to be in league with her, and Smart is in a quandary. Later ha is captivated by tho wit and beauty of fc 0 the mysterious lady and no longer $ 9 urges ner departure. He finds that $ she is divorced from a worthless and $ scheming Austrian Count, who. was S awarded the custody of the lady's J child. The Count demands a million $ 8 aonars irom Ms rich American father- $ in law, when he would give it up. The j mother abducts the child and selects S the castle as a hiding place. Smart fears trouble with the authorities, $ but consents to assist the fair s 6 divorcee. &"eS$e3$.(3$ lfJlND mi me eieV she corn els plcted gloomily. "And take the child awav M . . . . xrom you,-' i made haste to explain. A fierce light flamed in her eves "I should kill some one before that could nappen," she cried out, clench ing her hands. "I I beg of you, madam, don't work yourself into a a state," I implored, in considerable trepidation. "Nothing like that can happen, believe me. "Oh, what do you know about itf" sho exclaimed, with most unnecessary vehemence, I thought. "He wants the child and and well, you can see why he wants her, can't you! He is making the most desperate efforts to recover her. Max says the newspapers are full of the the scandal. They are depict ing me as a brainless, law-defying American without sense of love, honor or respect. I don't mind that, however. It is to be expected. They pll describe the Count as a long-suffering, honor able, dreadfully maltreated person, and are doing what they can to help him in tho prosecution of the search. My mother, who is in Paris, is being sha dowed; my two big brothers are being watched; my lawyers in Vienna are be ing trailed everywhere oh, it is really a most dreadful thing. But but I will not give her up! Sho is mine. He doesn't love her. Ho doesn't love me. He doesn't love anything in the world but himself and his cigarettes. I know, for I've paid for his cigarettes for nearly three years. He has actually ridiculed me in court circles, he has de famed me, snubbed me, humiliated me, cursed me. You cannot imagine what it has been like. Once he struck me in" "Struck you!" I cried. "in tho presence of his sister and her husband. But I must not distress you with sordid details. Suffice it to say, I turned at last like the pro verbial worm. 1 applied for a divorce ten months ago. It was granted, pro visionally as 1 say. He is a degenerate, He was unfaithful to me in every sense of the word. But in spite of all that, the court in granting me the separa tion, took occasion to placate national honor by giving him the child during the year, pending the final disposition of the case. Of course, everything de pends on father's attitude in respect to the money. You see what I mean! A month ago I heard from friends in .Vienna that he was shamefully neglect ing our my baby, so I took this awful, this perfectly bizarre way of getting her out of his hands. Possession is nine points in the law, you see. I " "Alas!" interrupted I, shaking my head. "There is more than one way to look at the law. I'm afraid you have got yourself into a serious er pickle." v "I don't un," she said defiantly. "It is the law's fault for not prohibit ing such marriages as ouri. Oh, I know I must seem awfully foolish and idiotic to you, but but it's too late now to back out, isn't itt" I did not mean to say it, but I did and I said it with some conviction: "It is! You must be protected." "Thank you, thank you!" she cried. clasping and unclasping her little hands. 1 found myself wondering if the brute had dared to strike her on that soft. pink cheek. Suddenly a horrible thought struck me with stunning force. Don t tell me that your your hus band is the man who owned this castle up to a week ago," I cried. "Count James Holiendahlf" She shook her head. "No. He is not the man. 1 ' Seeing that I waited for her to go on, she resumed: "I know Count James quita well, however. He is my husband s closest friend." Good heaven," said I, in quick alarm. "That complicates matters doesn't itt He may come here at any time. "It isn't likely, Mr. Smart. To be perfectly honest with you, I waited un til I heard you had bought the castle before coming here myself. Wo were in hiding at the house of a friend in Linz up to a week ago. I did not think it right or fair to subject them to the notoriety or the peril that was sure to follow if the officers took it into their heads to look for me there. The day you bought the castle, I decided that it was the safest place for me to stay until tho danger blows over, or until father can arrange to smuggle me out of this awful country. That very night wo were brought here in a motor. Dear om ixinraa ana Mrs. Scnmick took me in. They have been perfectly adorable, all of them." May I enquire, madam," said I stiffly, "how you came to select my abode as your hiding place!" Oh, I have forgotten to tell you that we lived here one whole summer just after we were married. Count Hohendahl let us have the castle for our our honeymoon. Ho was here a great deal of the time. All sorts of horrid, nasty, snobbish people were here to help us enjoy our honeymoon. I shall never forget that dreadful summer. My only friends were the Schmicks, Every one else ignored and despised me, and they all borrowed, won or stole money from me. I was compelled to play bridge for atrociously high stakes without know- ng one card from the other. But, as I say, the Schmicks loved me. You see they were in the family ages and ages before I was born." "The family! What family!" "The Rothhoefen family. - Haven't they told you that my great-grand mother was a Rothhoefen! No! Well, she was. I belong to the third genera tion of American-born descendants. Doesn't it simplify matters, knowing tnisf" "Immensely," said I, in something of a daze. "And so I came here, Mr. Smart, where hundreds of my ancestors spent their honeymoons, most of them perhaps as unhappily as I, and where I knew a fellow-countryman was to live for awhile in order to get a plot for a now story. You see, I thought I misfit be a great help to you in the shape of suggestion." She smiled very warmly, and thought it a very neat way of putting it. naturally it would be quite impossi- ble to put her out after hearing that she had already put herself out to some extent in order to assist me. "I can supply the villain for your story if you need one, and I can give you oceans of ideas about noblemen. I am sorry that I can't give you a nice, sweet heroine. People hate heroines af ter they are married and live un happily. You" J The public taste Is changing," I in terrupted quickly. "Unhappy marriages are so common nowadays that the women who go into 'em are always heroines. People like to read about suf fering and anguish among the rich, too. Besides, you are a Countess. That puts you near the first rank among heroines. Don't you think it would be proper at this point to tell mo who you are!" i She regardod me steadfastly for s moment, and then shook her head. "I'd rather not tell you my name, Mr. Smart. It really can't matter, you know. I've thought it all out very care fully, and I've decided that it is not best for you to know. You see if you don't know who it is you are shelter ing, the courts can't hold you to ac count. You will be quite innocent of de liberately contriving to defeat the law. No, I shall not tell you my name, sor my husband's, nor my father's. If you'd like to know, however, I will tell you my baby's name. She's two years old. aud I think she'll like you to call her Rosemary." By this timo I was quite hypnotized by this charming, confident trespasser upon my physical and I was about to say my moral estate. Never have 1 known a more complacent violator of all the proprieties of law and order as she appeared to bo. She was a revelation more than that, she was an inspiration, What a courageous, independent, fasci nating little bucaneer she was. Her"bver- whelming confidence in herself, despite tho occasional lapse into despair, stag gered me. I couldn't help being im pressed. If I had had any thought of ejecting her, bag and baggage, from my castle, it had been completely knocked out of my head and I was left, you might say, in a position which gave me no other alternative than to con sider mvself a humble instrument in the furthering of her ends, whether I would or no. It was most amazing. .Superior to the feeling of scorn I natu rally ten ior ner ana uer Kina tne fooU who make international beds and find them filled with thorns there was the delicious sensation of being able to rise above my prejudices and .become a willing conspirator against that despot, Common Sense. She was very sure of herself, that was plain; and I am positive that she was equally sure of me. It isn't alto gether flattering, either, to foel that a woman is so snre of you that there isn 't any doubt concorning her estimate of your offensive strength. Somehow one feels an absence of physical attractive: ness. "Rosemary," I repeated. "And what am I to call you!" Even my enemies call me Countess," she said coldlv. Oh," said I, more respectfully. "I see. When am' I to have the pleasure of meeting the less particular Rosemary!" I didn t mean to be horrid," she said plaintively. "Please overlook it, Mr. Smart. If you are very, very quiet I think you may see her now. She is asleep." I may frighten her if sho awakes," I said in haste, remembering my an tipathy to babies. Nevertheless I was led through a eouple of bare, .unfurnished rooms into a sunny, perfectly adorable nursery. A nursemaid English, at a glance arose from her seat in the window, and held a cautious finger to her lips. In the middle of a bed that would have ac commodated an entire family, was the sleeping Rosemary a tiny, rosy cheek ed, yellow haired atom bounded on four sides by yards of mattress. I stood over her timorously and stared. The Countess put one knee upon the mattress and, leaning far over, kissed a little paw. 1 blinked, like a confounded booby. Then we stole out of the room. "Isn't she adorable!" asked the Countess when we were at a safe distance. "They all are," I said grudgingly, when they're asleep." "You are horrid!" "By the way," I said sternly, "how does that bedstead happen to be a yard or so lower than any other bed in this entire castle! All the rest of them are so high one has to get into them from a chair." Oh," she said complacently, "it was too high for Blake to manage conven iently, so I had Rudolph saw the legs off short." One of my very finest antique bed steads! But I didn't even groan, "You will let me Btay on, won't you, Mr, Smart!" she said, when we were at the fireplace again, "I am really so helpless, you know." ' I offered her everything that the. castle afforded in the way of loyalty and luxury. "And we'll have a telephone in the main hall before the end of a week," I concluded beamingly. Her face clouded. "Oh, I'd much rather have it in my hallway, if you don't mind. You see, I can't very well go downstairs every time I want to use the 'phone, and it will be a nuisance sending for me when I'm wanted." This was rather highhanded, I thought. "But if no one knows you're here, it seems to me you're not likely to be called." "You never can tell," she said mys teriously, I promised to put the instrument in her hall, and not to have an extension to my rooms for fear of creating sus picion. Also the electric bell system was to be put in just as she wanted it to be. And a lot of othor things that do not seem to come to mind at this moment. I left in a daze at half-past threo, to send Britton up with all the late novels and magazines, and a big box of my special cigarettes. CHAPTER VI. I Discuss Matrimony, OOPENDYKE and I tried to do a little work that evening, but neither of us seemed quite capa ble of concentration. We said "I belt pardon" to each other a dozen times, or more, following mental lapses, and then gave it up. My ideas failed in con secutiveness, and when I did succeed in hitching two intelligent thoughts to-1 gether he invariably destroyed the se quence by compelling me to repeat my self, with the rosult that I became iras cible. We had gone over The events of the day very thoroughly, If anything, he was more alarmed over our predicament than L He seemed to sense the danger that attended my decison to shelter and protect this cool-headed, rather self centered young woman at the top of my castlo. To me, it was something of a lark; to him, a tragedy. He takes everything seriously, so much so in fact that ho gets on my nerves. I wish he were not always looking at things through tho little end of the telescope. like a change, and it is a novelty to sometimes see things through the big end, especially peril. . I hey will yauk us all up for aidine and abetting," he prolaimed, trying to focus his eyes on the shorthand book he waB fumbling. iou wouldn't liavo me turn her over to the law, would you!" I demanded-crossly. "Please don't forget that we are Americans." I don't," said he. "That's what worries me most of all. "Well," said I loftily, "woll see." We were silent for a long time. "It must be horribly lonelv nnd spooky away up there where she is," l saia at last, inadvertently betraying my thoughts. He sniffed. "Have you a cold!" I demanded. glaring at him. No," he said gloomily; "a ore- sentiment." "Umph!" Another period of silence. Then: "I wonder if Max" I stopped short. Jfes, sir," he said, with wonder- ' ful divination. "He did." "Any message!'.' "She sent down word that the new cook is a jewel, but I think sho must have been jesting. I've never cared for . a man cook myself. I don't like to ap pear hypercritical, but what did you think of the dinner tonight, sir!" "I've never tasted better boiled ham in my life, Mr. Poopendyke." "Ham! That's it, Mr. Smart. But what I'd like to know is this: "What became of the grouse you ordered for dinner, sir! I happen to know that it ' was put over the fire st seven" I sent it up to the countess, with our compliments," said I, peevishly. I think that remark silenced him. At any rate, he got up and left the room, (To Be Continued.) Italy will add about one hundred ami eighty aeroplauei to iti army eaulpmeut tbii UOaf,