touch of sarcasm. Faith answered simply enough: "She was in a shop at Clapham when father married her, and his people never forgave him." "You mean because they were swells?" "Yes, I suppose so; I've never seen any of them." "It's like a novelette again," said Peg, and fell upon her machine with renewed energy. It was some moments before she next spoke. "It licks me why you've come here. You'll loathe it like poison before you've been here a week. The noise of the machines gets on your nerves and makes you want to scream. Miss Dell gets on your nerves, too." She nodded in the direction of the thin-lipped forewoman. "You'll hate her, and you'll hate the sight of things like these and all the rich, hateful people who buy them." She caught up a dainty silk blouse from the table beside her and shook it contemptuously. "Do you know Scammel?" "Scammel?" Faith echoed the name blankly. "No; who is he?" "He owns this place," Peg explained. "There's no Heeler in it really--it's just a name. It's Scammel we're all swotting to make money for," she added. "And I hate him----" "You seem to hate a lot of things and people," Faith said timidly. "So would you if you knew as much as I do," was the sharp retort. Faith pushed the soft hair back from her forehead; she was beginning to feel unutterably fagged. "I don't think I could hate anyone very much," she said, "except the man who ruined father," she added slowly. Peg said "Humph!" and for some moments they worked silently. Then Faith asked again: "What is he like?" "Who? Scammel? Oh, big and ugly." "Does he ever come here?" "Bless your heart, no! He's a millionaire with a house in Park-lane or somewhere, and a yacht, and a place on the river, and a Rolls-Royce, and no end more...." She was drawing entirely on her imagination. "I saw him once when he brought two ladies round the works--dressed-up