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AS Bismarck Tribune ~: Am Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER ‘(Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Tribune pompany, Bismarck, N. D., and en- d at the postoffice at Bismarck as ond class mail matter. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, MAY 30, 1982 The New Trojan Horse : | Br Chickens Come Home to Roost (An Editorial) State administration papers which were vociferous supporters of the state recall election, aimed more at the retirement of Senator P, J. McCumber because he recommended Federal Judge Andrew Miller for appointment, now are being reminded of the adage that what is sauce for the goose also is sauce for the gander. They are also realizing that chickens come home to roost. rant some investigation by the local] tionalism, I doubt if civilization will health board. survive.—Bertrand Russell. Beer Versus Milk ee * What truth is there in the testi-/ I owe my nomination and my cer- \ mony of an alleged expert before a/tain election to my. enemies—Con- gressman Louis T. McFadden of congressional committee that there is almost as much energy in beer as in| Pennsylvania, critic of President Hoo- ver. good milk?—(H. M. D.) Answer — Approximately the same amount of truth in the assertion as ee # Men have IT oftener than women. teh aire wnmereatn meas reesei’ agro ser emanates a2 ies stoning nia Ne NEE AID GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher. by carrier, per year ... 7. mail per year (in Bis- ) ceescesesere 5 mail outside of North Wen by mail in state, per year $1.00 kiy by mail in state, _ years Veekly by three Veekly by mail in Canada, per Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation 3 q x 5 Member of The Associated Press ,; The Associated Press is exclusively \" ntitled to the use for republication inf all news dispatches credited to it sg° Not otherwise credited in this si¢Wspaper and also the local news of y2ontaneous origin published herein. Il rights of republication of all other (latter herein are also reserved. , 1 (Official City, State and County | Newspaper) b Foreign Representatives 2 SMALL, SPENCER, BREWER (Incorporated) HICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON n eons? C} Lights Over the Graves The nation today pays tribute to its onored dead and in so doing it should ike stock of history. On this day, when we bow in rever- ee at the graves of our loved ones, @ take special notice of the mounds hich mark the resting places of those hose lives teach us the lesson of pa- fotism, service and sacrifice. If we shut our eyes and project our inds back through the years, we sce te various crises through which this ation has passed and we thrill anew “SA ree .e gigantic figure of George Wash- gton facing defeat, misery, death ad disgrace in the dark hours of the volution. strayed, maligned and condemned by any of the very persons for whom * gave his all. We see the disgraceful record of dis- ganization and disunion which arked our feeble efforts in the war 1812, lightened here and there by e heroic deeds of our sailors at sea id the victory of Andrew Jackson at 2w Orleans. From 1861 to 1865 we see the spec- cle of a nation divided against it- Sw Sere ew ROH 1 If as few nations have been in his- ry. Millions of lives were destroyed id millions of hearts were saddened cause the people of the United ates could not find peaceful solu- m to a problem which common nse should have mastered. We see the graves of Spanish- nerican war veterans who fought to 2e peoples who now show little ap- eciation of the sacrifices made for em. ‘We see the graves of still younger 2n who fought to “Make the world fe for democracy.” What must they ink as they roam “that undiscov- F Gubecription Rates Payable in Advance » 2.50 mail outside of North 4} y Dakota, per year ............. 1.50 In the recall election the I. V. A. wanted to pass their “blizzard” primary law. That political ruse to bar farmers from congressional elections by advancing the date, failed ignominiously. Now Senator E. W. Jones of the 48th legislative district must face the recall racket just as Lemke, Frazier and Hagen once did. That memorable “political boner,” which The Tribune opposed as vigorously as the newspapers now supporting the I. V. A. candidates supported it, accomplished nothing. It boosted Frazier into the United States senate and, as a matter of delayed retributive justice, may send “Bill” Lemke sailing into congress on a low-interest plank. Lemke, who is “hitch-hiking” it through the state on his “depression campaign,” is putting up a fight unlike any in the annals of the state. It recalls the kind of campaign which former Supreme Court Judge Robinson conducted when he ran under Nonpartisan League endorsement with the late Judge Grace and the present incumbent, Judge Luther E. Birdzell. Mr. Robinson used a cowbell to attract a crowd. He won votes for both Grace and Birdzell. There may be no cowbells used in Senator Jones’ district, but if rumor is true Senator Bonzer of Lidgerwood, an I. V. A. adherent but not one wearing the Twichell collar, will be out on the hustings opposing his I. V. A. colleague, Senator Jones. Bonzer can be de- pended upon to hew to the line and let the chips fall where they will. The I. V. A. faction first used the recall club in North Dakota on state officers. They have used it several times since in recalling or seeking to recall Nonpartisan League legislators. Eleventh hour conversion in the I. V. A. camp against the recall as a governmental weapon comes now with rather feeble force. The voters in Senator Jones’ district are not going to be confused by the I. V. A. organiza- tion's pose against the recall as an “unholy” and most “unhallowed” instrument of “political piracy.” There was John Nathan in Sheridan, recalled under I. V. A. pressure. Mr. Twichell will recall, also, the fate of Senator John Webber of McIntosh. Who tied that recall can? | Let the show go on. The voters are entitled to a varied and picturesque campaign to lift the pall of economic depression. Let's get a good laugh out of it all if nothing more. Boss Twichell and his kitchen cabinet are tak- ing their politics too seriously. Let them come off their hypocritical perch and watch the chickens come home to roost. “Oh, what an awful web we weave when first we practice to de- ceive,” said the old fifth grade reader. The mouldy political ballyhoo won't go down in anno 1932. North Dakota voters want their political meat raw this June. Hitch-hiking, recalls, moratorium, cowbells and what have you! On with the show. We see him balked and] as yet. Their dreams haven't had a| chance to grow tarnished in the strug- gle. So they start on the uphill road | gaily, gallantly, unafraid. | Instructors, who are wise in the ways | of life as well as the routine of the classroom, will not teach boys and) girls, young men and young women, | that all battles go to the strong. They | will not tell them that every race be-+¢ longs to the fleet. They have learned better. Rather, they will tell those who are new in the conflict that there are things of the spirit that mean infi- | nitely more than material success can | | possibly mean. They will try to in-| spire them to make lives, not merely | ja living. i | It would be a splendid thing if the| | far-flung visions that are such a glo- | i vious part of youth could span every | |long tomorrow as they dream of doing. | But they can't. The play isn't writ-| ten that way, There are few all-star |casts. The vast majority of May and |June graduates must stay in the wings, | waiting for cues that seldom come.} | They are going to be disappointed and irestless, unless they have some abid- | jing, deeper interest. But I am in a hot climate where if I had clothes I could hardly wear them. Evil I am without any defense or means to resist any violence of man or beast. Good But I am cast on an island where I see no wild beasts to hurt me as I saw on the coast of Africa; and what if I had been shipwrecked there? Evil I have no soul to speak to or relieve me. Good But God wonderfully sent the ship in near enough to the shore that I have gotten out so many necessary things as will either supply my wants or enable me to supply myself as long as I live. He concluded that, on the whole, there was scare any condition in the world so miserable but there was something negative or positive in it to be thankful for. And he let it stand that we may always find some- thing from which to comfort our- selves, and to set on the credit side of the account. THAT’S NO VACATION Worcester, Mass.—In suing his wife for divorce, Franz H. C. Coppus, 53, came in for a rigid cross-examina- tion. He admitted having taken his 26-year-old private secretary, a pretty girl, on vacation trips to New York, mysterious illness in England recent- ly. The county analyst found 2.65 mg. of arsenic in her body. That is somewhere in the neighborhood of a third of a grain, if I have not forgot- ten the metric measure. A third of a |grain of arsenic is a whale of a dose for even a big strong man. A fairly safe medicinal dose of arsenic is one- hundredth of a grain. | In the sitting room of the home where the girl had lived the analyst found that arsenic was being given off in gaseous form from the wall pa- per, which was affected by mold. Now I want all my mentors and critics to note well that the arsenic in this instance entered the body in the form of a gas, by inhalation. It was not absorbed through the skin. Nothing ever is absorbed through the skin if the skin is not punctured, blis- tered, scratched or otherwise broken. This is true, no matter whether it be a case of shoe dye poisoning, nitro- glycerin, T. N. T., dynamite, duco, mercury, lead, ethyl lead, wood alc hol, benzol, and despite the arbitra: inferences of small time coroner’s physicians and old-time medical au- thorities. I might include Professor Kahlenberg and his boric acid trick in the general ruck, only I'm still a wee bit wary of this man—his stu+ dents all over the country seem to worship the man, so I am not yet ready to go to the mat with him, but anyway he is the only person of scien- tific standing I defer to in this con- to absorb things. troversy over the ability of the skin | PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE | By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self- addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. selves to the damp paper, grow vigor- ously, and generate a gaseous form of arsenic. That's how wall paper poi- soning happens. Arsenic is an ingredient in many wall papers, in the ink or color, es- Pecially in green papers. Other members of the girl's family were found to have traces of arsenic in thier blood, but not enough to cause any serious trouble. Just why the lit- tle girl absorbed and retained so much of it the report of the case does not make clear. Pathologist of Cardiff infirmary States that probably the flour paste used for putting on the wall paper served as a medium for the growth of the mold, which liberated the arsenic as a gas. INE BROUGHT YEZ. A_SWELL GIFT HORSE TO PULL YEZ OUTA ‘TH’ DEPRESSION! produces characteristic dysentery and cholera-like symptoms. Mild chronic arsenic poisoning is much more common than people gen- erally know. It occurs in various oc- cupations where arsenic is handled in one form or another, and it occurs from exposure to arsenic in domestic life. I am not going to describe the symptoms of mild chronic arsenic pol- soning. But I may suggest a harm- bend in the road, sight banners all! ishing on a barren place affording less remedy. That is a daily dose of ts sbe/resolution and courage with the way, and come into a Promised| 0 sustenance. sodium hyposulphite, say 20 grains, in| through gambling. A gambler can- hich Americans always have solved 4 i Evil A CASE OF WALL PAPER POISON- | grew there were only 2.3 parts; in the |a half glassful of water, for eight suc- |20t hold his winnings. He must go .eir national problems. seitth | Ihave no clothes to cover me. ING Plaster there were 91 parts. cessive days in each month. on, In tae on, he inevitably en In this bi-centennial year, we sce| They haven't tried to tackle reality | Good A girl aged 7 years died of some] spores of the mold attach them- —S. Beach Chester, noted Eng! QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Seventeen Cats Neighbors keep no less than 17 or 18 cats. Most or all of the cats have some disease which keeps them con- stantly sneezing, coughing, with a film on their eyes and bunches on their faces and throats, yellow pus masses. These people are members of a sect and they do not believe disease oc- curs and they will have no treatment. A veterinary physician who saw these cats said he believes they all have tu- berculosis. What are the dangers, if any, to human beings?—(Mrs. W. H.W.) Answer—If it is tuberculosis it is the bovine type, which is not likely to |infect human adults but may infect The jury gave a verdict of death | children, causing the bone and lymph- from dysentery, with arsenical poison- | node tuberculosis in young children.) ing as a contributory cause. | The condition you describe would seem ‘Well, arsenic poisoning, when acute,|to be a nuisance which should war-/|if it does not give place to interna- | there is energy in beer. A man couldn’t drink the prodigious volume of beer (many gallons) he would re- quire to furnish the energy for a light day’s work. The catch in the propa- ganda is that little word ALMOST. of Lime Can you tel! me if inhaling the fumes of lime would be of benefit to @ person with T. B.? A friend thinks this is helping him.—(Miss C. K.) Answer—There is an old theory that persons inhaling or ingesting consid- erable lime are less likely than others to develop tuberculosis, or that per- sons who have the disease do better if they get more lime in one way or another. I do not know any more about it. (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) TODAY * 21S THE a wi ANNIVERSARY SOISSONS FALLS On May 30, 1918, the German offen- Sive reached a new height in a big push which forced the allied rear guards back to Vesilly and which en- tailed the capture of Fere-en-Tarde- nois. This brought heavy fighting up to the outskirts of Rheims. The road from Soissons to Com- Ppeigne was well guarded, but German troops finally won through to the for- mer town on the road Soissons-Har- tennes. Allied troops were comparatively slow in backing up the line, but in the three previous days they extended the line of defense from 35 to 60 An income can never be made gambler now “reformed.” * oe * The day is not far when the Span- iards will realize that I was not such a bad king, after all, and that I did do something for the welfare of Spain. —Alfonso, ex-King of Spain. * Oe OX . We do not do things in this coun- try by revolutions in the sense that word is used, but here, as elsewhere, the people are restive and resentful because they recognize that govern- ments are not meeting the purposes for which they were established —Sen- | ator William E. Borah of Idaho. * Oe OK These are hard days, critical days, but they are days in which it is worth while to live and toil—stirring days. —Elinior Glyn, writer. oe Barbs ! —_+ Seventy-seven Dukhobors in British Columbia were sentenced to three years in the penitentiary for running around in their birthday suits. Gosh, isn’t Hollywood glad it isn’t in Can- ada, ° x OK Gandhi has given up his spinning wheel and will use a sewing machine hereafter. . But he’s still one step be- hind the modern American woman, who has given up the sewing ma- chine for contract bridge. * ee Now that congress has decided to cut out polo ponies for the army flyers as an economy move, we might suggest that spurs be omitted from boots. The saving from this item in wear and tear on desks would be tremendous. * The more congress battles over the economy bill, the more it is apparent that congress can’t save anything but the farmer. xe * Business has reached the turning point, a Chicago economist says. We certainly hope it doesn’t take the wrong turn again. (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) STICKERS ph a me a VEEEARBG Can you add two dashes and five vow- ls, four of them the same vowel, to make a word out of the top line, and then merely put the letters of the second line in their correct order to make another word? wr FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: —Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes. x % % The most dangerous thing in the | world is the spirit of nationalism, and, BEGIN HERE 90DAY SUSAN CAREY, 20 and benutt- fal, ts DUN- “There is nothing more to say, I guess.” the MAN HUNTERS BY MABEL McELLIOTT right. Be witling to talk turkey in a day or two.” Whether she has a job or not, a chorus girl is likely to be kicking. © ©/932 BY NEA SERVICE INC. had the ancient square piano, The whole rlace reminded him dimly of ; 3 | 1 ith “ i i. sd country from whose bourne no| it 100 the sorry plight of the \Cuba and elsewhere. When asked| Samples of the wall paper in the, ot a 'millionaire, His father detained him. “Where| Nevertheless, Mr. Dunbar rang|his mother's front parlor. It was veler returns” "| present economic system may make why he hadn't taken his wife along,| sitting room where the girl had lived | do you think you're going?” for his secretary and demanded the|uncompromisingly clean and the a returns” as they look down|+iom think that there are no holes,{he replied: “That, sir, would not| showed the presence of 8.3 parts of, “Back to my desk of course.” telephone directory. He had a good|frilled white curtains showed no on a world more imperialistic, less ited and more at odds now than it is before the World war began? What must all these detached spir- think as they see the futility with itch we, who remain behind, strug- with the problems of economic in- sbility brought on by a surplus of either round or square, for their pegs, in the industrial structure. If their |dreams are entirely materialistic this will be tremendously discouraging. If |they are built from firmer stuff they | | will stand the strain. Youth is such a buoyant time. It ts | have been a vacation.” May Bother You a Bit arsenic per million. Where the mold the marringe, nce between At Mr. Dunbar stood up, emphasiz- ing his words with a shaking fore- finger. “You're to do nothing of the kind,” he announced. “Until this affair is settled, you're persona non grata in this office. Do you under- stand?” It was a blow but the boy gave no sign other than the darkening memory and there flashed into his mind the name Bob had dropped earlier in the conversation. The girl’s name was Carey. She lived with her aunt Jessie, Bob had said, on the west side. His spatulate thumb ran down the list of tele phone subscribers. Sure enough, there was the name. In his small, sign of the usual Chicago grime, eee Sligo was a faint rustle in the hall and he stood up, feeling rather ill at ease. The girl who faced him was tall and slender. Her dress ¢. black woolen stuff had a nun-like frill of white t the throat, The man noticed that her skin had | 4X . 4 ” led. | i only right that boys and girls should HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Pustle 7 Heel led. of his eyes. neat, copper-plate script Dunbarjan extraordinary, ti..aslucent fair- i] ods? What must they think of the | ave S peaod for ireaming betore ite 1 Only state in ““ $Sun god. i “Very well, sir, if that’s the way|wrote the street number in bis|ness and that ae wore no makeng. ng ta of over-production of wheat, bri lgeadunaalvine. Towed the U.S. A. 9 Blackbird of | tie you feel about it.” He turned again | pocket address book. It might be|Her :yes were enormous. iy rat, lumber, cotton, wool and a host | 2778s Pro! ‘ B. bdaadd to. stiow ate: the cuckoo her to rele but his father’s bellowing voice ar-|handy to have during the next few| As the g’~ advanced Dunbar be i other products, and a surplus of la- | f the loss of a little transient glamour | crease in popu family. be eee ie akast te rested him. days. gan to speak quickly and glibly. It | t, in a world where many are hun- j will supply more durable stuff for to-j lation from 7 10 Broad. for New York. “What do you think you're going’ To his father’s surprise and irri-|Susan was not the sort of person 8 , ill-clothed and poorly shelterea? | ™°70"'s building, it is well worth 1920 to 1930 11 Bitter drug. NOW GO ON WITH THE sToRy | to live on, you young idiot, if I turn | tation, Bob did not come round. The|he had expected to see, he gave no 4 i ?| the cost. Gav cinin aatae 12 Squawfish, i CHAPTER XLV you out?” servants reported that he had re-|sign. His method of attack was + era in which we deny ourselves | tor from 15 Valued. ' The youth said grimly, “I sup-|turned home around noon, had|simple He would play on her pbet- 4 Mum..86 are afraid to make use | — Arkansas. 18 Splinter. | ‘pee elder Dunbar glared at his| pose I can get a job.” packed a bag and departed without|ter feeling. He would make her Fi the talents of our brothers who are | Editorial Comment | 13 Thoughts. 19 Half an em. tall son. “What's that you’re| “You do! You're very optimistic.|leaving any word. Mrs. Dunbar|see that marriage with a penniless zing for employment? 14 Vineyard. 22 Hose sup- saying?” he demanded. “I can’t|There are hundreds of stevedores|was at Hot Springs. She was one|boy would be quite different from Truly, we have little cause today to| popes pilates helope show the 16 Old-womanish. poters. seem to get what you're driving at.” and truckmen walking the streets|of those fretful, chronic invalids.| marriage to the heir of millions. te, pride in the way we have used 2 heritage bequeathed to us. And yet, as the arches of the years \) ‘They are published without regard |] to whether they agree or disagree | with The Tribune's policies. 17 Unless. 18 To frighten. . 20 Heathen god. 21 Almond. of quantity in 53 Eneysted 3 Seams. 6 An expanse. 'S-Loses color. 0 Ocean. Deliberately Bob repeated. “I told you, sir, I expect to be married next week.” looking for work. They can’t find it. What makes you think you can?” eee Her husband was relieved that there was no necessity of explain- ing the situation to her. cee “I'm Bob Dunbar's father,” he began. Susan was not surprised. From Bob the nignt before she had heard the whole story, “I don’t ey tumor 2 7 zkon us to look back to other trying} Robinson Crusoe’s Balance 22 Nutritious adeadtaletican Gi. Name of any a Seay “Hah!” The veins stood out Naps ye ngrgett for hed AFTER & day of waiting during| Want you to think,” the man pur- , es in this republic, we find cause Sheet elements foun! aM P . thing aL rettibi alarmingly on the forehead of the | ayant nuit eg a qa ¥ iy. which his digestion was annoy-| Sued winningly, “that I've come * hope. The spirit of "76, of ’61| es . in GOuRie, ORE oe net GB apablike 36 Not erect | man in the swivel chair. “You're| when 1 wanted Ay action (inelytmpatred the older. man |,ose-1n 8p. entagnnistic mood. (Ga d of 1918 still lives in the breasts | «New York Times? 24 Snaky f h. 37 Paqund. antelope. Ban J | A en I wanted to study agricul-|mappeu out a course of action,|the contrary, I feel very friendly When Robinson Crusoe was cast up- 25 Standard of 39 Hour. 56 Made neat 38 Soup. | trying to tell me—you have the/ture, the only thing I cared about, | tard-shelled autocrat that he was,|toWard you and now that I’ve seen American citizens. We are begin- ag to see the dangers of both polly- ha internationalism and rabid na- nalism with which we continually 2 propagandized. We labor forward in the darkness a uncertainty of trying times with > spirit of America guiding us. ‘We resolve anew, as we kneel at the saves of those who gave unstinting wifice that this nation might live, at we will be worthy of them; that , too, will discharge the responsi- ities which the times have placed jm us. If they could sacrifice, so 1 we. If they could solve the prob- ws of threat without, treachery thin and poverty. everywhere, we 2 solve thé lesser problems of in- “_ Atable distribution, rampant self- ‘ness and scornful power just as our [on a desert isle he began seriously to | consider his condition. This led him jte draw up the state of his affairs in writing, “not so much to leave them to any that may come after me as to deliver my thoughts from daily poring over them and afflicting my mind.” As his reason began to master his ‘‘de- spondency” he began to comfort him- self by setting the good against the evil, that “I might have something to distinguish my case from the worse.” He thereupon stated his situation Wald impartially like debtor and cred- rs Evil I am cast upon @ horrible deso- late island, void of all hope of re- covery. Good But I am alive and not dead, as all my ship’s eee was. type measure. 26 Elevated. Above. 40 Beasts. 42 Wrath. 29 Therefore 44.A woman's 30 Rendered club menial service. 46 Every. 31 Heavenly body. 47 Boil. 33 Folded in 49 Jinn. small folds. 50 To satiate. 41 Morindin dye. 34 Practical unit 51 Money drawer. 6 Indicted 4 Concorts. 41 Solitary 43 Silk worm. 45Giant king of Bashan 46 Astringent. 48 Tree. 50.Cry of a dove. 52 Behold. 54 Negative. VERTICAL 1 Flour milling center 2 Antipathy 3 Bird's home 4 Japanese porsy 5 Like. * “That's just it,” he said. ‘marry Denise. Then you come around with a cock and bull story’ face to announce that you're marry- ing a nobody. You know very well it's been understood you're to marry Denise.” Bob shrugged his shoulders. His father rapped out, “What's just it? You're talking rot this morning.” Bob tried patiently to explain. “You talked me into that engage ment. You and mother—everybody.” “I suppose you don’t know your own mind, hey? I must say, young man, I think you’re behaving in devilish bad fashion. First you give us to understand that you want to about a girl nobody knows. Some- who discouraged me?” “You were expelled from college. Don't forget that.” “I was because I was bored stiff. But you had your way and that was all you cared about.” Bob threw his young shoulders back and eyed his parent defiantly. “This ts one time you're not going to have it!” he said. “I’m going to marry Susan no matter what happens.” The older man gave a sharp, re- sentful laugh and spread his hands out. “Go ahead,” he said, “but don’t come whining to me when things go wrong!” “I won't,” Bob promised grimly. The door slammed. The father con- tinued to stare at the spot where his son had stood a moment ago. The mottled flush died in his cheeks and once he smiled shrewd- ly. The boy wouldn’t go far, he soliloquized. He would think {t he loved his only son dearly, This open break with Robert disturbed him. Mr. Dunbar decided to see ve girl and talk a little sense to er, He frowned with distaste as his taxi, bumping along the shabby side street, came to a stop. It was just as he had expected—a house in a row of brave, run-down dwellings badly needing paint. “Wait for me,” he commanded the driver. Dunbar rang the bell with some trepidation. It was not @ pleasant errand but it was one he must go through with whether or not he liked it. A lean, gray-haired woman in a spotless blue house dress answered the ring, “We don’t want to buy anything,” she began firmly, Then, struck by something in her caller's bearing, she stopped, confused, you I must applaud my son's taste.” He seated himself at her invita- tion. “I only want to make {t quite clear that there were good reasons for my behaving as I did when my son told me his plans. Robert is, I'm afraid, very impulsive, and,” here he shook his head sadly, “ex- tremely fickle. Perhaps you do not know that he fs virtually bound in another agreement.” He paused to let the words sink in. Susan sal ‘m afraid 1 don't quite understand.” Mr. Dunbar smiled. “Of course you don’t, my dear young lady,” he assured her. “The scamp would never tell you about himself.” “If you mean Denise Ackroyd, 1 do know all about that,” Susan said quietly, The man’s jaw dropped. “Oh, you do! Then I know you're going to be sensible about it. it you're : G over and come to his senses. Most| “I want to see Miss Susan|fond of my son you won't want to thera did. asi hm singled out, and separated, on Picked up God knows! voung men experienced these flur-|Carey,” Dunbar said in his courtii.|stand in bis‘way. His mother and ‘The light above those verdant graves raliie: where! ‘ ries of emotion over a pretty face,|est manner, “Is she in? I feel deeply on the subject of his ¥ ‘nes brighter as we vow that we will. 5 Good . Bob gripped his hands against] but there was no sense in taking] “Oh, yes, I'll call her.” The|M™arrying Denise. In fact his whole od ay Dreams of Youth year, in May and June, many “7s and girls set out to conquer the * are confident that their di- » (mas will help them cope with any “ ‘gation. They haven't a doubt but they will be able to take every But I am singled out, too, from all the ship's crew, to: be spared from death. And He that miracu- lously saved me from death can deliver me from vt condition, Evi I am divided from mankind, a solitare one banished from human society. Good But I am not starved and per- € the back of the chair until the knuckles stood out. “I'll have to ask you to take that back,” he said with deadly quiet. “I’ve told you all about her. There's nothing the matter with her family. She hap- pens to be poor—that’s all.” The two men continued to stare the thing seriously! The girl was undoubtedly a common little plece who had her eye on Bob's inhert- tance. What was it Bob had = she did? Worked in an office some- where. Young fool! ‘ And yet unwillingly the father admired the boy for his defiance. at each other. The younger moved toward the door, “Didn't think he had it in him,” he gray-haired woman gave him an- other penetrating look and then in- vited him to enter. As the man waited in the small living room he glanced about with annoyance, It was not at all the sort of interior he had expected.’ The old rosewood chairs, carved and upholstered in Buttered. “He'll come round all the manner of the '80's, had a de cent self-respect about them. So future depends upon it. His grand- father’s money is being held in trust for him, Robert will receive it when he is 25 on the condition that he marries with our approval. You see?” He smiled at her. “You mean, then,” sald Susan slowly, “that it would ruin Bob's life if he were to marry me?” (To Be Continued)