THE FORBIDDEN YEARS by WADSWORTH CAMP 4 '■I guess there’s something prong with me. The less you Slink about me the better.” He grasped her again. •I’ll never think cf any other woman. Make up your mind to It. I want you, and I’m going to have you.” She eluded his arms and flipped between the bars of the rate. Suddenly she swayed ack against the fence. "Harvey! There’s somebody there; in those bushes!” He vaulted lightly over and ■tood at her side. The bushes across the road rustled. "Who’s there?” Into the pallid twilight be tween the trees a gaunt, itooped form stalked. Barbara gasped. Harvey drew her ground. "It’s Ed Siller. Come along.” But the caretaker got in Cieir path. Although it was too aik to read his face, his at titude projected a pleased, im pertinent censoriousness. Bar para had never liked the man pbout whose exclusiveness and restraint she had always found •omething malevolent. That Characteristic expressed itself pow without veils. "Thought it was you two in the woods.” Barbara knew the signs of Survey’s temper. "I expect you’d rather spy than eat, Siller.” "I expect,” the caretaker grumbled, "that I would, since It’s what I’m paid to do.” "I never heard Mr. Manvel pbject to people going in his Woods.” Barbara tried to urge Harvey »way. "Come on. Don’t get mad." The intention of Siller's re ply couldn’t be dodged. "That depends on who and «nrhen. He certainly don’t want you and Bobbie Norcross alone In his woods after dark. He’d fee a fool if he did after what I Bust saw.’’ Barbara’s own temper (lamed. "What did you see? You be pareful what you say.” Siller chuckled. The sound ■was mirthless, obviously in tended to offend. “I expect I’d better be to (pare my blushes for what I didn’t see.” Harvey’s clinched hand shot put. The caretaker toppled and (h opped to his knees. "Get up and I’ll give you (mother on your dirty mouth.” Siller remained crouched, looking warily up, his Jaw sag ging. The night didn’t quite bide a trickle of red from his Ups. Harvey took Barbara’s band. ljet a gu. She stirred with a feeling of awaking a new world, heavy (With different ugliness. Bur dened with blameless shame, the let Harvey lead her up the lilll. From the top she glanced hack and saw Siller’s dim, de formed shape, like an evil •hade. Slowly, with an air of Ceaseless effort, it limped after her up the slope. Barbara lay on her bed, Worrying rather formlessly about the imagination of prurient people. Ed Siller wasn’t the only one in back ward Elmford. What would the iutcome for her be if he should itart a train of malevolent lies that would draw her closer to Harvey against her will? 8he turned to the wall as her aunt glided in questioning and hopeful. “Harvey say anything to night?” She knew that her uncle and aunt desired the flowering of that romance, because they had a taut eagerness, puzzling to her, for an early marriage, and they had faith in Har vey’s ambition. But she couldn’t decide her whole fu ture in the dark. The realiza tion stimulated her hunger for self-knowledge into an uun bearable void, and she turned back slowly, tensly, striving to surmount the inhibitions oi years. The struggle ended on broken whispers. “Aunt Barbara, what—what happened when 1 was a child? Why—why—am—I—” The tightening of Mrs. Gardner’s face, the blank fear of her eyes, rather than her swift movement for the door, conquered Barbara. Perhaps Uncle Walter was right, and it was better not to know. “Come here Aunt Barbara. I want to tell you something.” Mrs. Gardner paused. Slow ly she relaxed and tip-toed back to the bed. *Mt’s just this: I don’t love Harvey.” “What do you know about love, Bobbie No*cross?” “Nothing, and certainly you couldn’t dream c: marrying a man without knowing a little.” Mrs. Gardner’s head jerked. “I’m sure I can’* guess where you get such notions.” Perhaps from a white-and gold mother outlined against gay draperies, gazing horri fied, at an object guite beyond a child’s vision. “Make up your mind you’re going to dream about it. You won’t find a better chance in Elmford.” Probably that was true, for the first time, lying on her bed, shrinking from her aunt, the thought came to Barbara that through her failure to catch fire from Harvey she might be driven forth to other chances, better or worse;.. and onward, for good or evil, to the knowledge of herself that she wanted desperately, yet dreaded. She sat up in bed and stared at the glass beyond the foot board. Life would have been so much simpler if she could have found warmth in the mirrored face, and love in the puzzled eyes; but there stared back at her only coldness and beauty: an icy loveliness. Her aunt’s jeer drew her away. “You needn’t look at your self. I guess you know you’re too pretty to die an old maid.” The conclusion was conser vatively expressed even for Elmford. Barbara’s dresses, cheap prints in warm weather, and cotton masquerading as wool in cold, failed to hide the slender graces of her figure. Her heavy hair, nearly black, yet lighted by sly flame, piled from her neck and temples in orderless waves that achieved of themselves : counterfeit of meticulous arrangement. Her brown eyes had a groping, pensive guallty from her per petual tsraying among the re luctant shadows of her baby hood; and her mouth, probably from the misty explorations, took on, even when she laughed, soft, wistful lines that obscured her charming, provocative face with a nearly transparent veil of enigma. Such beauty was exceptional in Elmford. It might be the souvenir, then, of that van ished past of which Barbara was never allowed to speak. Too openly Mrs. Gardner found it in something profane; a quality to be distrusted. And now suppose that evil figure | at the Manvil place should cast his twisted shadow across it. But was she truly beattiful? Barbara had no faith in Elm ford’s judgement. Even the admiration of her former teacher at the public school, Miss Minnie Barton, who was too pretty and competent her self to remain long in the vil lage, had failed to convince her; but now that Miss Minnie had left to accept a minor position in the university library at Princeton, Barbara found herself longing for the approval of her steady, hazel eyes. Then one morning she saw Jacob Manvel in her uncle’s store, and, surprised, read in his peering gaze a eulogy she couldn’t distrust. Her first glimpse of the owner of the big house was a little disappointing. As Harvey had told her, he was tall, spare, and near-sighted. She won dered if it were a false pride that hindered him from plac ing proper lenses before his eyes. A crisp, ashen mustache called one’s attention to the gauntness of his face, its long straight nose, its prominent bones, its hollow cheeks, its high narrow forehead. The loose flannels he wore, his soft linen, his easy felt hat made him -eern out of place in the store. In common with her uncle, Harvey, and the few shoppers along the counter Barbara Barbara stared. All at once she looked down, coloring, for she realized that Mr. Manvel was regarding her as amazedly raptly as she did him. ““Warm weather for the sea son; much too warm for the football squads.” Although he spoke to Mr. Gardner, Barbara chained his gaze. The voice was rather rather high, the intonation taccato. Barbara gathered her packages and fled from those felt excited, stimulated; and that night she was self-con scious when Uncle Walter ar rived to retail his drama of the day. “Jacob Manvei was in me store. Bobbie saw him, too.” He distorted his face with his acrocious grimace. “And Jacob Manvel saw Bob bie. Didn’t have eyes for an other soul in the store.” Then it was true, for even he had observed that. “And after Bobbie left he wanted to know who she was.” Mrs. Gardner looked up, frowning. “Why should he want to know that?” “Can’t answer,” Mr. Gardner 1 said lugubriously, "any more , , than I can tell you why he said: “Gardner, that’s a hand ! some girl, a damned handsome t girl.”’ Barbara slipped out, con fused and made uncomfortable by this appraisal that she couldn’t distrust. What was the use of beauty if it was shaped from ice? Mrs. Manvel she glimpsed I at first more remotely than ; her husband. Through the windows of a swiftly moving automobile she got no more than an impression of fine clothing, unreasonable youth, and an apparent inability to I iook rignt or leiu It was late October before she saw the third member of the family, the young man in his last year at Princeton, who, Harvey had told her, was sure to be a weak sistei. Harvey had an errand for the store at a potato farm near Prince ton, and asked Barbara to go too. She shrank from the long ride alone with him, but he had avoided awkward ground since their encounter with Ed Siller, and foolishly she be lieved the ugly memory would keep him aloof. Her impression of toppling on the rim of a crisis, never I theless, commenced to spoil ; the excursion, and as the day wore on other apprehensions, ; less tangible, approached slyly to increase her depression. Near Princeton the country resembled an endless garden. She identified on either side of the road sections of the gar den as private properties, some of them as rich and austere as the Manvel place. Sardoni cally they instructed her that she had been wonderstruck by that because it was unique in her experience. As they drove along Nassu Street the Gothic towers | pointed ironically upward. The leaded windows in the long, i gray habitations of fortunate ! youth gave her jeering | twinkles. The sweeping, j flowering lawns reminded her of the contsruction and aridity of her life. During all these years with the Gardners she had never visualized this grace, massiveness, and so phistication; she had never striven to imagine the other marvels of vitality and pro gress that must lie in many other directions just around the corner from the smallness, the ugliness, the smugness of Elmford. “What’s the matter, Bob' bie? “Nothing. Why?” “You don’t seem to be hav ing a good time.” How could she have with all this richness drawing her memory back futilcly? If that sharp sound hadn’t awakened her. if the breathless tableau in her father’s dressing room hadn’t been posed, would she at the age of twenty, guided by an awkward young country man, distinguished already, however, by the touch of destiny, be taking her first steps in the broader world? She remembered her old teacher, and had an urge to go to her for comfort and advice as she had so frequently done during her schooldays. They found Miss Barton at the li brary, and she arranged to look out for Barbara while Harvey saw to his errand. Since it was Saturday she would take Barbara to the football game, and Harvey would meet them at the sta dium. Miss Minnie Barton had matured since leaving Elm ford. She had brushed at least against the living world; but sitting in the stadium, wait ing for the game to commence, Barbara couldn’t free her con fidence from a binding of multiple repressions. Miss Minnie’s pliable fingers went at them directly. “You’re not happy, Bobbie. What’s wrong?” Sitll the cords were too taut. Miss Minnie’s laugh rippled. “Harvey looks at you as if he owned you already.” Barbara partly freed her self. “Miss Minnie, even though you wanted more than any thing in the world to make him happy, you couldn’t give in could you to marrying a man you didn’t feel you had to?” Miss Minnie laughed again, and turned away, flushing. “That’s a poser for an old maid. I fancy if you don’t care quite a lot for a man that sort of experience might be fairly trying. Please don’t think I’m unfair, my dear, or snobbish. You always were a striking youngster, but coming on me this way after a long time you fairly take my breath. You’re up to a lot better than Har vey.” Barbara shook her neaa, frowning at the growing ranks of spectators. “You’re wrong. Harvey’s too good for me. I’d give anything if I could love him. I just just can’t. I can’t care for any one that way. It makes me unhappy, ashamed.” Miss Minnie’s eyes widened. She bent closer, whispering. “When you find you’re wrong, as you will any day now, you’ll have a trickier problem than Harvey's given you.” But Barbara didn’t believe. “There’s only one problem for me in Elmford: marriage.” “Then why don't you shake free of Elmiord, Bobbie? You never seemed to belong there.” Barbara shrugged her shoul ders. “I don’t even know how I came there.” __---— (TO B> CONTINUED) THKEE YEAR OLD PRODIGY Marshalltown, la.—(UP)—Jerry ' Gregson, aged three, knows and can recite 150 poems from memory. Jer ry has accomplished in a year the memorizing of these verses, whith were learned from a book of nur sery rhymes. Now he is attempting | to learn to write. _ No Typical American. From Cleveland Plain eDaler. The American is a myth; he doesn't exist. The typical Ameri cas town or countryside is like- j wise a figment of the imagination; i It has no reality. There are many i Americans and many American i towns, but none representative of ! toe whole. An English commonwealth fund i fellow studying at Yale has been touting the United States from coast to coast. Some of his obser vations are interesting. The Eng lishman or the Qeiman may be discoverable in his own country, put the search for an American thoroughly typical of his nation was in vain. Between the Californian and the New Englander, or between the Georgian and the Indianan there j are differences that might, to a : casual observer, indicate wholly different nationalities. Between the dweller in a congested district of an industrial community and the Kansas farmer the diversities out number the resemblances. Yet all are Americans bound together by ties stronger than mere personal appearances or mental slants. The successful role played by the United States in the late war proved to the world that U|h cpup try could act unitedly and effec tively in spite of the vast differ ences due to geography. Industry and the inherited reactions from generations past. The leadership in financial restoration which Mr. Hoover now offers and to which the country warmly responds is further indication that the nation can act as a unit, even though "the" American does not exist. One is inclined to agree with H. L. Puxley, the English student who makes these observations touching the diversities among us. It may be impossible to isolate type, but its absence seems not I to hamper Americans in anything worth while they care to under take. _ ^_ DON’T CUP CLOSE One reason some lawns turn brown and dry up is because the grass has been clipped too close. Close clipping allows the hot sum mer sun to get at the roots of the grass and dry them up. FOR DRY SOIL If your soil is dry and poor, try plants that prefer such conditions. Some plants in this classification are yuccas, cinquefoil, globe thistle, junipers, heather, native rosea, »ea holly and portulae*. Maximum of Fighting Ef ficiency Represented by Small Craft Paris—(UP)—While still opposed ;o the building of huge rigid di igibles of the Zeppelin and Akron type, the French government has had constructed and successfully nested a novel pony dirigible which represents the maximum of fighting or commercial efficiency yet at tained by small rigid airships. This new dlrigiole, destined for the French navy, is capable of about GO miles an hour, as fast as many of the heavy bombardment planes and yet so easily managed that it can be operated by a single pilot and his mechanic. No other military force possesses such a handy airship, capable of carrying 1 1-3 tons of bombs or air mail. The gasbags have a ca pacity of 3,400 cubic meters, and the ship is driven by two 120 horsepower motors. This new ship, known as the Zoaiac VII, is so small that it can be housed In the average air plane hangar. Its cabin is built into the framework of the trilobe balloon, so as to give great rigid ity to the whole ship. This per mits it to turn in a distance of twice its own length, at full speed, without danger. The Zodiac VII will be able to land without a ground crew, for it has a pneumatic bumper which can be replaced by pontoons if the airship is to be used over water even in rough seas. The French believe that airships would have certain advantages for mail carrying to the African col onies over airplanes and it is pos sible that the Zodiac VII may make a test flight for that pur^ pose. “WE POINT WITH PRIDE.” “Hurrah.” exclaims the G. O. P. "See what our party's done; Bv standing fast for farm relief, What victory we’ve won! “GrasshoDDers. that the fates have sent, Had ruined farmers quite, Had not our statesmen quickly seen, To save them from their plight. "For had they eaten dollar wheat, Or corn at 80 cents, Just think, dear friends, what that had meant In loss of crop share rent. "But ever trust the G. O. P. A peril pointed out To us, in just a moment L A peril put to rout. “And so the landlords we hav* saved. And farmers, too, from loss; Bv cutting prices right in two, We’ve helped them bear theli cross. * 'Tis ever so the G. O. P. Stands by the stricken masses— Nor e'er forgets the debt it owes Unto our ruling classes.” —Sam Page. ■-♦♦ Fishing for Temblors. Prom Philadelphia Public Ledger. Plans of the navy department to plumb the Great Bartlett Deep in the Caribbean sea between Hon duras and Cuba in search of a prob able Central American earthquake source will add another chapter to the constantly growing body of knowledge about the earth’s valleys. Bartlett Deep, which already has been partially sounded, is a trough 1.000 miles long, 50 to 60 miles across and more than two miles lower than the surrounding ocean bottom. Much of it is known to lie at least three and a half miles be low the surface of the ocean, and depths of four miles have been re corded. The known great deeps of the ocean are generally believed to have definite relations to the earth's seismographic action. The greatest recorded depth, 35.410 feet, or near ly seven miles, is in the Mindanao Deep, between the Philippines and Japan, a definite earthquake area. The deepest spot in the Atlantic, near the Porto Rican earthquake region, is 27,972 feet. In the Malay region of terrestrial nervousness is a deep of some 21,300 feet. In Ber ing sea, off the scene of Alaska's tremors is a deep of 13,422 feet. A British Poet's Political Pessimism in 1799. Fr i a letter from Robert Southey to his Brother Tom. It is not yet known here whether the war has certainly recommenced in Germany or not. If it has it can onlv end in the utter subversion of the French or imperial power. The new system or the old must fall. Europe must be devastated by the revolutionary whirlwind or pois oned bv the plague vapors of des potism and superstition and perse i on. We must either suffer under the inquisition or the revolutionary tribunal. This is the alternative to which our ministry are driving us —and which only a change here rnd peace can preserve us from. The income bill produces not a fifth part of the year’s expenses. The nigh aristocrats wince at it. What will they do next year when perhaps the capital, not the income, will be ;ithed9 I believe from my soul that Fox ;ould save the country. But I never ?xpected to see its salvation. I love England—the country of Alfred, of Coeur de Lion, of Milton, of Sidney. But a land enslaved shall never be my country—in proportion as I ;oved it free should I grieve for and loathe it enslaved. Tv :n, I wish we had a South Sea island. God bless you. Your affec* ionate brother, Robert Southey. Love from all. Bristol, March 14, 1799. Ol>D CHRISTENING Albuquerque, N. M. — The new iake and bathing beach in Conser vation park had a real christening recently. Two large bottles of wa ter, one from Los Angeles ana the Pacific coast and one from Atlantic City and the Atlantic ocean, were broken into the waters of the beach. The bottles bore elaborate seals and were broken as part of an elaborate ceremony. Several dozen special coaches j have been chartered to take Texas fans to the Harvard-Texas football I came at. Cambridge October 24. MercolizedWax Keeps Skin Young Get an t uoee and use %e directed. Fine particle of ekia peel off until all defects such as pimples, liver spots, tan and freckles disappear. Skin is then soli and velvety. Vour face looks years younger. Mernolised Was brings out the hidden beauty of your skin. To remove wrinkle* use one ounce Powdered tSazolil# dissolved in one-half pint witch hazel. A * drug stores. O Well! “What Is the date?” “I don't know, but look on the newspaper you have in your pocket.” “That is no use—it's yesterday’s." —Berliu Ulk. How to train BABY’S BOWELS Babies, bottle-fed or breast-fed, with any tendency to be constipated, would thrive if they received daily half a teaspoonful of this old family doctor’s prescription for the bowels. That is one sure way to train tiny bowels to healthy regularity. To avoid the fretfulness, vomiting, crying, failure to gain, and other ills of constipated babies. Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is good for any baby. For this, you have the word of a famous doctor. Forty seven years of practice taught him just what babies need to keep their little bowels active, regular; keep little bodies plump and healthy. For Dr. Caldwell specialized in the treat ment of women and little ones. He attended over 3500 births without loss of one mother or baby. Dr. W. B. Caldwell's SYRUP PEPSIIM A Doctor's Family Laxative DISTRIBUTORS, AGENTS WASTE#-For line of razor blades. Wonderful quality blades. Excellent repeat sales. Federal Razor Corp., Dept. B. 1140 Broadway, N T. Cancer Blood Alkaline Cancer victims have blood more alkaline than normal, and the in creased alkalinity seems to be relat ed to the speed with which the dis ease ends fatally. Ample Proof Proud Papa—Darling, our baby smiled at me. Sweet Mamma—Then lie has a sense of humor, Henry. What the Gears Think First Gear—Where yuh been? Second Gear—Aw, just meshln’ around. Makes You Lose Unhealthy Fat Mrs. Ethel Smith of Norwich, Conn., writes: "I lost 1G lbs. with niy first bottle of Krusclien. Being on night duty it was hard to sleep days but now since I am taking Krusclien I sleep plenty, eat as usual and lose fat too.” To take off fat—take one half tea spoonful of Krusclien in a glass of hot water every morning before breakfast—an 85 cent bottle lasts 4 weeks—Get It at any drug store In America. If this first bottle falls to convince you this is the easiest, sur est and safest way to lose fat your money gladly returned. On the Warpath Walter—‘‘Has your order been tak en, sir?” Would-be-Diner—“Yes, and so has Bunker Hill." How old is "old"? You can be young at sixty. Or old at twenty. It’s all a matter of taking care of your health. If you feel "run-down”, and have no “pep”, take Fellows’ Syrup. You w ill be amazed at the way it restores fagged out nerves and tired bodies. Fellows’ Syrup, with its valuable health-building properties, has been pre scribed by physicians in 53 countries of the world. It is obtainable at your drug gist’s. Get a bottle today. You won’t regret it. FELLOWS SYRUP •ioux City Ptg- Co., No. *7-19*1.