THE FORBIDDEN YEARS by WADSWORTH CAMP It The momentary sense of magnetism left Barbara. “Mm Jacob Manvel. She want* to speak to you." •Tell her the same thing, Mls/Norcross." Barbara obeyed and turned tack. “She wants to know If she may drop in for a moment." “No, no, no. Caroline Man vel is another well-meaning •oul. Tell her I’m too miserable to see anyone." Barbara transmitted the message and hung up. “She says they’ll be at the boat” Ur. Twining sank back. “I wish people wouldn’t •some to the boat. I wish people wouldn't be so kind.” But Barbara was trying to construe Mrs. Manvel’s final wordP, “Tell her we’ll be at the boat." Did the pronoun in clude Gray? She knew she ought not to want it to. If It did, if she had to see him, she would have the defense of a multitude. He couldn’t play Ills game with her to-night. When they left the house Mrs. Twining was the least concerned member of the party, and at the pier she kept murmuring useful suggestions while Barbara attended to the baggage, the passports, and the tickets. A considerable (roup of her friends waited On deck to wish her a pleasant fourney. She spoke to them all, thanking them. “But you must let me go to ■ay cabin. I am very tired.” Yet Barbara noticed that She entered the lift with a |Srm step, and that her face had for once a natural color ■nd animation. Undoubtedly Hie self-ordained hermit still possessed the power to enjoy Hie active world. But always Barbara’s glance dissected the fastless crowd. The Manvels hadn’t been at the head of the gangway, in the compan lonway, or at the life entrance an the deck below. Then, as Hie family party streamed ■long the corridor, Barbara heard Mr. Manvel’s precise ■oice. “Adelaide, we were begin ning to worry." He stood peering outside Hie entrance to a private hall, ifrs. Twining snapped at him: “I wish people wouldn’t worry. There’s plenty of time.” Mrs. Manvel appeared In Hie doorway, stretched out her hand, and drew Mrs. Twining In, but Gray didn’t show him self. and neither in the hall nor in the drawing room did Barbara see him; and she tried to tell herself that she was glad, but in her heart she hnew that she was bitterly disappointed. Mrs. Twining had one of the best suites, and already it housed many proofs of her taperishable popularity. Boxes ■nd baskets littered the furniture and the floor, and hoys kept darting In with ■tore. Barbara cleared an easy rihalr and made the invalid jpomfortable for an Improvised levee. “Caroline, where is that £fantlc Infant of yours? I Ink he might have said good-bye to an old wreck that way never wallow home.” Barbar held her breath as tfrs. Manvel answered on a noticeably constrained note. “He’s over his head In ex aminations, and getting ready Cor commencement. That’s the •urse of popularity; he’s on * dozen committees; but he »ent his love.” Mrs. Manvel’s glance barely brushed Barbara, and she sensed, as she had during her visits with Mrs. Twining, that Grave of Civil War Vet U Found by Autoist Ounbury. Pa —(UP)—Descendants Charles Mattern, Snyder county ■itdler In the Civil war, found his pave la Virginia after a 60-year March. Mattem died while serving with |ba Union army near Riohmohd. fcacords of his burial place were |Mt. Members of his company had m recollection of its location. Barry Laub, Dewletown. motoring Mrefeh Virginia, eaw a familiar .Vantar count* name on a head Gray’s mother was wary of her, and disapproving. Mr. Manvel, however, peered, and took her hand. “An Elmford neighbor! I heard you were cheering our old friend.’’ He had heard, but Gray hadn’t; and obviously no one had told him she was going to Europe with Mrs. Twining. She experienced a quick Joy that she should be of that much importance in Gray’s life, and she glanced with an inner defiance at Esther who floated about the room, touch 1 ig the flowers which the maid already had arranged in vases. Mrs. Helder, as the moment of parting approached, swung to the morbid side. “I must say, Adelaide, I think it perfectly mad your rushing off this way with no one to take care of you." “Here is a very competent someone, Martha.” Lyon Helder said in his forthright way: “It mighn’t have been a bad idea to take Esther along too." Barbara smiled a little, plainly he had no share in the campaign that was so easily visible to her. Esther had to be left behind to make the most of her propinquity to Gray. Mrs. Twining spoke dryly: “Taking care of me Is hard work, Isn't It, Barbara?” Barbara’s denial was a little confused. It was the first time Mrs. Twining had used her first name, and she had chosen an occasion when Esther, and Esther’s mother, and Gray’s mother could hear. Of course there was no sig nificance in that, but the odd chance clung to her memory for a long time. "Where’s Steve? Mean to say Steve’s forgotten me?” Barbara went to the corridor to look for Steve, and came face to face with Harvey. It was their flrst meeting since the unhappy episode of Elm ford, and he was as conscious of It as Barbara. “Thought I’d like to say good-bye, because it may be a long time.” Nervously she asked him what he had been doing, and for a few minutes he rambled on to brace himself for the real purpose of his coming. His salary had been raised again, and he had speculated shrewdly and successfully In staple foodstuffs. Rankin and he, he told her, were on the eve of forming their partner ship. “I’m making money, Bobbie, and I’m certain to make a lot more.” But when she said she had to go back to Mrs. Twining he took her hand, and willfully fulfilled the mission that had brought him. “You haven’t seen Manvel since, Bobble?” Although she didn’t want to answer, his strong will com pelled her. “NO.” He took a deep breath. "That’s good, but I can tell you haven’t stopped thinking of him. You will on this trip, Bobble; you must. Although I will miss you, I’m glad you’re taking It, because It will give you a chance to forget, and by the time you come back he’ll probably have hooked up with Miss Helder, or someone else.’’ She turned away. He did have the power of giving her mheallng hurts; yet when you ,ame down to It he was usually right What he had Just said was logic. “I’ll try, Harvey.” Yet even then she had no stone In ft national cemetery at City Point. Va„ this summer. It bore the names of “Charles Mat tem.” On his return home he inquired whether a soldier of that name had served in the Civil war from this section. His Inquiries reached Prank Mattern, son of the long-lost soldier. Rich FomU Beds Found in Western Nebraska Sidney. Neb.—(UP)—New. rich fossil beds have been discovered In western Nebraska by a party of in faith In her power to forget. Out of the bedlam of the corridor came the tap-tapping of a cane, and Steve lounged up and took Barbara’s hand. She said good-bye to Harvey and went back to the drawing room with Steve. He bent over Mrs. Twining. ‘T had to see if it’s true, Adelaide. The age of miracles is revived." Lyon Heldcr faced Barbara, and In his inadvertent way loosed a thought that had ap parently been forming for some minutes. "See here, young woman, you’re scared. Don’t be. Know ing my sister-in-law. I pro phesy that everything will run along smoothly. If it doesn’t, if the smallest cloud appears, illness, accident, cable or tele phone me at my ofnce, and I’ll see that everything’s done for you. You may depend on me absolutely.” She liked him better than ever for that. “Thanks. That's a real help, Mr. Helder.” Mrs. Twining kept glancing at her watch, urging her family and friends away. “Go along home, Slocum, or you’ll burst into tears. This, I might point out, is supposed to be a joyous occasion.” But the temperamental housekeeper lingered. “Steve, take Barbara on deck. Remember it's her first sailing. Let her see some of the excitement.” Steve said good-bye and led Barbara to the head of the visitor’s gangway. He smiled down at her understandingly. “I heard what Lyon said to you. I’ll add my word. Ade laide will run everything. She’ll take care of herself and you too; it’s her nature.” His smile narrowed a trifle, and the wrinkles about his eyes deepened. “I’ve never seen a novice so reluctant to start for Europe. Perhaps because I delivered you helpless into the clutches of Adelaide I have a most un comfortable feeling of re sponsibility for you. It urges me to persuade you that this trip is a splendid thing. You’ll see fresh people and things. You’ll come back with altered thoughts and a broader out look." She had a sickened, shame ful feeling that he did know about the meeting-house steps and what had followed. Mrs. Slocum waddled to her rescue, and burst into tears. “Take good care of her, Miss Norcross. Don’t let anything happen to her. I’m sure I don’t know what I should do.” Her mood changed, and, as she whispered, her tears dried. “And don’t let her keep you too long. You’re wasting your time trotting around with a crotchety old woman when you ought to be having your pretty face in all the papers and magazines.” Barbara submitted to a damp kiss, and watched the housekeeper waddle to the pier with the departing crowd. Steve grinned. “What was the old devil, as Adelaide calls her, putting in j your ear?” Barbara smiled tremulously back. i “It’s an obsession of hers that I ought to leave Mrs. Twining and display myself on the stage.” His head jerked. “I can get her point; and that reminds me that, acting on my sense of responsibility, I must advise you to be on your guard against selfish people. It’s been my experience that a truly selfish person can cause a most devastating quantity of suffering.” And with that sick feeling she was sure he wasn’t warn ing her against Mrs. Twining, j In his indirect fashion, she believed, he had told her, as Harvey had done directly, to drive Gray out of her mind during this journey. Perhaps Slocum was right and the stage in the long run would offer her only escape from a situation that had become 1 vestlgators working near here and at Bridgeport. Fields located here and at Bridge port are reported to be particularly productive by C. B. Schulz, leader of the excavation party. Work done this year was prim ary, Schul* said, but resulted in discovery of valuable oligocene beds. Two members of the party digging near here, unearthed a mastodon skull, prehistoric rhino ceros, camel, turtle and evidences of a rare thrse-toed horse. The IMgty will return to this location nearly unbearable since her Princeton visit. The Manvels and Kelders came up and paused at the head of the gangway while the stewards patiently un raveled a snarl that the crowd had formed there in its too hurried retreat. Mr. Manvel peered. “Coming with us, Steve?" “Right. Good-bye, Barbara. Don’t forget an elderly well wisher." “You know I won’t.” But the human knot was slow in breaking, and Mr. Manvel took Steve’s arm, and, ' glancing with troubled eyes at i his wife and the Helders, sur reptitiously spoke the name that was softly spelled, but that always sounded harsh in Barbara’s ears. “I had a letter from Essie to-day.” Steve started and turned away from Barbara. “Good Lord, Jacob! What about?” Barbara wondered what odd power the name possessed that it should break through even Steve’s composure. “Money.” Steve lifted his shoulders. He, too, glanced steadily at the two women and Lyon Hel der waiting to get on the gang way. “Gad! How’ the years go by! Told Lyon?” Mr. Manvel shook his head. “And I shan’t until it’s necessary.” Steve frowned. “Think she’s capable of making trouble?” | Mr. Manvel laughed shortly. “Why shouldn’t she be? If she does it has to be faced.” The stream of departure had resumed its flow. Steve pressed Barbara’s hand and muttered a last farewell. He and Mr. Manvel, in descending the gangway, Barbara ob served, let the Helders and Mrs. Manvel get well ahead of them. The two men receded slowly, side by side, heads close, whispering, victims, ob viously, of an acute apprehen sion. CHAPTER IV The European journey, while it shaped into a number of unexpected angles, was on the whole, Barbara imagined, a disappointment to Mrs. Twining. It was prolonged j time after time through ap { )arent caprice, and Mrs. Twin ing, having announced her de cision to linger, would study Barbara with ironical eyes. “What is it, Barbara? Why are you in such a hurry to get home? No use denying it.” But Barbara would deny. “There’s no reason why 1 should be in a hurry. Perhaps I do think you would be more comfortable at home.” It was quite patent that Mrs. Twining would be. Her persis tent interest in England and the continent, lasting more ; than a year, was quite out of I character, for she submitted herself in various countries to the good intentions of well meaning people as she had steadfastly refused to do in America, cheerfully accepting invitations from old friends whom she hadn’t seen in years and dragging Barbara and the maid in educational explora tions to sections where living conditions were painfully be neath her standards; yet she grew steadily better, throwing off, as far as it was in her nature to do so, the more pro nounced illusions of her in validism. So Barbara com menced to sense a definite in tention in the succession of delays; she conceived the thought that Mrs. Twining waited in Europe for a very special reason, and Barbara began to wait too, watching j the old lady suspensefully each time a letter came from Esther; running through every New York newspaper she could get her hands on, fearing to find two names in conjunc tion, for Harvey and Steve had assigned her a task of forget fulness she couldn’t possibly accomplish. 1 (TO B* CONTINUED) I next year to further develop this bed. One of tlie most Important finds over made in Nebraska was report er from near Bridgeport, where the jaw of an amphibian was un I earthed. ---— HUMILIATION KILLS PEACOCK Chaffey, Cal—(UP)—Humiliation was blamed for the dearth of the main attraction at the local aoo ! Keepers pulled the gorgeous tali 1 feathers of a male peacock, he lan • guished aud died as the regult. HAS SURVIVED MANY PROBES Tammany Organization Is Older Than Present Po litical Parties New York—(UP>—Samuel Sea bury, who has attracted nationwide attention by heading the New' York '‘city-wide’’ investigation, is char acterized by some as a Don Quixote tilting at a windmill. The ‘‘windmill’’ is Tammany hall, a political organization whose pow er is felt throughout the nation, but which, strangely enough, has a dis tinctly parochial outlook; a society much older than either the repub lican or democratic parties. Tammany is unique because un like other municipal political ma chines it transcends personalities. In Philadelphia there is “Bill vares organization, in Chicago candidates used to assail “the Thompson machine.” Here Tam many leaders come and go. but Tammany remains. 125 Years Old For well over a century and a quarter Tammany has exercised a political power while dozens of or ganizations similar In purpose have grown and died. Exposures of its office holders have occupied newspaper head lines every decade or so and pre dictions have been made the or ganization is waning. The first re corded prediction of this kind was made by a New York newspaper in 1809. The newspaper has been out of existence long since. Newspa pers have set about to "get” cer tain of the Hall’s leaders. Some times they did. And some of those same newspapers are now extinct, while Tammany remains. The secret of this self-perpetu ating existence lies in an invention of Aaron Burr and the tendency of human beings to be grateful. Burr was the Hall's first leader, taking charge when the organiza tion incorporated in 1797, a few years after it was founded by Wil liam Mooney and named after an obscure chief of the Delaware In dians. Burr's invention was the district leader. District Leader The district leader, in these populous times, aided by numer able district captains, is a man who has made friends with every voter in his district, climbed tene ment stairs to take them groceries when they were ill, and gone to court for them when they were in trouble. Because it was—and still is— human to be grateful, it is not surprising when the district lead er’s friends vote as he suggests. John F. Curry, present dictator of Tammany, was such a leader. He sawr that poor families in his territory had enough coal in winter and clothes when they needed them. On election day the only voters in his district who didn't cast ballots were those too ill to be carried to the polls. Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt's rela tions with Tammany may deter mine his chances of securing the democratic nomination for presi dent. Curry voiced the profourd local interest of Tammany during the current investigation when, as a witness in the case of Dr. William F. Doyle, former veterinarian, he said: ‘ I am interested in every demo crat in the great city of New York.” Tammany has numbered na tional leaders on its roster. Fore most is a present sachem, Alfred E. Smith, democratic pominee in 1928. Others of note ait United States Senator Robert F. Wagner, Col. Ja cob Rupert, more interested in his New York Yankees than politics; James W. Gerard, former ambas sador to Germany, and Samuel Un termyer, lawyer. Tammany’s first scandal oc curred in 1837. Since then there has been many a Quixote to tilt at Tammany, some seriously and seme merely hoping to attract public in terest. Seabury’s attempt appear* to be a serious one. —--— — Lost Longhorn Herd Enriches Texas Man San Antonio, Tex. —(UP)— Re mains of a lost herd of longhorn cattle, famous In the history of the Texas range, have been found by L. D. Bertillion of Mineola, Tex., and their horns have made him rich. In 1812 Jacob Don Lonerr’s en tire herd of several thousand long horns stampeded in a storm near Tetringua Creek. They were never found. That is. not until Bertillion trailed a nearby canyon to a cave opening and found a great heap of bones and horns. Bertillion has since sold more than $50,000 worth of horns, and is now negotiating for a sale to the Prince of Wales. -— - — ♦ ♦-■-— Contnjious. From Tit-31 ts. “Oh, come on, May—give me $ kiss.” “No. I've got scruples." “Never mind—I’ve had them twice.” . -- - -- Yale News Betrays Absent Minded Profs New Kaven, Conn. — (UP) —The Yale Daily News claims to have discovered concrete evidence that professors—at least not Yale pro fessors—are not absent-minded. Why, asks the News, are not work men busy in excavations on the campus picking out professors who ge every morning to the holes wfiere their offices used to be? The obvioua answer Is that lh« professors are not absent-minded Papal Error That Cost Spain Much Territory King Solomon offered -to divide a smaU boy to whom two women laid claim, and won a great reputation for wisdom by so doing. Pope Alex ander VI—born Roderick Borgia— actually did divide the world, and got no special credit for It even In his own day. He was an abler administrator, a more versatile politician, a more far a.ghted statesman, a greater patron of the arts and sciences and a much better friend to the common people than was the Hebrew monarch, and that's about all the good it did him. Vasco da Gama had rounded the Cape of Good Hope to give Portugal a foothold iu India. Columbus had sailed west to discover what might prove to be a new continent, and he represented Spain. It was Inevitable that there should be conflicting claims, and perfectly natural that the rival rulers should turn to the pope as the logical umpire. Alexander did not find the prob lem difficult. For generations the Portuguese had been sailing south ward along the west African coast and their claims were obviously to be preferred along the routes they followed. The Spaniards, through their Genoese agent, had found land In the West. What was easier thaa to draw a line from north to south on the map and let the broad Atlan tic separaie the new dominions of the rivals? Every one was happy. It was seven years before the Por tuguese discovered that Brazil stuck out so far to eastward that It crossed the pope's line, and that the holy father had given them far more than they had dreamed of. They were quick to colonize, and that le how Brazil speaks Portuguese to this day, although every other Latin American land prefers Spanish.— Cleveland Plain Dealer. Conditions That Unite Whole Animal Kingdom A conference of eminent scientists recently met at the estate of Copley Amory, of Washington and Boston, at Matamek, Quebec. For ten days ecologists—that is, students of ani mal life In relation to Its surround ings—discussed problems and find ings In tlielr particular fields of ornithology, mammologv, marine biol ogy, etc. The results of the con ference were so profitable that plans for another meeting in 1934 were made and a committee appointed to formulate a permanent organization,. One of the points especially stressed in the discussion was the interrelation of the various animal groups, including man. Fluctuations In one species are often felt through out the animal kingdom. Certain varieties are of such importance that they are known as “key ani mals." Mice and mice-like rodents are “key animals” in many parts of the world. When mice are abundant in the Canadian Northwest foxes, snowy owls, wolves and bears cease to prey on partridges. When the mice decline, animals turn again to game, and Eskimos and Indians suf fer for food. Weasels and ermine die out In numbers when mice are scarce and snowy owls fiy south In search of food, only to die in the warm climate. Church Placed in Steel Cage To reduce tlie fire hazard and pro tect workmen anti passershy during the repairing of St. Paul’s church, famous landmark of lower Broadway In New York city, the entire struc ture was Inclosed in a steel-cage scaffolding, says Popular Mechanics Magazine. The cage is 200 feet high, and 5,000 couplings and 2,500 pipes were required to complete the frame. Never Can Tell “You aren’t cussing goldenrod any more," remarked the stranger. “Not while these rubber experi ments nre on," responded the farmer. “Next year I may be planting It." Slumber A nulurul sleep of three mouth* Is credited to a woman In Brazil. Couldn’t any good housewife do that If she had time?—Buffalo Evening News. The man who holds his head too high overlook a lot of life's good things. l.nrlie®. quick relief, old reliabl® Men**®, moit iH*p®ndabl® compound; safely reliovHH Tnoit obitinafp cas-n. $1.50 box. RADIOR fO., 11 Ea«t 4 4 St., New York, Dept. K. Sunshine —Alt Winter bnnff At the Foremost Dosort Retort of tha Wast—marvalous climata—warm sunny day*—claar starlit nights — dry invigorating dir — spl*ndid roads — gorgaou* mountain *e#nos— fln,st hotals—tha idaal winter homo. Writ a Craa A Chaff ay PALM SPRINGS VmUfcrnim