o THE PEE: OMAHA. SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 12. 1321 FLESH OF MY FLESH By Barker Shelton How Far Is a Father Justified in Insisting That His Son Shall Fulfill His Own Blasted Ambitions? TUB (tout young woman who JuJ bn brees. Iiif hriokly Int. Hi kiiihi-n of the Khu. gru'a rut tvrry few minute for th Lt h!f hour or m imJ a mmi em- lent ri ff Prn VMI there no atmou'lier of ruU or huU about ahntevrr eh til J. lta snout, plhthed It nli aniailng rdpid'iy. And ttrii lime ho appeared (in th men h had ltiit for Con Wtugru. mihw with (real iiiteniiuMi out Ih kitchen window, and liitlw nod of or- fop him, Hn. t'ur!iriioiiilttt' word or two intended to tnnv to hint without ttIUi lilm In many mereoiyprd phre th comforting fwa that titer wai nothing to worry about . A wholly trustworthy party, thin stout young woman, you couM Ml In a minute kit knrw her Job. You wouldn't niik any mfHnk In putting all norta of fund in Iter, dt-xplt th fuet that her uniform was that of nur mill lit training, fon tfhugruo f!t he In luck, be rau tlio goip i.f th rieistiborhood whispered tht when you pidid for a num at th ru pennary you nuua perfoiv rn-pt without a murmur whatever th lti f imry ho to nd you. Py blind luck li had drawn a prlto a prl thnt w open to .rlt!tim In imly mm renpect. Kh always 1. ft thi kitchen door open. Every tin ah cumo Into th.it kitchen ha left th door ajar, and eh persistently neglected to dor it behind her when ah left. For food nd aufflrieiit r-on Con Shugrue wanted that dour cloned. Klnr tha (out young woman was Juat do pining with a lot of ahlny tee things In a bowl of steaming witr, It wus a good bet tha door would b loft wlilo open. H wa. to Con left hi observation pout at tha -window mid thut it one attain; hut It a softly a ha could, but. at tha uma time, a tlithtly as ha could. agatiiNt aouml that int cold crpepa up and down hi pin and th faint, awectly tkkl.ili odor of ethr. Then ha, went back to IiIh window to rcnume hi waiting waichfulm-ns. Th block of dreary t-ncmciits In which tha domestic Rod of th Shugruc wcr establlnhed wa on tho left hund Id of a ireet that run up no wharp a nlopa It Mnicd to ba trying to tund on end, and tha flat that ot Con Hhugru back $26.75 every month wa th uppermost vna of th flva In that particular house. Con, therefore, had an xcellent view from the kitchen window; of roofa h!nlng with tha gkue of a March aleet torm, and chimneys that looked a if an ambl tlou confectioner had tried hla hand at frost ing them, and light In rows and circle and triangle and aquare. Electric lgn' mad smudge of red and green and braiigs and bluo on the low, eastward driving cloud which had momentarily ceased dripping particle of hall and rain that froze a it struck. Con Shugrue's eye were fixed on a string of flery red letters that stood out against the black March sky. They winked at him and mocked him, and beckoned him and stabbed him. They made him scowl and set his teeth Into his under lip, and then shrug his shoulders In a sorry attempt at resignation, which recalled to mind the fact that his right shoulder developed shoot lng pains even yet when he tried that movement on It. He scowled harder at the blazing red let ters. They spelled out for him the name "COLI SEUM A. C." Under those letters tha present lightweight champion of the fistic world would be having a merry argument of It with a certain party who was sure his own claims for championship honors were better founded. The little affair was scheduled for ten rounds. That was all the law allowed. There was a feeling prevalent . among the wise birds espousing either side of the contention that ten rounds were amply suffl cicent. Whatever number of rounds the affair lasted, these same wise birds knew would be full of action, and the sort of action they loved but) seldom found. Therefore the old Coliseum would' be crowded. Every last seat of those tiers slop ing upward from the ring would be jammed. With knowing ones. Who would while away the time until the main bout was staged sizing up the talent displayed to them In the prelimi naries. A chance to leap Into the limelight, that! Con could see those Jammed tiers of seats, the fog of blue smoke, the glare of the shaded arc lights above the ring shining through it. He could hear the pounding of feet, the first thrill ing mob growl of delight as the fighting took on speed In one of those preliminary bouts; growing to a roariny rumble as it became yet faster; the staccato rattle of blows; the patient, monotonous whirring of movie machines going on with no letup. But for the untoward circumstances he had not taken Into his reckoning he might have been there tonight; a contender In one of those pre liminaries, showing his speed, his cleverness, his punch, to eyes he could most desire to see such qualities In him. "We'll show em what we got at the Coli seum In March," Al Dorsey had told him. "The night Biller and Lewis has to back up the hot air they've been throwing at each other. They've been gassing so much back and forth the place will be packed. It'll be the chance of a lifetime to show up a comer. I'll get you on in a pre liminary with somebody who it is won't matter much. You could take care of any of them now." Every word of that conversation came back to him now; the first thrill of it that evening months ago In a corner of the basement of Dor sey's little sporting goods shop which Al had rigged up for training quarters. Al's hand on his shoulder as he spoke and himself, panting on an up ended box as he unlaced his gloves, seeing life heading for pleasant places. Al Dorsey had happened into the molding room of the Pratt Car Wheel Works one noon hour, had seen him fooling with some of the other men, had watched him closely, asking him a few questions, requested more of the fooling, watohed closer, and taken Con Shugrue under his wing. Skeptical at first, thinking little of it, Con had said nothing about it to anybody. Neither had he allowed himself any pleasant delusions. But he had worked faithfully with Al Dorsey several evenings a week, with an aptitude for the work which Al himself could never have guessed. Then Annie had to give up her work in the loft where they made the feather flowers. Annie didn't think it was necessary, but the doctor was firm about it It took money to get by and live ven half decently, and with Annie's weekly contribution nol prossed and the need of money In the future looming yet more urgently, Con aaw where it. behooved him to find some extra work. He found it. In the Bay State Garage, four evenings a week, which left him two evenings for tha finishing touches in Al Dorsey's base ment. All of which might have worked out sat isfactorily with the closest sort of figuring if a benighted swab with more indifference than brains hadn't dropped a heavy Stlllson wrench over tha side of a car and Into the pit one night at the Bay State Oarage. It struck the bottom of the pit via Con Shu grue's right shoulder. And this was calamitous. Tor, while they managed to patch and strap the shoulder so Con was missing at the Car Wheel Work but ten days and from the garage but two waaks, tha speed had gone forever from that particular shoulder when It was pronounced fit once more. Al Dorsey trotted him arounj to various men who might do something to limber it up. Suc eively they shook their heads. Al Dorsey learned three new oaths In hi? overweening dis appointment. Tha mea to vnom ha had taken i I i m: m " - -Sill 'iLi ' ' Straight from th ihoalJt! Attaboy I Attaboy I Did yoa gat that. Anni ? " Con Shugrue explained at length why no opera tion would help and why no system of exercise or massage or baking on bandaging would be effective. And Al Dorsey learned two more new ones. Wherefore Con Shugrue saw his visions fade and did the best he could about it, and told himself he hadn't thought at first there was any thing In it, so why mope about it now? Emi nently sane philosophy. Only visions, once they have taken a grip, are loath to let go. They have a way of popping up persistently, poor ' unlaid ghosts, to Jangle and wrench the soul and present trains of futile might-have-beens. Just such futile might-have-beens were hav ing their will of Con Shugrue now as he scowled ' at the smudge of red letters on the roof of the Coliseum, dimmer because the sleet was begin ning again. If, for Instance that pinheaded boob hadn't dropped his Stillson wrench, or had dropped It from the other side of the car. Or if he had been working at the other side of the pit at the moment. Or if Annie could have held down her Job In the feather loft a little longer. Or if he had met Al Dorsey a little sooner or had met Annie a little later in his life. He heard the footsteps of the stout young woman crossing the floor of the diminutive din ing room of the flat. She was opening the kitchen door. So, of course, he'd have to close it after her again presently. He turned about. The stout young woman came in. This time she carried what might well have been a hastily gathered bundle of laundry to be duly wrapped up. She grinned, at Con, and transferred what ever it was she carried from her own arms to his. It did not seem to have much shape. thin wail startled him into the realization that there was something alive in it. "It's a boy," she told him, "and a fine one, too." Con merely stared at it. He had no idea babies looked anything like that. As for there being anything fine about it, she must be kid ding him. He grunted dully: "A boy, hey?"- He said it as If he didn't believe it. "Isn't he a bouncer?" she went on.i "Hear him him howl! That's the way he should do It." She could not seem to Impart any of her own enthusiasm to-him. He refused to be Impressed. "He ain't much to look at," said he. "Going to be weak and plndllng, ain't he?" She looked at him scornfully, and then broke into a delighted laugh. "Weak? That baby? Not on your life! Look at those hands? They're busters. Tou never saw such fists on a baby, Mr. Shugrue. They're big enough for a prize fighter's." Con Shugrue's face underwent, a cha'nge. Its apathy vanished. He came out of his daze. "Does that mean he'll be a husky kid, maybe?" he asked. v . "I'll say he will." A sudden warm glow descended upon Con Shugrue, a sense of peace, a feeling that maybe Fate had not cheated him so fearfully after all. "A husky kidV he muttered. "A boy! I'd oughta be proud of him, hadn't I?" The stout young woman nodded emphati cally. "Well, I am," said Con. For, vague, formless in detail as yet, another vision had come to Con Shugrue. "I think Mrs. Shugrue would like to see you for a minute," the stout young woman sug gested to him. "It will be all right for you to go In for a little while now." She led the way through the dining room and paused to listen for a moment at a door Just beyond. Then she pushed it open softly and took from Con's arms the bundle which was no longer to him a potential armful of wash, . but his son. Con tiptoed awkwardly in. A single electric bulb, swathed with several thicknesses of tissue paper, gave a feeble light. Annie, very white, very , drawn, very tired looking, smiled uncer tainly at him from the pillows. . "Con," she said weakly, "come here to me!" Ha knelt beside the bed. He started to take her hand, but it seemed so small and frail and his own paw looked so big beside It that he hesi tated. She noticed this, smiled again, and slipped the frail hand into his. "Annie, girl," said he with a strange gentle ness, "the son you've given me! The fine, big, husky boy!" "Are you glad, Con? Do you really want him?" she said with a queer catch In the words. , "The fool questions the girl can ask!" said he. "She gives me the fine,- husky kid, with a howl In him that does credit to his young lungs and th biggest pair of flat that were ever on a baby! And then: 'Am I glad. Do I want him?' says she! The fool questions a woman can ask a man!" "But I thought, may be, the last few months, Con " He waited, but she did not go on. "What was it you thought, Annie, girl? Out with it!" "I thought these .last few months. Con," she said, "you was awful troubled about it I didn't blame you, what with the hard luck we've had. I thought me having to give up work sooner than we'd counted on It, and you taking on the night work at the garage and then getting hurt I thought maybe you didn't want him." ' "What made you think that way, girl?" "Could I help thinking that way? Look back. Con, and think hard yourself for a minute. Could I?" "No,"' he said, "you couldn't help' thinking like that becaus, God forgive me, it was true. I didn't want him. But it's different now. Hon est, it is. I'm tickled to death with that kid." Her eyes searched his face as If they would ferret out any sopthing untruth he might be trying to put over on her for the sake of her momentary comfort. They looked at him long and steadily. "I believe you are, Con," she told him at last; "I really believe it's so. I was afraid you'd look on him as just another drag, another piece of the hard luck you've had. But something in your eyes tells me you are tickled to have him now he's here awful tickled to have him, Con and I'm glad and happy." the eyes closed again. Presently the nurse came In. She touched Con's shoulder. She nodded toward the door. Carefully he freed his hand and tiptoed cautiously out of the room. "Can I have another squint at them big fists of my son?" he asked the nurse. She seemed not only willing but highly pleased to grant this request of his. 'it is a hard climb to the Shugrue apartment up the narrow little street that seems trying to stand on end. Moreover, after the ascent of the sharp slope has been accomplished there are four flights of stairs to be negotiated before the uppermost flat is reached. Neither of these conditions Is conducive to the general comfort of a man who recently has been taking on weight far too rapidly and to whom an attack of the flu has bequeathed the unwelcome legacy of a good imitation of asthma. An overwarm day would tend yet further to upset the equa nimity of a party of this description. The October holiday seemed to have become a trifle confused as to its identity. Anyway, it had taken to itself a temperature that would have done credit to a Fourth of July. ' Wherefore at the top of the third flight of those stairs by which he gained his domicile Con Shugrue found it advisable to heave out a lifebuoy in the shape of a word of encourage ment to the heavy man puffing and blowing and stumbling upward In his wake. "Only one more flight after this, Al, and we're there." ' Mr. Dorsey was wondering why he had come, or at least why he had not deferred coming un til a cooler day. No prodigy of a kid that ever lived was worth all this discomfort. , As for the prodigy part of It, he had his own mental reser vations on that point f Kids were always prodi gies to their parents; much overrated; one had to be prepared for disappointments. Still, In a way, he could see where It was the only decent thing to do; to humor this paternal exuberance of Con Shugrue's out of respect to certain high and now defunct hopes which had been mutually his and Con's. At the sound of the key in the latch Mrs. Shugrue came into the hallway. Three of them In it left scant elbow room. She was a smaller, frailer woman than Dorsey had expected Con's wife would be; prettier, too, a certain fetching grace and lightness about her. Dorsey, unmar ried himself and firm In his belief that marry ing young was a good deal like standing your chance in life against a blank wall and assassi nating them one after another in cold blood witness this case of Con Shugrue, for example forgave Con a whole lot at th sight of her. "Annie," said Con, "I want you to shake hands with my good friend, Al Dorsey. Al wants to see the kid."' Annie Shook hands ' with her husband's friend. Al murmured that he was glad Indeed to meet Mrs. Shugrue, which was the truth, and Annie said she was pleased to meet Mr. Dorsey, which wasn't Con pushed open a door on on id of that triangular room, Al Dorsey mad ready to spill the enthusiasm he knew was ex pected of him and to say the things he would be expected to say. Ha found himself standing with Con beside a small iron crib. Mrs. Shu grue had betaken herself to the kitchen. "Well, what do- you know about it?" said Con proudly. . "A fine kid, Con, Sure, a right fine kid." "I'll say so, If I am the father of him. Did you ever see a huskier kid at seven months?" "I never did," said Dorsey, which was per fectly true, considering the fact that he had probably never inspected a seven months old baby before. "Look at the fists on him, will you." Dorsey centered his interest on the fists. "Ain't they cute?" said he, and realized at once from Con's face that he had made a con versational miscue. "Cute nothing!" Con denied. "They're big as young hams. Old whales of fists for such a wee feller as him. Which means, so they tell me, he'll be a husky young brute, that he'll grow to match them big fists of him. 'Big enough for a prize fighter's,' says the nurse when she sees them the night he's born. That's what seems to strike her about him more than anything else, them big fists of his. 'Big enough for a prize fighter's, she says of 'em." Mr. Dorsey took another look at them. "They sure are big fis'ts for the size of the kid," he re vised his former estimate of them. ' "Some day them fists is going to have a regular old mule kick of a punch in them, Al." "They'd ought to," Dorsey agreed. "And the little bit of a kid will grow up to match them fists of his. All that I couldn't be because of the busted shoulder he shall be. And more maybe, because, no doubt, he'll be bigger and huskier than ever I was." "I see," said Dorsey. "And when that day comes I'll want you to train him, Al, the same as you was a training me, and put him where he ought to go. That'll be the top, Al. Nothing short of the top will do." Al Dorsey did a little mental arithmetic. "I'll be an old man then, Con," he said. "But you'll be a wise one, all the same. 1 don't mean for you to put on the glove with him like you did with me; but I do mean for you to take him in hand and show him what you can show him and tell him all the things you can tell him, and watch him and shape him and get him placed right. There's a lot In start ing right ain't there? Well, do that for him, and have an oversight of the whole training of him. Will you do it, Al?" Mr.. Dorsey accepted the commission. "Now lemme show you the material you'll have to work on," said Con. From the foot of the crib he took up a cellu loid rattle with jingling bells around Its edge. He shook it before the baby's face. Two chubby hands came up and clutched the handle.. "Tou wouldn't believe the grip he can get on it," Con told the other man. "But now Just watch." He proceeded to take the rattle away. The small face wrinkled into a scowl. But there was no sound, no walls, no tears. "Do you mind that? Never a whimper out of him. I'm teaching him early to take what's coming to him and be game." "Fine!" Dorsey enthused, although he saw nothing particularly marvelous in all this. "And he is game all right. Even now that kid's game." "Sure he is." Mr. Dorsey concealed a yawn. "Now watch again." Con poked the baby's cheek with one fore finger. The small hands pushed the prodding linger away. Con chuckled in great delight. "Did you get that?" he asked. "The way he' playing with you?" "He's not playing with me. He's fighting me off. Look at the scowl on his face. Fight ing me, he is, I say." "Well, well, now! I be hanged If he ain't!" "Tou told me once I had the real fighting blood in me, do you remember?" "I told you the truth, Con. You sure hav got It." "And It's In him, too." "Nev.er a doubt of It." Annie came into the hall as Con was show ing Dorsey out. "Won't Mr. Dorsey stay and have a bit of dinner with us?" she asked her husband. Dorsey thanked her, said he had an engage ment downtown, and departed, with all that feeling of relief that manifests itself when soma MrlKf tut PrtMry ihic M tn fcum tltHat, "Who ! Itii lr, lrnyr Annie .k4 him lion ih 4aor l4 o4 IwljinJ ihir iiior. "An eUl Mn4 of nun, Anni. A man that would hv don a t for it. If h'l bd the rhni, or If l hsdn'l been w4 out tf th rhni' Pt doing It i of In 4t 1 fully funny, ln't It?" Den t )6ti Ilk lilm?" Anni thought Iff nf r vxtr rtfi!iy ! f.u kl t4 it. "No," ha Mill liiully, . "Why nutf "I dun'i know, li ju! iht I don't Ilk him. Mt u IwiftiiM of i Imt funny r, I'm I want you li lior th hihy to )our MflnU, Con, 1 ( you to show him to all your McndK, liilir or hot I lak a dulika to ihm. I'm Kind rou'r proud of him." "I'm going lo bu pruu'Kr yet ma dy" ' Anni ma rod for ih klt hrn to lk up III M'l dinner. II foiinunt lir. "When Al Inri"y lot dona all t tun for lilm." h went on. "Al Itor)! What ran Al Uory li lor him?" "Kvrryiliinf, IA h could hut don for in If llunii Imd koii rUttl." II liiiMrd pip sud wit down by th opt n window of the klu lien, Annla worked mviiy by th (tnve, "Ulmi sll thin Mr. l.my ruuld liav done for you. dm. and why didn't h do It?" h kd bun, after on of thou tn Mil psuxr thut told lilm she hud been nailing for him lo go on without th prompting qutnilon. "II rould tmvn put tu into Ih wty of making lioapt of money. We might hv had wad of it, and alorie about in In lite piper and pl' lure of in (trading 'em, and a llmou in of our own, no doubt In time, and thlnv Ilk that." "Well. liy didn't ba do It for you?" "I'd huv lumltt good from th Urt, Al uill I had lha p-d. the uhlftin, and th punch. I wn all ready for my lirnt appoaram- It wit to ba at tha Collm-u'm In on of tha prelliulnarlra one nls'it when the plr would be crowded by reason of tha main bout drawing out a full Iioumi. Hut I bunted the shoulder and It went tiff on me." A spoon clattered to tha floor. Hi wlfa forgot the dinner ha was taking up. Sh turned about In middun, distressed alarm. "You were going In th ring, Con?" she 'aitked between ft lip. "In tha ling, Annie. And up to th top after I one got started. I had all tha stuff to do It A I said so." "I that what your friend Dorcy will do for little Con?" "II promised to do It this morning; In there after ha had looked over tha kid and seen the gamenexa of lilm and the spirit, and him only seven months old, at that." "Oh, Con, not thai! Nothing like that!" "What would you hnvo him, girl?" "I don't know. Whatever ha wants to be. Mont anything but that!" "There' money In it, more than he'd ever make at anything else, probably. When you get to tho top there's a lot coming to you out of the picture and turns you do in vaudeville, be side the Income from the fights themselves." "Money!" she said scornfully. She stood by the stove, twisting a corner of her apron in her fingers. She was not looking at him. Her eyes wcr fixed on a warping crack in the kitchen floor. "Con," slie said at last, and the slowness with which she spoke told of th difficulty she was finding In making herself clear. "I want you to be glad we've got him. I want you to be glad at any cost. That's the main thing, for you to be glad he's here. I was so afraid once, Just before he was born, you didn't want him. I don't want to be hurt like that again." , "Want him? Of course, I want him. Have done with all this foolish talk about me not wanting him, Annie!" "You didn't want him at first," she persist ed. "You're glad of him not for himself, but because you count on some day seeing him do all the things you wanted to do yourself. It's all right, Con. I'm trying to understand it and make the -best of it" "Now listen, Annie!" he tried to explain it to her. "That's kid's like me; he looks like me. You've said so yourself time and again. He's got my Ecrapping blood In him, too. Why, Al Dorsey could see that this morning. You don't know the feeling blood like that in your veins, so you can't understand. You'd have him a priest, maybe, or a lawyer, or a dolled-up floor walker in a store. He'll do best whatever he likes best; and, being me alb over, he'll want what I want" "I'll do my best," she said very meekly. "I'll try not to interfere. There'll be times when it will be fearfully hard not to speak my mind about it all, but I'll try to keep quiet." Annie surprised him in the weeks that fol lowed, for she kept her word and carefully avoided the subject; or, if Con brought it up in any way, she merely dismissed, it with: "You know best, Con." His feeling of uneasiness, of being in wrong In the matter, wore away. Annie, plainly, had fully accepted the fact that he was the one to shape his nwn-child's future. , And this, he felt, was as it snould be. Presently all his spare time became occu pied with much cutting and shaping of scraps of soft leather and a vast amount of awkward sewing with a needle that was forever getting itself lost in his big fingers. His wife's proffered ' help he turned down. He chuckled frequently over his task, whatever it was. It was clearly some work that must be done to his satisfac tion, for he was forever discarding it when it was partly finished and starting the cutting and the shaping and the sewing all over again. But at last he reached the standard he had set for himself and grinned delightedly at a pair of tiny boxing gloves he had contrived. He took them into the room where the Iron crib stoo4 close to the window. Being late in the evening, his offspring was asleep. But Con Shu grue could not wait until the following evening to see those tiny gloves he had made on those overgrown little fists. So he violated the one and only law Annie had laid down concerning the baby since their discussion of his future in the kitchen that former day and prodded the child into dazed wakefulness. His wife heard , him laughing mightily and presently he was dragging her into the room. "Look at that, will you!" he bade her. He had laced on the gloves. The baby blinked and cooed and waved its chubby arms. Its face was wrinkled with smiles. "The feel of the gloves!" Con enthused. "His first feel of them, and look at how he likes them!" ' He stepped to the crib and bent over it. "Come oh, old timer!" he urged, his grin ning face close to the swinging arms. "Swing on me once with the fine little gloves I've made you! A good one! Straight from the shoulderl Atta-boy! Attd-boy! Did you get that, Annie? He passed me a couple of good ones. By the living hokey, he did that!. Wouldn't it kill Al to see him do that? He's got to see him! To night! Right uway! I can't wait to see him split himself with laughing at it. I'm going down and bring him tip here in a taxi. It's worth it" He dove out of the door for his hat and coat The door banged behind him. She heard him going down the stairs three at a time. She flew to the crib and began to unlace the gloves. She was saying "O! O!" over and over, deep down In her' throat She looked frightened. ton and Al Dorsey alighted from a taxi some ' twenty minutes later. Dorsey made his usual lumbering ascent of the four long flights of stairs. "You'll near die when you see him with 'em on, Al," said Con. "And he passes good ones, too, believe me, he does!" But the crib by the window In the room they entered was empty. Neither was Anni any- hi about h pUr; not In th kitchen; not In th dining room; itr )t In tha tt tfsort, lh front room, A vagu uvpk-lon, which atrut-k Con th itit abaurd lUa In all tha world vn a It poMMMd Mm, prompted hint to rpn a rlvimi door. Th clo looked a If ryclon hl ion through It tvrything of Ann)' that h4 hung in that clot bad (una from th hook. "th mut hav took th kid out nmewhera, A I," It announced a calmly a h could, "uv. r lo to on of br friend, probably. I gue I'll hv to how you om oilier trulii4 how l look with ihtm glov on." Tha qnurtr of ili (juill liuresu of Investi gation are not liituuatng. Tlo-y do not keep fault wlih tho iiw of ih concern. On urn II. fiid office In nit old building tuhVe It need. Th llil window in Ih pine open on an air haft. Th furniHhiiiK t on nxioinl'liand hl big citblnrl, two cliMir with sugKiiig can nt, a framed portrait of Allnn I 'Inker! oft, atanding bet. id Mm oh) in front of a itu, and a xeunvd, ifgr acori'lted dik, at which, mU' em i Into ilia Inadequate tontine belweell llio arlox l't III desk chair and overflowing It somewhat, an Jiweph LI. Quill, bead of th bureuu and iu en lir working fore well. Con Phuuru w iinprttl with lulttu-r tlx pla' nor wlih Mr, Quill. Th hitter ..iucd far too heavy boll) phynlcully and im lit. illy for th delicti detail nf confidential Invemiiittiioii. A fellow workman at Ihu cur wheel work had NUtited Mr. (Julll and bin bureju to Con. And. ainra It wa Iter and Mr, Quill waa al ready nuking for tho third tinio what ba could da for hlni, there to-emed nothing el to do but tat the natura of hi errand. So Con took a photograph from hi pocket and laid It on th desk. It wa a llkene of Annie and himself. "I should Ilk you to find out th present whereabout of till lady," said Con. Mr. Quill gated on the photograph. Th man In th picture being undoubtedly th on who whs speaking to hint and th habiliment of th lady being of th bridal variety, ha got tha right answer at tha first try. "Your wife?" auit, he. "Quite so." sha' beat it. I tuk It." "Hh h." "How long ago?" Thre dity." "What wa th troublo?" "That's what 1 want to find out." "There' always reaaon for everything," said Mr. Quill. "Don't be afraid to tell ma tha whole atory. How about another man?" "Nothing In thnt." "But you do know aome reasona why aha left you. Think hard, and don't be afraid, a I aay, to tell me everything. Th mor I know about It, the quicker I'll be apt to find her for you." "There wa a kid." said Con slowly. "Wa hadn't actually quarreled about him. But there waa aome difference of opinion between ua bout what he'd be when he grew up." "She took the kid with her, of course?" Con nodded. "Did she have much money with her?" "Only a very little. Maybe not any at all." "Has she ever worked at any Job? Before you married her or since?" "Uh-huh. She worked on feather flowers for a number of years." Mr. Quill took up a pencil. Ho Jotted down Con's answers to terse questions as to her name, age. weight, color of her hair and eyes, and certain details of the clothing she had taken with her. "Ought to be easy," said Mr. Quill. "Ten dollars in advance to cover possible expenses." Con gave him the ten dollars. "Where will I get you when Fve found out anything?" Con mentioned the car wheel works as the best bet in the daytime and gave the address of the flat where he might be located after six at night Just before closing time that evening Mr. Quill came into the molding room at the ear wheel works. "You haven't located her already?" Con asked him eagerly. , "Mayb not; but try this address." He passed Con a slip of paper with a street and number scribbled on it "Mrs. Annie Shaush nessey came there with a baby three evenings ago, and took a room. Mrs. Bedloe runs the house. Better look into this." This latter advice was wholly superfluous. Con went straight from the car wheel work to the address on that slip of paper. It waa a dowdy street He rang the bell of a house that matched the street. A dispirited looking woman opened the door; the Mrs. Bedloe who ran the place, no doubt "Will I find Mrs. Annie Shaughnesscy here?" Con asked her. t "I'll see if she's in." "Let me save you that trouble," said he, pushing past her and mounting the stair. At the top of the third flight he tried a door knob cautiously, it turned noiselessly in his careful fingers; the door opened a crack. It was not locked, then. He went in, closed it, set his back against it Annie bounded out of a sorry looking rocking chair by the yet sorrier looking bed, where the baby was asleep. "Annie, what crazy foolishness is this?" h growled. "I saw the gloves on him. It was the last straw. You shan't make a fighter of him!" "I thought you said you wouldn't interfere." "I said I'd try not to interfere." "You're coming home with me." She shook her head. "No, Con. I've thought it all over- I'd rather it would be you that wa cheated than him." "Who's cheating him?" "You," she flared. "What's all this you're doing but cheating him? What's all this talk about him being a fighter when he's not out of his crib, and prodding him and poking him and taking things he wants away from him and scowling at him so he won't whimper when you do it and keeping at him until he won't think of anything when he begins Jo think except what you want him to? What's all that but cheating him? Maybe he'd rather take holy orders or be a poet or love music or something like that. And he won't know because you've filled his poor head with the stuff you want it filled with. No, if any one's got to be cheated. It shan't be him." "I suppose," he said with biting irony, "you'll work in the feather loft again to support him, and give him a grand education when he grow up." "I'll save every cent for him I can," she said. "What you'll do," he said shortly, "is get on your things and the kid's things and come home with me." "Will you promise to stop all the things you've been doing to him?" "I'll promise nothing of the sort." "That's the way I thought it would be," she said, dully. "So we'll stay here. And I'll giv him a chance to choose for himself, if I have to work my hands off to do it." "Annie, that child is a real he-kid. He's got bed blood in him. My fighting blood is in his veins. Teach him to be game? Teach him to fight? It comes to him naturally, without any teaching. It's In him. Born there. He gets it from me. Get on your things and his! Do you hear?" ' She went over to the door and opened It Standing there, very straight and very white, she motioned him to leave. "I hate the way you've acted about him," she said between her clenched teeth. ,. "And hating the way you've done, I've come to hat you. Now go and leave us alone." "Hate me, do you? What for? For trying my best to make something out of that kid that I know h'H do better than anything ! in tha (Tor to Fag Mn-B, Col am Tamj . i - .