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Bobby Rigby and Graydon Banseo; they had been classmates at Yale It had been a question ofto his own adreat annoyance to him He was not out of debt but once, and then, before he fully realised it So unusual was the condition, that he could not sleep; the first thing he did in the ht and left for fear another attack of inso for the football eleven

Robertson Ray Rigby, ione in for athletics, where he learned to think and act quickly He was called one of the lightest, but headiest quarterbacks in the East No gridiron idol ever escaped his "Ji out his shingle in Chicago: "Robertson R Rigby, Attorney-at-Law," he lost his identity even aenerally known that it was Bobby aited for clients behind the deceptive shingle

The indulgent aunt who had supplied hie was rich in business blocks and apartby was her man of affairs When he went in for business, the old push of the football field did not desert hiorous, and it did not take hi prosperity, his own ready wit and unbridled versatility, he was not long in establishing himself safely in his profession and in society Everybody liked hih no one took him seriously except when they came to transact business with hi-room turned into shrewdness as it crossed the office threshold

The day after the Cable dinner, Bobby yawned and stretched through his ht before, and all on account of a certain, or rather, uncertain Miss Clegg That petite and aggravating young wo at the Cable dinner Mr, Rigby, superbly confident of his standing with her, encountered difficulties which put him very much out of temper For the first time, there was an apparent rift in her constancy; never before had she shown such signs of fluctuating He could not understand it--in fact, he dared not understand it "She was a by to hiht Anyhow, he could not see what there was about Howard Medford for any girl to countenance, much less to admire Mr Medford certainly had ruined the Cable dinner-party for Mr Rigby, and he was full of resentment