Beusrvalic Aad Selistnte, Pass March 10, 1916. The Governor’ s Lady. [Continued from page 6, Col. 3.1 4Se ana by servants with Dan there. Without him she felt like a prisoner of state and looked on the servants as so many Jailers. Leaving her breakfast practically mntasted, Mary again ventured to the telephone, With faltering voice she repeated the number. “One-three-nine- four;” with beating heart she inquired for “Mr. Slade;” with sinking courage she received the answer that Mr. Slade had gone out, leaving no message. Again and again during the day she repeated the call, only to receive a similar reply. The possibility of her husband having left such a message to be delivered to her, whether he was there or not never occurred to the truthful, simple-minded little woman. [But Slade did not want to be reached by her, and if an untruth, more or less, were necessary, the telephone boy was easily bribed. Meanwhile Slade was eagerly look: ing forward to his new life, Never a man to waver, he did aot once look back to the wife he had so coolly de- serted. He was being dined and ban- queted and feted, being everywhere hailed as the candidate for governor. He was sniffing the first breath of fu- ture glories with keenest delight. This was the sort of thing that made a man feel big! This was the sort of life to lead—with men bowing and salaaming all around him. He walked with a firmer tread. His shoulders were thrown back a bit more arrogantly. His chest was more noticeable as he walked down the street. The innate conceit and self-esteem of the man made him overlook the fact that the party needed a rich man. He was quite satisfied that he was being boosted by Strickland and the others because of his brains, his unusual abil- ity, his oratory and his power to lead men. He was happier than he had been for years. Every day the new life looked brighter and the old less desirable, If he gave a thought to Mary it was a passing one. Mary was “comfort. able.” She had everything that money sould buy. The servants would be tak- Ing good care of her, of course. Of the lump in Mary’s throat as she sat at the lonely breakfast table and as she went through the still more lone: | some ordeal of the formal dinner, he knew nothing. Of the woman's aching heart and her eyes bright with unshed tears as she tried to keep up before the servants and make excuses for his absence, Slade was heartlessly ob- ltvious. Or perhaps it was self-esteem again, that made him unable to feel for her—the self-esteem of the suc | sessful man who feels no wounds when fighting for what he wants, and neither knows nor cares that others {eel them. He had a heart, but it was | anpleasantly like Pharaoh’s. But of Katherine Strickland’s stat- nesque beauty and her cosmopolitan manner he was delightfully aware. During the weeks since he had left | home Slade had been calling regu- | larly at the Strickland home, partly to consult with the senator and partly for the purpose of posing for the bust which Katherine was modeling. they sat hour after hour, he posing comfortably, she working deftly and talking even more cleverly, Slade and . Katherine had come to ‘a mutual un- derstanding. The more they saw of each other the more each became con- vinced that their paths would inevit- ably converge. Katherine talked animatedly and en- tertainingly of social life abroad and of the gay times in Washington, and Slade’s heart warmed and his eyes flashed as he pictured himself a part of that charmed circle. With keen penetration he saw the longing of the girl’s nature, her iron will, her deter- mination to gain social honors at al most any cost. He flattered himself that when he said the word Katherine Strickland would be ready to cast her lot with his. From the smoking room of Senator Strickland’s big house came the stri- dent sound of men’s voices, raised in excitement, and, it would seem, ac- claim. Now and again the senator's smooth, oratorical voice would sound and then Slade’s slightly deprecatory, yet firm and pleased. Then would follow the patter of applause, laughter and the sudden dropping of voices that signified earnest converse, To Katherine Strickland, sitting in the softly lighted library adjoining, every sound had its meaning. Her eyes sparkled with keen interest, In her cheeks glowed the deep rose of excitement and exultation. In that other room she knew they were making his- tory. In that other room they were putting up a man for governor, a man she admired and who had aroused her interest as no other man had ever done. Nothing could stand in that man’s way, she thought, with a catch in her breath, nothing could stop him now that he was fairly started. How dif- ferent this domineering, forceful per- sonality from Bob Hayes, the man who had first won her girl's heart, and yet for whom she had never been willing ito renounce her interest in the polit- ical and social life which obsessed her with the same compelling force as it did Slade. ‘With an effort she brought her mind back to the present and to Mrs. W ley Merritt, who had dropped in on her way from a dance to pick up her husband. “You simply weren't listening to a word I said,” Mre. Merritt complained in her affectedly affectionate way. “I As was asking if you know Mr. Slade very well.” “Yes,” Katherine replied, “we know him very well.” “And does he ever mention his wife?” in Mrs, Merritt's most perfectly | feline manner. } “Never once,” admitted Katherine, { without even an attempt at an evasion. i “And you have never met her?” Mrs. Merritt was in her glory if she could probe. “No, I have never met her.” “How extraordinary! My husband —why, Wesley Merritt's name spells | hearth and home, domestic purity— while Slade’s! They tell me he hasn®t seen his wife for weeks, and it’s town talk that he’s living at his club. And to think he’s never mentioned her to you!” Katherine had quietly rung for a servant, and as Mrs. Merritt finished, remarked casually: “Martin, see that these letters are mailed at once.” Unabashed, Mrs. Merritt was moving eagerly about the artistic room, com- fortable in all its appointments, its richness enhanced and mellowed with age, a blend of color that nothing but years can give. Fannie Merritt was a decided blonde. Her decision had been made more than ten years before. It was a de- cision that, once made, must be abided by, and the woman had been living up to it ever since. Her gown was the last word of sartorial elegance and style. Daringly decollette it clung to her long, svelte figure with loving emphasis, and trailed round her ex- quisitely dressed feet. Her hair did credit to the hairdresser’s long and pa- tient efforts, and long, bizarre diamond pendants flashed and sparkled from her ears. If ever a woman had become a slave to her own personal pleasure and dress, that woman was Fannie lightly, ever to crave motherhood, she lavished a kind of affection on a watery-eyed | little poodle, which repaid her with lap-dog gratitude. Tonight she was restless and ill at | ease. Like Katherine, her mind was | full of one thought—Slade, Slade, Slade | —but thoughts that took a different di- rection. She was sick of his name, sick of hearing of his money, sick of him named as “the man of the hour.” He was winning the very honors she had coveted for her husband, and tak- ing them right out from beneath his very eyes and nose. There didn’t seem to be a doubt of Slade becoming gov- ernor, the very position for which her husband had been striving for the past six terms. Slade with his millions needed the gavernorship no more than a pampered child needs a new toy, while to her husband success or fail- ure this time meant either the retriev- ing of his fortunes or his utter ruin. The abstraction of the two women was broken by the sudden entrance of Hayes. {| “Whew!” he whistled. “They’re hav- | ing a time of it in there. Good eve- | ning, Mrs. Merritt, your husband is | certainly making it warm for Mr. | senator's nearly out. Slade.” | ified for the moment. i “Dear, dear!” she exclaimed as she watched Hayes gazing wistfully at Katherine and looking very handsome i and manly in his well-made evening | clothes. “It's quite like old times to see you together.” Unhappy herself, | it gave her a certain pleasure to make | other people unhappy. The jealousy she had long felt for the younger and more beautiful woman found expres- | sion now in her purring tones, as, with amiable cruelty, she reminded them of their earlier intimacy. She took delight in making Bob writhe and Katherine whiten as she recalled their passionate young love when only the senator's stern interference had kept them from wedding. “Let me see,” she recollected, “when I was your confidante, . $10,000 | Want?” twenty-one, Katherine, and you, Rob, were twenty-four. I can feel Rob's hands gripping mine yet: ‘O, Fannie— please see her for me—the senator doesn’t approve of it.” And the tears you shed on my shoulder, Katherine —why, it feels wet to think of it.” “0! Fannie!” Katherine's voice was not as firm as usual. “I always said,” the woman per- sisted, “Rob, she’ll come home to you in the end—" “I think I'll go back and listen to the discussion,” and Bob flung dis- gustedly out of the room. At the door he almost collided with Merritt. Kath- erine had hurried out to see a reporter who wanted the wherefores and the whys of the dinner party to Slade. “I can’t possibly get away, dear,” Merritt explained to his wife. “I've you were “Did You Ask tho Senator for the | i | ! near the fireplace. the talk of his power and of hearing | | mockingly, “darling.” “Indeed,” laughed Mrs. Merritt, grat: i | sweetness. been buttonholed by some men from up the state. Shall you wait or go home—first?” Mrs. Merritt refused to be dis- missed in that peremptory fashion. “Ill wait,” she returned with acid “Then if you are not ready I'll run along.” “Slade’s had an ovation tonight,” Merritt informed her, nodding toward the smoking-room. “The big out-of- town men are all here. Some of ’em in there yet. He’s big, Fannie. He's big. We can’t deny that. The brute attacks his point with all the force of a sledge hammer.” “Yes, that's what you lack— punch!” his wife turned on him petu- lantly. “You're snowed under,” she com- | plained, bitterly. “If you'd taken my | advice you wouldn’t have come to this Slade feed tonight. What's your pa- per for,” she demanded, “if you can’t attack your rival candidate in its col- umns? Anyone would think you want- ed to make him governor—instead of yourself.” “I can’t attack him publicly,” Mer- ritt retorted. “He’d put up glue fac- tories facing our property and, with a lake breeze blowing our way— phew! My position is very difficult. Of course, election’s a long way ahead, but I’m the only stick in his puddle.” “Yes, you're a big stick!” she taunted. “Why don’t you do some: thing?” “What can I do?” he groaned. “I've” been told tonight by no less than four men that they won’t support me again. And Strickland’s speech introducing Slade was a masterpiece!” “Yes—Strickland’s masterpieces are concocted by his daughter, we all know that. Just as I write your stuff,” she finished with hateful emphasis on Merritt. Too self-centered and selfish the possessive, “My dear, I wish you'd be more i careful!” warned Merritt, making sure that the door leading into the | smoking-room was closed. “Your ‘Message to the Farmer’--that | made you famous! What did I ever get for writing it?” and with self-satis- fied deliberateness she arranged her: self carefully in a low-seated chair “I never denied that you had a man’s brain,” placatingly, drawlingly, “Yes—I'm the family mosquito that buzzes behind your ears. God help us if it wasn’t for me. Did you ask the senator for the $10,000 I want?” she demanded. “He can’t,” Merritt was huddled in the nearest chair. The subject had been causing him appetiteless days and sleepless nights. When a woman of Fannie Merritt's persistency and tenacity wants something a man can’t get then that man is very likely to be nagged into desperation. “You look out, Wesley,” she an- swered, alarm breaking the careful modulation of her voice. ‘“That’s the first time he ever refused us.” ‘“He’s broke—dead broke. I don’t know how he can keep this up. The That's why he’s sticking to Slade.” “Well, I don’t care how you get it— I want it. It’s vital. I've got to have ten thousand to go to Europe. Every- body’s going—Mrs. Webb, Mrs. O’Don- nell—” and her voice trailed off into a pettish whine. “Yes, I know all about that crowd,” Merritt snarled. “Sunny places for shady people.” “Wesley! I need clothes. I've told everybody I'm going,” and the peev- ish woman glared at her husband. Then she added suddenly: “Can’t the senator ask Slade?” CASTORIA. "here women are only fulfilling the | franchised states of the Union is so “Oh, my God, Fannie!” the hectored : man groaned. “Can I suggest that?! A rival candidate! I've mortgaged my property up to the hilt now for | clothes—but sooner than—” “I don’t care—I need clothes,” his | wife interrupted, rising and walking | restlessly about the room. “I've got | to go to Europe. The devil take your . excuses.” | Then, with a sudden change of | thought, she cooed. “Wesley!” [Continued next week. ] MEXICAN WOMEN WANT VOTE Republic's First Woman’s Congress | Petitions Carranza. Mexican women are demanding the righ. of suffrage. In the first woman’s congress held in the republic women of Yucatan have declared Mexican women the equal of men in intelligence and en- titled to hold office and to share in all political activities. The Mexican suffragists call on women throughout their land to join in the demand. The demand of the women was re- ceived at El Paso, by Andreas Garcia, Mexican Consul, for trasmission to General Carranza. | Women As Street-Cleaning Inspectors. “Because women are the only per- sons who know how to clean house” Street Commissioner Fetherston of New York City, is going to permit five of them to get on his street clean- ing force and see what they can do at cleaning up the large dirty-faced city of Greater New York. “New York is nothing more than a large private house,” remarked the commissioner, and as women are natural housekeep- ers and also trained house cleaners, he expects better results from them than from an entire board of men. ‘Women have been saying for a long time now that municipalities are only extensions of homes and private houses. Their contention for posi- tions in the great modern civic move- ments is based upon the fact that same duties on a large scale which for generations they have been fulfill- ing on a small scale. Women believe that they can make good in such po- sitions. These five inspectors from New York City will be watched with considerable interest by all those who have faith that this is a most nat- ural and wise step for Commissioner Fetherston to take. Propinquity Did It. The prairie districts of Canada, Manitoba, Alberta and Saskatchewan are presenting bills for woman suf- frage. “It may be,” says an English paper, ‘because the intercourse of Manitoba and Alberta with the en- close that they have been won over to suffrage by seeing it in practice.” In Manitoba a government woman suffrage bill has been drafted, while a similar bill is being drawn up in Alberta. Suffragists confidently be- lieve that women will win equal suf- frage rights in those two provinces within a few months. There are also good hopes for suffrage in Saskatch- ewan. It is expected that Dominion Franchise will automatically follow the Provincial vote for the women of Manitoba and Alberta, as in any Province all those people vote for the Dominion Parliament who are qualified to vote for their own Pro- vincial Parliament. CASTORIA. Exact Copy: of Wrapper. 59:20-e.0w = GASTORIA For Infants and Children. 5) Mothers Know That Genuine Gastoria Use For Over Thirty Years =GASTORIA THE CENTAUR COMPANY. NEW Yonx sy. a — ——— Hats and Caps. Clothing. New Things For Spring ARE HERE. Suits, Spring Overcoats, Shirts, Ties, Hats. We Would Like to Show You. It won't hurt to look. BUY when you are ready. FAUBLES BELLEFONTE, PENNA. 58-4 $350 SHOES Reduced to $2.25 NOW ON SALE Ladies $3.00 and $3.50 Shoes Reduced to $2.25 Per Pair. ALL NEW GOODS, Latest Styles, Good Sizes and Widths. This sale is FoR CASH ONLY. Shoes must be fitted in the store, as they will not be ex- changed. H. C. YEAGER, THE SHOE MAN, 58-27 Bush Arcade Bldg, BELLEFONTE, PA.