Bellefonte, Pa., January 20, 1928. THE MILKY WAY. In winter time, to pail the cows, We're up before the sun; We clean and feed and milk again Long after day is done. In summer time we sweat an swear And swat the pesky flies From early morn till late at night. It ain't the life you’d prize. And bow to spend our idle hours Don’t worry us whatever, For days may come and days may go, But cows go on forever. This life's a grind, but then we're sure Of steady compensation, That squirts a little sunshine on A gloomy situation. One day last fall poor father phoned— He sure did sound forlorn— He said to me with husky voice: “The frost has caught our corn.” Now you folks who are keeping COWS, I know will all agree, With silos waiting to be filled, What's frost to you and me? Small grain may blight, the corn may freeze Despite our best endeavor, For crops may come and crops may go, But cows go on forever. My brother's fruit crop last fall Was left upon the trees; The railroad couldn’t haul the stuff; It had to stay and freeze. To beat the game with hogs and steers, You've got to: be darn clever, For beef may drop and pork go down, While milk flows on forever. KENNEDY & WISE, Versifiers. YOU WIN, I PAY. The son of Julius H. Albec, Wall Street financier, Jimmy Albee, and pl his partners, own a promising gold mine development in the Malays on which they are forced to stop work for lack of capital. Their several families refuse to send money, but Jimmy’s father de- termines to come out and investigate the proposition. He wires his son that his allowance is stopped and that the must put his proposition over alone, “I will make you a fair and square offer—a challenge if you like—and Lord knows I hope you win!” says his father, adding: “If within six months from date you can produce to me irrefutable evidence that you have got the bet- ter of any sane and responsible bus- iness man in a legitimate business deal (said deal not to infringe the criminal laws of the State) I will back you in any venture you choose to name!” Jimmy, taking up the challenge, promises his partners that he will sell a third share in the mine. * * * “But, dear old thing!” protested Mr. Saxonby, genuinely perturbed, “don’t, do not, I beg of you, attempt the impossible and come an almighty cropper for our sakes. It'll take twenty thousand pounds to get us sol- | idly on our feet and put in the stuff we want to carry on. Who the blazes is going to give it for a third in this?” Mr. James Van Hoyt Albec smashed his mighty fist down upon the verandah rail. “Who?” he answered, breathing hard. “Who the blazes d’ye think! My old man! He wants proof. He shall have it—bless his heart—in the neck! I'm no piker! I'm going to sell him a third share in the Bonanza for twenty-five thousand, not twenty; and when he wants to see the sane and responsible business man I’ve stung, he’ll only have to look in his shaving glass. Get me? You watch!” He strode away. “Where are you off to?” inquired Secretary and Treasurer Arbuthnot, plaintively. “Into the wilderness to think this job out,” answered Mr. Albec over his shoulder, and stalked on towards the horizon. The machinery of young Mr. Al- bec’s mind being—unlike the muscles of his stalwart frame—somewhat in a state of corrosion from lack of use, the centrifugal idea for the salva- tion of “Golden Tribute” and the in- | clusion of the Albec among its share- holders seemingly refused to have conception in the brain of the stum- bler along the pathway of High Fi- nance. For two days he sat upon distant rocks and other lonesome and arid places, scowling at as much of the Federated Malay States as impinged upon his vision. In which state of tortured impotence he attracted the attention and curiosity of the pon- derous and vociferous Chong-su. In the inscrutable and devious mind of that worthy celestial was an intense regard—amounting to adoration—for the iron-muscled young Hercules; a feeling entirely lacking for the other partners. ‘Blon- el Bll’ as Chong-su fantastically rendered Mr. Beauclere’s betitled ap- pellation, he respected entirely. ‘Blon- el Blill’ was a person of great exper- ience in open-cast alluvial mining, a man who never took liberty—or per- mitted one. A calm, equable person who claimed the respect of the con- tractor of Chinese labour—and got it. Messrs. Arbuthnot and Saxonby he regarded as entirely superfluous and unnecessary in the general scheme of creation. If they had any justifica- tion to put forward for existance, Chong-su was not aware of what it might be. ut ‘M’lisser Oblec’ was a vastly different proposition. Physical strength was in Chong-su’s eyes the summit of all human perfection. In it he trafficked and by it he lived and amassed much moneys; and of all men that he had ever seen, none pos- sessed it in so prodigious a degree of excellence as ‘M’lisser Oblec.’ The culminating apex of that gen- tleman’s supremacy in the mind of Chong-su occurred during a riot among celestial gentleman of the en- tourage; a bloody little melee that looked like spelling the final extinec- tion of the corpulent gang-boss. The joust was at its height when the ex- Yale heavyweight strolled unsuspect- ingly into the compound. Perceiving with an expert eye Chong-su’s peril, Mr. Albec there and then treated the unruly disciples of Confuscius to so masterly an exposition of the noble science of hit, stop, and get away that the exhibition left upon the mind of Chong-su an indelible impression, never to be effaced. That one man (without appearing in any way incommoded; indeed, seeming to enjoy his job) could ren- der unconscious with a blow his work- steeled coolies, and serve them in this way as fast as they would attack seemed a physically impossible feat. Even he, Chong-su, had not accom- plished so splendid a result with the loaded bamboo with which he assailed the enemy in the rear. It was not impossible to one man, because he, Chong-su, had himself personally wit- nessed this special revelation. In- cidentally it had also saved his life; he was under no misapprehension as to the ultimate result of his minions’ manhanding of him. Therefore, a man who had done such things light- ly was a man to be venerated. And Chong-su, being a Chinaman, vener- ated with no half-heart: next to the graves of his ancestors, his whole ad- oration centred itself upon the mass- ive person of Mr. James Van Hoyt Albec, and there remained fixed and unwavering. Chong-su observing from respect- ful distance the worried features of his diety as he sat scowling unpleas- antly at the landscape, first woadered, then pondered; and finally, with tor- tuous indirectness moved toward the furrow-browed student of la haute fi- nance. Insinuating himself upon a neighboring outcrop of quartz, he sat and scrutinized M’lisser Oblec with silent perplexity. “You blin all slame muchdam wol- ly,” he remarked chidingly at length in the extraordinary lingo that con- stituted for him the beautiful and revered language of the English peo- es. Mr. Albec turned and regarded the intruder gloomily. “You'd worry little yellow bird, if you had to churn the gray matter extract ideas from the mush in lib- eral quantities. Me, no thinker, Chong, and that’s a hard boiled fact.” To which Chong-su responded with a bland and voluminous smile and pronounced a highly beneficient and unanswerable “Hoki.” From the capacious padded sleeve he dexterously produced an incredit- able roll of paper money of strange- ly assorted variety and denomination. Without further preamble he thrust the lot into the hands of the aston- ished Mr. Albee, and beamed more benevolently, if possible, than before. “All slame fi’t’ousan dollar. You tlake ’em. Much big flen’ Chong-su. All slame, one stlong feller. Hittem hand-bang coolies much sleep—glood! Chong-su much plenty lich man. Plen- ny. m 3 r—hokil”? -. i. . Jimmy started to his feet, and roll in hand, faced his opulent admirer. “Chong,” he said earnestly, “you're a2 good chap, but I couldn’t dip into your wad. I'm hard up in a way, but dollars aren't the breaking point. Much business—same? I've got to put over a big deal—much brain— ino can have got. Get me?” | For some moments Chong-su pon- dered this confidence, then reseated himself upon his piece of outcrop. “You all slame tellem Chong-su slow. Much can do think. Chong-su much too damn clever. Hoki.” At which invitation, and in the sim- plest and plainest language at his command, Mr. Albec unbosomed him- self of the full extent of his perlex- ities, to which recital, and with a total lack of expression that would have reflected the highest credit upon the Sphinx itself, Chong-su listened, and seemingly also marked and in- | wardly digested as well. | “Hoki,” he grunted at the finish of | the morbid narrative. “Me tellum you. All slame Chong-su much good glood blizness. You sellum mine you father. Plenny glood mine—Chong- isu know. You all slame muchee lis- ten glood. Chong-su tellum you plen- ny quick. Leaning gravely forward, and with a face upon which shone the uncon- scious innocence of childhood, he pro- ceeded to exhibit to his astounded au- ditor, the workings of the most tor- tuous and delicately balanced brain he had ever encountered. A mind that for keeness of edge, subtlety of construction, analysis and certitude of reasoning would, in the humble opinion of Mr. Albec Junior have had the old man, John D. Morgan, Na- tional State Bank Stillman, and the rest of the elect of Finance “gallop- ing with the crowd.” It was his first introduction to the mind celestial and the astounding vastness of that organ stunned him. In the space of ten minutes Chong- su, with the most complete personal detachment, had constructed, ana- lyzed, and passed acceptance upon a solution of M’lisser Oblec’s difficulties that would have done infinite credit fo fe great Signor Machiavelli him- se “Chong,” he gasped open-mouthed, “you're a wonder and some added!” Chong-su, again with his beam of childlike innocence, arose, and once more stoutly repulsed the wad of me- gotiable assets his companion was thrusting upon. “You all slame stlop here,” he ad- vised. “You workmen coolie. Mtluch bamboo, plenny hand-bang, mluchee sleep. Senr’ Blonel Blill, much glood man, all slame big genelem. ‘Chong- su glo Slingapore t’moller. See Quong Meng mlutch big man, plenny money. You keepem doltar—can do pay some- time. Hoki. Chong-su all slame plenny mloney. All slame mlutch clever feller Chong-su.” : With modest appraisement of his mental equipment, Chong-su stalked solemnly back to the open-cast, and with bamboo and caustic quip raised the standard of native labour on the “Golden Tribute” several points near- er perfection. : “Hatt,” suddenly remarked Julius H. Albec to his daughter as they sat upon the balcony of the “Raffles” at Singapore, “I'm worried about Jim- on ; And indeed there was that upon the massive leonine face betokening that its owner was not quite at ease in his mind. A troubl shading in the steelly gray eyes that might be attributed to anxiety, or perhaps an intense speculation upon some per- turbing subject. : Miss Olbec compressed the lips of her firm little mouth. She glanced at her parent with the greatest in- dignation. “You make me absolutely wild with ‘once upon a time talk. ‘When you were Jimmie’s age you'd been working ten years because you just had to, not because you liked it. This new idea of yours is ridiculous!” “Nonsense, The best of a deal against any reputable business man. What's ridiculous about that?” “In a strange country with neither money nor influence behind him. Easy—of course!” smiled Miss Albee, sarcastically. “You may think it’s a fair deal—I don’t. He’s bound to lose.” ‘I don’t care ten cents,” said her father grimly, “whether he does or not—so long as he makes a clean cut fight of it. I haven’t asked him to tackle John D., or Morgan, or—or me. Let him make a showing. Ill know what's in him when he’s floored.” “He won’t be floored!” exclaimed Miss Hattie with flashing eyes. “He won’t—he won’t! And when he is,” she continued with true feminine con- sistency, “you’ll just stand round and be utterly piggish and-—-and horri- ble!” Mr. Albec, a twitch at his cast-iron mouth, surveyed his lovely daughter in silence for a moment. “If you think,” he retorted slowly, “that I’m out here stewing in my own juice in this hell-prepared climate for the sake of doing pig mimicry over my own son, youre due to guess again. And from little odd things I’ve already picked up here, it’s about time I did blow into the game. I've got a notion he’s not getting a square deal.” “Whatever do you mean?” asked Miss Albec, sitting up very sharply. “I’ve been pulling a few wires to get an inside line on this rabbit war- ren Jimmie’s scratching up for gold, and I find the whole proposition is kind of spotted. There’s some good claims, but most bad. Bellamy our Consul here, says it’s a million to one against Jimmie’s prospect being worth ten cents.” “But if he isn’t getting—" began Miss Albee, impetuously. “Yesterday evening,” continued Mr. Albec calmly, “I was sitting around in the smoking lounge after dinner when nearby me came and squatted a big Chinaman; raerchant. riandarin or something. I'm uot acquainted with the degrees of Chinese aristoc- racy, but some of the richest men here are of that colour. This particu- lar one looked money all over. He hadn’t been ‘here long “when another icined him—a man I’ve since learned is called Quong Meng, and one of the big bugs of this locality. He Spoke English as well, if not better, th I do. With him was a near-white gentleman as foxy-looking a jackal as youbd see bundled out of a fan-tan raid on Mott Street. Because of him I suppose they discussed their frame- up in English, not figuring on my taking any interest or knowing any- thing of the subject. Which I shouldn’t if I hadn’t very distinctly caught the nam: “Golden Tribute” | and again, Kuala Lipis.” He paused and eyed his cigar maditatively. 2 ay | “Go on, father, go on!” urged Miss ! Albee, impatiently. “There’s some scheme on foot to buy into this mine; and the twist centres around Chinese labour on it, which one of these gentry has some- thing to do with the control of. So far as I could ‘get it, the coolies are systematically robbing the mine of the biggest part of the gold it does pan out, to make a bad showing for these pig-talied swindlers to buy in at a low figure. Seems a third interest is already on the market or at any rate these two have got an offer of it. “How dare they—the brutes!” de- manded Miss Hattie, clenching her little hands fiercely. : “So far,” returned Mr. Albec, im- perturbably, “I haven’t asked them. Though I don’t mind admitting in one that it sticks in my neck to see my son skinned out by a pair of pot- bellied chinks.” “Is there no way of finding out the trath of things?” asked Miss Hattie, anxiously. “You’re so fear- fully clever in these affairs, aren't you.” The faintest inflexion of sar- casm in her voice caused Mr. Albee to glance sharply at his daughter be- fore replying. “Yes,” he answered slowly, “there is. That gentleman Mrs. David J. Engell introduced to you last eve- ning. “The Honorable Mr. Beauclerel” Miss Albec flushed a delicate and ex- tremely becoming shade of pink and studied the toe of her Pinet shoe with great assiduity. “Whatever has he to do with it?” “Bellamy tells me that he is one of the inside men in auriferous gold mining around these parts. Knows every inch of this Kaula Lipis coun- try and all the locations. According to B. he is one expert, and a ‘thor- oughly dependable and honest man. I must say he struck me in that light. A gentleman; no doubt of it. It oc- curred to me - that having got so friendly you might get a little in- formation out of iam nz: Miss Hattie rose abruptly and stared out over the harbour. “Fathet,” she exclaimed, “how mi- dicuous! I—I hardly know Mr. Beau- clere at all. I simply couldn’t—” For three solid hours last evening,” interposed Mr. Albec dryly, “you en- tertained the gentleman with your wit and wisdom, while T listened im on these Chinese yeggs. You conferred with him again after supper. At ten this morning when I left to call on Bellamy, you were conducting a heart-to-heart seance with him in the lounge. You were still at it when I got back to the tiffin meal, After- noon tea saw him again pretty ad- jacent. Earlier on this ‘evening—” bec, with an unusualy color. Beauclere and I and—" “Thank Heaven,” retorted Mr. Al- bec dryly, “that a genuine conversa- a fixture till around bedtime. How- ever, I'll extract the information next—chat.,” Miss Albec started, and regarded her parent anxiously. “You're not going to offer Mr. of that sort!” she said hurriedly. Julius studied her a moment with compressed lips, then addressed him- “When I make a had break,” he Shs vel slowly, “it isn’t one of that sort. he were born. By the way, not mentioned your brother or this mine to him in one of these volumin- ous chats of yours?” wanted our interests frightfully secret.” Her father nodded. here kept so what I’ve told high-binders.” He was later aroused from a pro- found concentration upon this ques- tionable affair by a solid footstep halting beside his chair. Glancing up he perceived the gentleman whose acquaintance he was desirous of mak- ing—the Honourable Mr. William Mote Beauclere. “Miss Albec has given me to under- stand that you wanted a chat with me,” began that gentleman with his pleasant smile; a smile that the keen- you of these yellow ive. foreign to Mr. Beauclere. this scheme (erroneously by him to Mr. Albec Junior), and th thorny paths into which it had led him. His curses had been none the less heartfelt since his introduction to the beautiful sister of the frenzied financier of Kuala Lipis. As a mat- ter of fact, it but required his thoughts to dwell at all insistently upon that fascinating little lady to reduce him to a condition of remorse- ful pulp. As for Chong-su, the mere sight of that miraculously garbed phenomenon made him shudder, did the celestial ever betray acquaint- ance with him. In this frame of tion to wreck the whole outfit before giving utterance to one downright falsehood, he presented himself be- for Mr. Albee, who rose and shook him warmly by the hand. “I'm obliged to you, Mr. Beau- clere,” he said briefly, then plunged into ‘his subject with his usual direet- ness. “There are one or two point- «rs I want about mines in this coun- try and I'm told you're the man to ask.” The Honorable Bill bowed silently, took the chair indicated, the cigar of- fered, and grimly wondered what ; came next upon the agenda. “Anything I can inform you. ‘m sure,” he murmured. | “I'm told you are one of the best men in alluvial gold mining here?” The Honorable Bill started appre- hensively. “Er—know a bit. Been at it a long time. Plenty better men though.” A modest reply that pleased the magnate tremendously— as did also his direct dot-dash-dot method of speech. pen to know anything of a gold mine at Kuala Lipis in Pahang called the ‘Golden Tribute’? I have a very par- ticular reason in inquiring about that property.” Mr. Beauclere drew an involuntary breath. “Bet you have,” he thought, and gulped something down; then, with diabolical calmness replied. “I know the mine perfectly well.” “Good. Mr. Beauclere, may I ask your candid opinion of it as a prop- osition 7” The Honorable Bill opened his mouth to speak, then shut it again without utterance. For a moment he sat in frowning communion with him- self; symptom of habitual care before expressing an opinion that impressed his intent watcher most facorably. “Without being in any way a Raub Mine,” he commenced slowly, “the proposition’s good. Present moment strangled for capital. People owning it worked like slaves—say that for them. Sunk everything but not enough. Not suffiicent labor to get big stuff; or machinery. Prospects are good; indications can’t lie. Sure of that.” The Honorable Bill knitted his brows and pondered a moment. Twenty to twenty-five thousand in- vested make it pay well. Pounds, of course. Given the work and enthu- siasm behind it now. Everything in that.” “Ah,” commented Mr. Albec, mus- ingly. “Then a man who'd been of- fered a third interest at around that figure wouldn’t have been especially singled out for trimming?” “Certainly not. If I had the cash, sink tomorrow. Haven't unfortunate- ly. Mightn’t suit a man of your cali- bre, though. Not big enough. Also not on spot. Genuine proposition to a man interested. Sure of that.” nks,” said Mr. Albec. “Er— you know the men running it—the syndicate 7” “Kmow ’em well as the next,” an- swered the Honorable Bill, truthfully. “There’s one of them of my name, I fancy?” said Mr. Albec, with tent- ative duplicity. “Yes. American too. Rare chap, for work—hard graft. Do as much as ten coolies if allowed. Can’t be done of course. Low caste. Good chap, and best gang-boss on mine.. Coolies work for him. If they don’t—~fattens ‘em out. They understand that—ev- erybody satisfied. Not much exper- fence of course as yet, but getting it. “Do you,” pursued Mr. Albec, “hap- tion didn’t ensue, or you’d have been the absent James, I manded want for myself. You might mention ! the fact that I'd be glad of a word your opinion be of his business abil- with him at his leisure when you ities—if you've had any opportunity Clere a—an expert’s fee or anything | self to the lighted end of his cigar. i chap—!” | “Don’t know what he’ll pull off even- ‘tually—mnot my line of business. “I was sizing up men before you or | in particular. you’ve | perience—much greater than mine of That the gray eye of the elderly “Mr. financier had glowed warmly at this merely chatted, intelligence was obvious even to the | harrassed mind of the Honorable Bill. He had put extra decisiveness into his short-chopped words of praise for feeling that com- mon honesty to his co-adjutor de- it. “And what, Mr. Beauclere, might of judging? Does he show any sign of—of initiative; daring in methods —for a youngster of course?” “By gad, ke does!” replied the Hon- orable Bill with whole-hearted con- cession of this particular virtue. “Ideas positively amazin’ Conserv- ative minded man myself. But that He broke off and stood up. Tackles things make me shiver—one Don’t know your ex- course—but fancy lad who'll tackle things bound to land somewhere big sooner or later. Can't keep him “No,” answered Miss Albee, “you down.” 1 “Then don’t,” he commanded. “Or Mr. Albec rose and gripped the Honorable Bill’s hand with a warmth that made that honest gentleman feel | like a double dyed sink of iniquity. “Mr. Beauclere,” he { you've helped me through a bigger i | | | { information, eyed financier instantly noted made | bucked up considerably and took 2 his homely face exceedingly attract- | more optimistic view of things. ; ) “Rather a decent concert Riverside |in the morning,” rive this evening,” he ventured tim- 'orable Bill dubiously. At that particular moment the D . ] “Man-of-War band, very kick. Every right of smile camouflaged a condition of orously. acute nervousness—a ghastly feeling decent and of Machiavelian chicanery entirely haps—" A good | many times in the last couple days “Mr. Beauclere,” he responded, “if had the honest-souled Bill cursed the ! there is any form of culture that I dazzling brain that had conceived | neither understand nor appreciate, attributed is music blown out of those oompah- € | oompah arrangements. though never by the faintest glance ! Glad | ' proposition than I—than I can ex- plain just now. I'm indebted to you, | and I shan’t forget it.” exclaimed, ! “Not at all, not at all,” murmured the Honorable Bill vaguely. mation honest at any rate. that.” “I do. I—I wish you'd dine with us ' waist and tonight—my daughter would be de- | lighted I know.” “Infor- | of 1 Bank on Honorable Bill intrepidly placing one . - _— A “I don’t know how you can talk Make first class man—keen.” such utter rubbish,” flashed Miss Al- . Suddenly, with perfect English and in a deep sonorous voice that boomed: gratefully upon the ears of the mag- nate, Quong Meng spoke: “The purchase then is agreed up- on at twenty-five thousand pounds English money. The price is big, but,” he emitted a fat, wheezy chuck- le that made the American’s foot itch, “the output will soon go up. It is worth it—to us.” He chuckled again meaningly, and the veins up- on the financier’s forehead swelled. “Tomorrow I meet you here, at mid- day, then you Chong-su go north to Pahang. I will bring a bank draft to close the business.” “Hoki,” Chong-su lumbered to his feet heavily. “What was the last average 7” questioned the putty-faced gentleman with the foxy eyes as they turned away. “The last average to them does not matter,” quoth the sonorous Quong Meng sententiously. “It will be very different to us.” = And again that maddening chuckle reached Mr. Al- ’s ears as the trio departed upon their nefarious way. “I'll bet it will, you yellow scourge,” he muttered through "his shut teeth. “When you get it. But you haven’t got it yet by a long shot!” . Miss Hattie upon her return was informed that her august parent had retired to his bed; whereupon the music lovers supped tete-a-tete, and later, put in an hour in earnest con- versation upon the balcony. Their departing for the night was a surprisingly tender nature; the arm around Miss Albec’s slender kissing her fairly on the amazing occurrence, to lips. An young lady responded by which the At which pleasing return for his flinging her arms about his neck and the Honorable all that. Mr. Albec smiled at him grimly. Choice of ' evils give me neuralgia. My daugh- | ter, Hattie, however, is differently | constituted. She can assimilate it in- { to her system with enjoyment. If you can spare the time to escort her, i it est. Bill returning the caress with compound interest. “Speak to your father first thing murmured the Hon- “Expect he’ll course. Feel Fancied per- rotten over this finance business.” | “Bill,” returned Miss Albec firmly, you’re not to go near papa until I tell you to. As for Jimmie’s affair, you’ve been perfectly square and hon- All that you've said has been absolutely true. Dad,” she continued, the very tiniest soupcon of sarcasm: in her voice, “is the cleverest man at Finance—High Finance—in this: whole universe. He'll tell you so any time you've got ten minutes to sit | around and listen—which you won't: I've no doubt she will be eternally 'N&Ve uow you're engaged to me. Go grateful—and so shall I. In any; case I've several important things to | run over in my mind this evening, ' vo business affairs that wait around on ! the mat until I'm ready.” A suggestion pounced upon by the Honorable Bill with undiluted delight and later by the beautiful and spirit- ed Miss Alb ithout visible si fi mind, and with the steeled determina- | 8 jas RE ION Wish 2 sign oF | abhorrence. ! For some little time Mr. Albec sat | and digested the information culled from the wonderfully observed Mr. Beauclere; then glancing at his | watch decided that he had just time to start a certain scheme operating before dinner. Slipping from the ho- ' tel he made his way to Telegraph office, enjoyed one minute of thought- ful nourishment upon the end of his lead pencil, and dispatched the fol- lowing telegram: “Albec, Golden Tribute Mine, Kuala Lipis, Pahang. Here-at- | Raffles-Hotel-with - Hattie - got- | private-line-on-things - concern- | ing-your-mine - reason - believe- | underhand-work-on-sale-two- fat | Chinamen-one-third - as - before- ! wire-price - and - twenty - four | option-purchase-to - date - from- : time-of-my-wire-of - acceptance. | Love-from-Hattie-and-self - hope ! to-see-you-soon-wire - at-once— “Dad” “And now,” mused Mr. Albec as he walked briskly back to the hotel, I'll put a crimp in your little game, Messrs. Hog-fat and Chop-suey or whatever your names are. Next time you pick on a son of Julius H. Albec for the sucker, you’ll watch out that father’s not in the immediate vicin- ity.” Whatever the ebyssmic machina- Putty-face Combine, upon that partic- ular evening when Mr. Albec found them whispering myteriously togeth- document, they determined that the outer should glean nothing of them. to bed and don’t worry. You leave Dad to me.” mm The breakfast gong was still re- rberating its appa ling din along the passages when Mr. Albee stepped up to the rack, and took from it a. telegram addressed to himself. Tear-. ing it open, he read as follows: “Albec, Raffles Hotel, Singapore. Delighted-receive - wire - don’t- understand-about - native - labor no-trouble-here - regret - option- impossible-until - another - deal- decided-on-or-off - hurry - along- love-Hattie-and-self - Jimmy—" Twice Mr. Albec perused this: missive, a frown growing ‘ and set- ling between his eyes, then with his: jaw thrust out and a set determined look about his mouth he strode brisk- ly along to the Telegraph office, and { without hesitation wrote as follows: “Albee, Golden Tribute, Kuala Lipis, Pahang. Wire-receixed- offer - thirty - five - thousand- pounds-English - third - share- Golden - Tribute - Mine-if-deal settled-before-noon-today - Con- sult-partners-and-wire-me - on - or-off-if-on-accept-this - as - con- tract-and-follow-telegram - here- earliest-Julius H. Albec.” This dispatched, he returned to the: hotel, made an excellent breakfast, then settled himself down in the lounge to await events. Came ten o'clock and with it his: daughter more radiant and lovely than ever; thrillingly so in the eyes of one gentleman who breakfasted in solitary state and eyed her wistfully through the glass doors of the dining room. Miss Hattie was informed i that her parents had passed the best | of nights and was feeling pretty top- tions of the Chong-su, Quong Meng, |'motch general | which pleasing intelligence that de- lightful young lady joined the wist- ' ful-locking gentleman v-hose whole er over what appeared to be a legal demeanor brightened, were evidently quite promptly ordered a second breakfast: world to keep her company. Wherear Mr. | Albec, Vv. Upon receipt) of and who observing operations: surrep- With consummate guile Mr. Albec i titiously from around his newspaper, had idexterously indinuated himself ' grinned hugely. into a fourth chair at their table, his back upon them, immersed him- self ostentatiously in his newspaper, and strained his ears until the drums ached to catch their conversation. For all the results he achieved he might just as well have been suffer- ing at the band concert in the com- pany of his daughter and the Honor- able Mr. Beauclere. But for a succession of soft sibilant whispers which goaded him into a transport of baffled fury, he heard not one choate word, not one intelli- gible syllable. The situation stung him to a point of seething rage and frenzy; for one glimpse at the docu- ment they were prodding with fat, long-nailed fingers, he would have willingly sanctioned assault and bat- tery. What in particular was fast re- At eleven of the clock a telegraph messenger entered suddeniv and handed a message through the win- dow cof the bureau. Immediately the | thin, teedy Eucasian hall-buy who owned it was heard piping: “Albee! Teiegram fr Albec!” Mr. Albec grabbed at the message and tore it open avidly. I: was word- ed as follows :--- “Albee, Raffles Hotel Singa- pore. Right offer - thirty - five- thousand - pounds - one - third share-Gelder-Tribute - accopte:d- behalf-self-and - partners . sales date-time-of-lodging-this-am - on way-down.—Albec. “Hal” breathed Mr. Albec with a grim sigh of relief, that settles that! He folded the telegram and placed it carefully in his pocket book, then ducing Mr. Albec to a condition of |Teseated himself in a comfortable po- murderous frenzy, was the contempla- tion of the fact that the aim and end —the Alpha and Omega—of these | piratical blooded trimming of his son! Julius H. Alec’s boy, a hard working lad acording to an honest man who was capable of judging. His son, who was putting up an honorable busi- ness proposition to this gang of pig- tailed sharks in comic opera clothes —and assuredly Solomon in all his glory had nothing on Messhe. Chon- su and Quong-Meng in the matter of raiment. Well, they wouldn't get away with it! He would see them in hell first. He'd break that bunch or—! In his impotent fury at miss- ing the import of their whisperings, the great financier had to take firm colloquies was the cold-! Tae | His ! ried snatch at tiffin—when afternoon | tea rolled along at four o’clock. No grip of himself to prevent his jus- tifiable wrath’s getting the ascendan- cy of him and manhandling the pre- cious triumvirate upon the spot. I sition immediately commanding the hotel entrance. “Now you gang of yellow hyenas,” he muttered, “I'm waiting!” He was still waiting—but for a hur- materialization of the Chinese expon- ents of finance had so far been forth- coming. Mr. Albec turned grudgingly in the direction of the table presided over by his fair daughter (attended upon by the Honorable Bill Beau- clere) when the door flung open, and Mr. James Van Hoyt Albec, burnt al- most te the color of a roasted coffee bean, burst in, greeting his family with a wild exhuberance peculiarly his own. ; “Jimmy boy,” said Mr. Albec, grip- ping at the huge paw of his son, “it’s good to see you again. You—you look good.” There was a great lov- (Continue@ on page 6, Col 6)