Bellefonte, Pa., October 11, 1929. A BEAR If I were a bear, And a big bear too, I shoudn’t much care If it froze or snew, I shouldn’t much mind If it snowed or friz— I'd be all fur-lined With a coat like this! For I'd have fur boots and a brown fur wrap, And brown fur knickers and a brown fur cap, I'd have a fur muffle-ruff to cover my jaws, And brown fur mittens on my brown paws. With a big brown furry-down up to my head, I'd sleep all the winter in a big fur bed. ————————— GOOD GRAFT. About seven o’clock in the evening, on February fifth, which was elec-: tion day in Camville, Mr. Roscoe Critz was sitting in his cane rock- ing-chair in front of the sheet-iron stove in his dining room. On a hard chair at the other side of the stove Professor Plato Ham- mond, principal of the Camville Pub- lic School, who had reached the ven- erable age of seventy-six, was re- peating for the thousandth time why he had not been able to take partin the Civil War, being then but nine years old, and Mr. Critz had mo- mentarily fallen asleep. His totally bald head fell forward dnd he had just uttered the first “G-r-r!” of a snore, when his nephew Sammy burst into the room. “Uncle Roscoe! Uncle Roscoe!” Sammy cried excitedly. “You won! Your whole ticket was elected!” Mr. Critz came awake with a jerk. For a moment he blinked, trying to remember who, what and where he was, and then a look of consterna. tion came upoy his pinkly cherubic «countenance. © “My goodness gracious, Samuel! That's dreadful! Ain't you foolin’ me?” Mr. Critz exclaimed, pulling at his little white goatee nervously. Behind Sammy now appeared Mr. Ira Binzer, whose occupation was practically nothing but who sang bass in the choir. He was excited, too. “No, sir, by hecky!” he declared. “You carried the town by a mee-jor- ity of six votes as slick as a whistle, Roscoe, and no foolin’ about it. They just got the ballots all counted and it’s a landslide—mayor and council and town clerk all elected.” “Well, land's sakes,” said Mr. Critz with irritation. “You don’t have to be so cheerful about it—it's bad enough as it is. Plato,” he shouted at Professor Hammond, “you're elect- ed mayor!” “What say?” asked Professor Hammond, putting a hand behind his © ear. ‘Whose mare?” « “You've been elected mayor,” shouted Mr. Critz. “Mayor! Elect- ed, I say. Mayor!” “May Irwin? Yes, I've heard she was a good actress, too,” said Pro- fessor Hammond, nodding his had. «I never saw her, but folks say so.” “My goodness gracious!” exclaim- ed Mr. Critz. “He ain’t ever goin’ to hear anythin’; I'm goin’ to have a terrible time. Ira, how is Emmy takin’ it?” “Grand!” said Mr. Binzer. “Just grand! The ladies are gettin’ up a perade right now, and Mis’ Critz is headin’ of them.” “Land sakes !” Mr. Critz ejaculat- ed. He was undoubtedly greatly per- turbed by this unexpected electoral triumph which had made him the political boss of Camville. For twelve years Obert Duff, Camville’s only barber, had been elected mayor al- most unanimously and there had been no reason to think he would not con- tinue to be so elected forever. If Mr. Critz had thought anything else he would not have gone into politics. To be boss of Camville, or any oth- er place, was the last thing the gen- tle and plump little man desired, but his wife, Mrs. Emma Critz had pes- tered him until he got up an opposi- tion ticket, hoping it would be deep- ly snowed under. Mrs. Emma Critz had succumbed to the prevailing hair style and had had her hair bobbed, and her first » experience in Obert Duff's barber :shop had aroused her ire. Obert ‘Duff had succeeded his father, Or- ‘lando Duff, as Camville’s barber, and back in 1888 Orlando Duff had dec- orated his ceiling with pictures cut from the Police Gazette. Some of these were portraits of John L. Sul- livan but most of them were pic- tures of chorus ladies of the plump variety then prevalent. : © “Jt ‘was all well enough, I dare say, Roscoe,” Mrs. Critz had said, “when there was just men lyin’ there | knowin’ about it in the barber chair and lookin’ up at all them ladies’ legs, but it’s real em- barrassin’ when a lady has to go there to get a hair cut or a facial massidge. And he wun’t scrape them off. He was real sassy when I ask- ed him to.” i “TI don’t see whut I can do about, it, Emmy,” Mr. Critz said. “You can get an ord’nance passed forbiddin’ ladies’ legs on barber-shop ceilin’s, I should think.” “Now, Emmy, not whilst Obe Duff is mayor and’s got the city council with him,” Mr. Critz told her. “Well and indeed!” exclaimed Mrs. Critz. “Then it’s about time you wake up and elected a new mayor, Roscoe Critz, and I wun’t give you a mite of peace till you do.” Nor did she, and Mr. Critz, for the sake of the peace he loved so well, went through the motions of bring- ing forward a Reform Party ticket. He was going to make the campaign on the slogan, “No legs on barber- shop ceilings,” but Mrs. Critz objected that that slogan would alienate the entire male vote, and said the anti-leg effort should be a whisper- ing campaign among the ladies of Camville and that Professor . Plato Hammond—who had told Mr. Critz he was willing to be defeated for for the office of mayor—should run on the platform of “A Bigger and Better Camville.” And now not only was Professor Plato Hammond elected but the three found aldermen and the city clerk had gone in with him. By this unexpected and undesired success Mr. Critz had be- come the : was now his duty to make Camville “pigger” and “better” as promised. The interest of Mr. Ira Binzer in all this was because Mr. Critz had boss of Camville and it . and Willie Lunk play to with, i robbed the baby. In the hand bag Willie Lunk had ents, a 7. Se a for prune whip, but the mother had come from the store in time to see Willie making off with the hand bag and that was why he was now in No one was hunting for him bottle, t ‘but he imagined that all the police promised him the appointment to the | position of chief of police if the ticket won, and a few evenings later when the three new councilmen, the new mayor and Mr. Critz met in the dining room to consider a program, Mr. Binzer was present. : Now that he had been elected may- or Professor Hammond had assume an air of dignity and had had his long beard trimmed, but even so he was not much help. As he heard practically nothing that was said, he confined himself to placing the tips of the fingers of his two hands to- gether, looking gravely at the ceil- ing, and repeating, “Most reasonable! Most reasonable!” whenever he was appealed to. It was evident that as a mayor Professor Hammond was going to be a total loss, and it made Mr. Critz perspire to discover that he was not only to be boss but may- or as well. “My goodness gracious !” Mr. Critz exclaimed when the talk had gone on for half an hour and nothing had been accomplished. “We ain't gettin’ nowheres. Gentlemen, we told these folks we’d give them a bigger and better Camville, and seems as if we ought to do it, but I declare I don know how we're to go about it.” “What we're up against, it looks like,” said Mr. Binzer, who had a face like a horse, “is a proposition. That's what I say it looks like. I may be wrong but that’s what I say.” For a moment Mr. Critz became red in the face. “Proposition!” he cried. “If you can't say nothin’ better’'n that, you might as well say nothin’ at all. My gracious! the town's lookin’ to us to do some- thin’ and there ain't no way to do it, far as I can see, and all you got to say to it is ‘proposition.’ ” “Uncle Roscoe!” called a boy's voice from the next room. “Yes, Sammy; whut is it?” asked Mr. Critz patiently. “Why, now, Uncle Roscoe,” said Sammy, appearing in the doorway. “Now Willie Lunk and me, we were talking about how you said you were going to make Camville bigger and better, and Willie Lunk he has been in Chicago and New York and every- where, and he says the trouble with Hs town is there ain’t any graft in “I don’t know whut you mean, Sammy,” said Mr. Critz. “We're busy about politics, Sammy, and you hadn't ought to interrupt us.” “Yes, I know, Uncle Roscoe,” Sam- my said, “but that’s what I mean. Willie, he says you can’t expect this town to be bigger and better like New York and all those places, be- cause the first thing those places do is to get graft in the government, because that’s how to get things done, Uncle Roscoe. Willie says that’s al- most all you read about in the city papers—how the grafters are doing things and buying parks and making sewers and everything to make the place bigger and better, and—" “Well, my goodness gracious, Sam- my,” Mr. Critz said, wiping his spec- tacles, “I guess I know that as well as Willie Lunk knows it. I'm able to read the newspapers as well as the next person, I should think. Trouble is, I ain’t had no experience in that sort of thing and I don’t know just how to go about it.” Ira Binzer got up and opened the stove door to spit into the fire. He slammed the stove door. Pied “From what I read in the papers a police force ain’t much account, seems as if, if it ain’t all permegat- ed with corruption and one thing and another. I'm willin’ to be permegat- ed that way if you say so, Roscoe. We got to do the best we can for the town, all of us.” : “Most reasonable! Most reason- able!” said Mayor Hammond, tap- ping his finger tips together. “Sammy most generally talks sense, Roscoe,” came from Mrs. Critz in the next room. : “Well, I got myself into this job of boss of politics,” Mr. Critz said, “and I am to do the best I can at it. I sort of hate to rob folks the way these grafters have to do.” “Oh, pshaw, Uncle Roscoe!” Sam- my said. “You don’t rob nobody but the taxpayers, and Willie Lunk says they never care. They expect it, Uncle Roscoe. They like it, Willie sa Ln “Well, IT guess maybe they do, the way they put up with it,” agreed Mr. Critz placidly. “I guess maybe, men, we'll have to start in graftin’ and see whut we can do that way for a big- ger and better Camville. I'll do the best I can at it and I guess maybe Willie Lunk can help us out some, like he does. You councilmen has got to come in on it the same as me and Plato and Ira.” “Yes, if you say so, Roscoe,” said Mr. Wulk, whose sudden elevation from odd jobs and cordwood sawing seemed to have stunned him, and the other two councilmen, Mr. Tever- sham and Mr. Gollick, agreed. “All right, fellows,” said Mr. Critz. “I guess Emmy has some cider and cookies she’s waitin’ to pass round, and afore we meet next I'll try to think up some sort of graftin’ to start things agoin’. If you see Willie Lunk tomorrow, Sammy, you might ask him to sort of drop round and talk things over.” Willie Lunk, whose knowledge of graft had so impressed Sammy Critz, was not a citizen of Camville. He was temporarily making his home in the cheapest room at the Camville Hotel, and he had never been in Chi- cago or New York. He was not much of a crook but he liked to think he was a hard-boiled tough of the deadliest character. As a matter of fact Willie Lunk was the misguided son of a wealthy widowed mother in Riverbank, Iowa, and he had begun his career of crime in Davenport. Here he had seen a mother leave her baby outside a store in a baby carriage, and she had left her hand bag for the baby d Take it from me, that Here we elected Plato and | ‘nothin’ forces of America were on his trail. Willie’s devilishness consisted in pulling his cap over one eye, letting a cigaret listlessly from his lip and spitting tarough his teeth. With this he sported and attitude of 'world-weary cynicism which he ex- pressed by saying of everyone whose name was mentioned, “Aw, rats, bo! guy’s nothin’ but a dirty crook.” “Well, now, Mr. Lunk,” Mr. Critz said when Willie came to the house, “I guess Sammy told you what I wanted to see you about; we've got to get started at this graftin’ busi- ness before the folks begin to get im- patient over nothin’ bein’ done, seems as though, and me and Ira Binzer thought maybe you could help us some.” “Yeah? Is that so!” said Willie Lunk sarcastically. “Well, I'll tell you about that Binzer guy; you take it from me, that guy’s nothin’ but a dirty crook. See?” “You don’t say!” said Mr. Critz. “I'm real glad to hear you say so, knowin’ about such things like you do. I guess maybe if he is we can do some first-class graftin’ when we get goin’ right. Now—" “Roscoe Critz,” came the voice of Mrs. Critz from the next room, “don’t you go and forget them chorus-girl legs on Obert Duff’s ceilin’ with all your graftin’ ana stuff.” “No, I wun't, Emmy,” said Mr. Critz. “Say! What about them chorus- girl legs?” asked Willie. ‘What's the dame peepin’ about? What's that celin’ to her?” It’s sort of why I come to be the Boss Tweed of this town,” Mr. Critz explained. “Emmy, she’s sort of dis- gusted with that ceilin’ of Obe’s, and that’s why we threw Obe out of the mayor’s chair. But I reckon we ain’t goin’ to have much trouble, about that ceilin’, Willie. Soon as town council meets I aim to pass an ord’'nance forbiddin’ legs on ceilin’s.” “Yeah? Well, you take it from me,” said Willie, “them councilmen ain't nothin’ but a bunch o dirty crooks.” “I hope they be,” said Mr. Critz, “but to get down to this graftin’ business——"' “What’s the matter with the ceil- in’?” asked Willie Lunk. “Hey ?” queried Mr. Critz. “The ceilin’ ?” i “The ceilin’,” repeated Willie. “Lis- ten, bo! if you're goin’ to graft you've got to graft, haven't you? | Aw, wake up! Go on and tell Obe Diuff you're goin’ to pass an ordi-! nance to chase them pictures off his ceilin’, see? What's he? He ain't: but a dirty crook. Tell him you're goin‘ to put through an ordi- nance, and then I go around to him an pn Willie rubbed his thumb against his forefinger in the sign that means “Money! Come across!” : “I say, ‘Come across, and old Critz will forget it,” Willie explained. “There's your graft if you ain’t just talkin’ through your hat. Leave him have his legs on his ceilin’ if he comes across right, see?” ! “Roscoe!” came the voice of Mrs. | Critz from the next room. “Roscoe Critz, you wun’t do nothin’ of the | kind! Them legs has got to come ' down.” | “Now, Emmy,” said Mr. Critz Pleagingiy: “don’t you interfere in Ss.” - “I will, too, interfere,” said Mrs. Critz, coming to the door with her sewing in her hand. She was a large | plump woman and she quite filled the doorway, and her usually placid face showed her disapprobation. “Ros- coe,” she said, “us women elected Plato Hammond to get them pictures off Obe Duff’s ceilin’, and off they've got to come! That's my word, and it’s’ a word with the bark on it.” - “Now, Emmy,” said Mr, Critz pa- tiently, “whut we promised when election was goin’ on is one ; and whut we have to do to get this graftin’ business under way uite another. Folks has got to BY up with is when election is over. illie has give us a real good idea and it’s the only one we've got so far, so I guess we'll go right ahead with it. Folks has got to put up with one thing and another if they want to have crooks in gov’ment of- fices. I guess, Emmy, you and the ladies can keep you're eyes shut when you go to get your hair trimmed off.” “Well, ofall things,” exclaimed Mrs. Critz. “I'm goin’ to go and get Mrs. Keech and go down and tell Obert Duff this very minute!” Mr. Critz waited until he heard the front door slam, and then he heaved a sigh. : Bt “That's how politics is,” he said sadly; “bustin’ families wide apart. Now we got Emmy against us. How- soever, a man’s got to do his duty; women don’t seem to understand these things.” “Say, listen!” said Willie from the depths of his cynicism. “Women, they're nothin’ but a bunch of dumb- bells; you got to treat ’em rough, see?” “Well, I don’t know as Emmy is as dumb as some,” Mr. Critz said, he was not a little worried. “Aw, forget it!” said Willie Lunk. “You give me a pain! What I want to know is what I get out of this.” “The’ ain't so many offices to hand out, Willie,” Mr. Critz told him. “I was talkin’ to Ira Binzer and he thought maybe he could put you on- to the police force—dog police or somethin’—but seems as if law re- quires a policeman has got to be a citizen of the town. I sort of figure the best job would be to make you watchman to the fire house. It don’t pay much but when we get to graft- in’ in good shape your share ought to be right considerable.” The fire house of Rescue Volunteer Hose Company No. 1 (and only) was a two-story building and in front of it hung an old locomotive drivewheel tire and gn sledge hammer for scund- ing fire alarms. The fire house was heated, and was used by the mem- , coe. company as a place in which to: i door at the side opened on the stairs t nursing that led to the. second story, which" and a recipe was used as a town hall. Here was one room used as a council room; and three other smaller rooms, one for the town clerk, one for the chief of police. As Mr. Critz explained to Willie, the duties of the watchman were neither arduous nor difficult. He could have a bed in the fire house, need sweep out only once or twicea week, must keep up the fires and, un- less someone beat him to it, clang the fire alarm when a fire broke out. As Mr. Critz, as boss of Camville, meant to make his headquarters in the mayor's office, it would be handy to have Willie, as advisory grafter, right in the building, particularly as Mrs. Critz now threatened to be an- tagohistic. When Friday came the Camville Weekly Eagle gave the result of the election the headline display desery- ed by such an event, and the leading editorial of Editor G. W. Jones bore the title, “A Bigger and Better Cam- ville.” “The election of Professor Plato Hammond as mayor carries with it, ye Editor understands, a circum- stance of much greater importance to our little city. We hear that Mr. Roscoe Critz, having managed the campaign for a Bigger and Better Camville, becomes the political boss ofour town and has already begun work in that important position. Mr. Critz promises to drag Camville out of our town and has already begun long floundered, and to introduce here the same up-to-date grafting meth- ods that have made New York, Phil- adelphia and Chicago huge and pros- perous. “We have it on good authority that Mayor Hammond and the three new- ly elected members of the council are thoroughly in sympathy with Mr. Critz in this praiseworthy effort, and that Chief of Police Ira Binzer will do his share by assuring us a corrupt police force. Mr. William Lunk has been appointed watchman of the fire house and graft adviser to the new administration. Mr. Lunk is known in metropolitan underworld circles as Willie the Rat.” On an inside page was a brief item to the effect that an ordinance would be adopted at the next council meeting prohibiting the exhibition of chorus-girl and other female legs on barber-shop ceilings under penalty of five hundred dollars fine, sixty days in jail, or both. “Thus already,” added the Eagle, “we find Boss Critz and his hench- men busy in the interest of a Big- ger and Better Camville.” All day Saturday Mr. Critz sat in his cane rocker in the mayors’ office over the fire house waiting for Obert Duff to come and ask for terms, but Mr. Duff did not come, and about five o'clock Mr. Critz walked across the hall to the office of Chief of Po- lice Binzer. “Ira,” he said “I don’t know whut’s the matter with Obert Duff. It don’t seem likely he's as dumb as it looks like.” “What's the matter, Roscoe? Ain't he been up to talk graft yet?” “He ain’t been nigh me,” Mr. Critz said. “Land knows that piece George Wash’n’ton Jones had in the paper ought to be plain enough of a hint to him.” “Well, Satid'y is sort of a bad day for him, Roscoe,” Mr. Binzer suggest- ed. “Busiest day Obert’s got, every- body gettin’ shaved for Sunday.” “Ddn’t look right, somehow, Ira,” Mr. Critz said. “Wouldn't doubt a mite that Emmy and that Keech wo- man has gone and put him up to somethin’. I guess maybe you'd bet- ter go down and tell Obert whut’s whut.” “How much graft do you figure we’d ought to ask him to have that | ord'nance sidetracked?” Mr. Binzer , asked. “There's ten of us ought toget a share out of it, countin’ Willie Lunk,” Mr. Critz said, pulling at his goatee. “A dollar apiece ain't a mite too much, the way I look at it. You tell . Ober right out clear and plain he’s | got ~ to hand over ten dollars if he wants to keep them pink papers on his ceilin’.” Mr. Binzer hesitated. “I sort of feel like we hadn't ought to splurge out too heavy right at the start,” he said. “Dollar is a lot of money, Ros- 5 Seems like fifty cents would be sort of more reasonable till we get folks used to it.” «I don’t know but whut that’s good sense,” Mr. Critz agreed, “but you tell Obert I ain’t goin’ to put up with no nonsense; he's got to graft us five dollars or peel off them pictures, or take the consequences when council meets.” Mr. Binzer departed on his errand but in half an hour he was back, and he did not look any too well pleased. Mr. Duff received him with anything but cordiality. He had stated flatly that he was not going to pay any graft whatever. i “He wun’t, wun’'t he?” snapped Mr. Critz. “That's how he talks, is it? You go on back and tell him the price has gone up to ten dollars, Ira Binzer! Amd if I've gotto wait til Monday it’s goin’ to be twenty. I ain’t goin’ to be trifled with, I tell you whut !” “Well, now, maybe ’tain’t as sim- ple as all that,” said the chief of po- lice. “Seems like there's a nigger in- to the woodpile.” “Nigger?” inquired Mr. Critz. “Aunt Emmy,” explained Mr. Binz- er. “She's been down there. She told him not to give no graft to no- pody. ‘Don’t you do it,’ she said to him. ‘Things has come to a nice pass if folks has to give graft to Roscoe Critz when his own lawful wife is against it’ That's what she told him, boss.” «My gracious!” exclaimed Mr. Critz. “Well, for land's sake! A man can’t understand a woman no- how. They don’t know their minds one minute after another. First nothin’ would do but I elect Obert out of office to get them legs off his ceilin’, and now she's goin’ to leave them on it just to upset plans I went and made. Whut else did she oh “She said you was a well-meanin’ old codger, or words to that effect, but that electin’ ~n old fossil like Plato Hammond had gone to your play pinochle:and poker. A-= ‘cut off a piece of his ear while cut- , durned if he would.’ ’ : stop | head and made you think- you amounted: to more than you was,” Mr. Binzer told him. “She said, if it came right dewn to it, it was the female vote ‘1 ‘Obert, and she did not expect to live to see the day when the ladies of Camville couldn’t handle you like a hen handles a worm. : “She told Obert that her and Mrs. Keech and the Ladies’ Garden and Poetry Club was takin’ a firm stand against graft and corruption in any and all forms, and would stand back of him if he’d fight you.” “Whut did he say to that?” “He said he'd fight you,” said Mr. Binzer, and Mr. Critz was silent. He had no false ideas regarding his wife's influence with the ladies of Camville. On the other hand he was of the opinion that women had no business meddling in politics—af- ter election was over. He went over his forces in his mind. ’ Of Mr. Binzer and Mayor Ham- mond he had no doubt. The city council consisted of six members, and three had been elected on his ticket. Mr. Wulk, the odd-jobs man, Mr. Critz was sure of. Mr. Teversham ran the cigar store and no ladies of Camville yet smoked cigarets, which should make the female influence negligible with him. Mr. Gollick, whose profession was whitewashing and paper-hanging, was the only doubtful man, and Mr. Critz resolved to make sure of him beyond any doubt. Of the three holdover mem- bers of the council Mr. Critz believ- ed he could count on the vote of Mr. Vidder because Obert Duff had once ting his hair and Mr. Vidder had never forgiven Mr. Duff for that. But even without the vote of Mr. Vidder, if Mr. Golick remained faith- ful, the ordinance prohibiting unclad chorus ladies’ limbs on barber-shop ceilings could be carried, for in case of a three-to-three vote the mayor cast the deciding vote. “Whut did Obe say about scrapin’ off them pictures?” Mr. Critz asked. “I asked him that, too,” Mr. Bin- zer replied, “and he said he'd be “Well, we’d better go home and get our food,” Mr. Critz said. “You in and tell Obert the price of graft has gone up to ten dollars. 1 don't hardly know whut to make of we At home neither Mr. nor Mrs. Critz said anything about the matter, but Mrs. Critz kept her lips firmly set. Mr. Critz wondered if she had not be- come an anti-graft and anti-pink- fanatic, willing to deceive Obert Duff into thinking she was more powerful than she was, thus lulling him into inaction until the ordinance was passed, and thus at one blow defeat- ing her husband's graft and making sure of the removal of the pictures from Obert Duff’s ceiling. 1 An annoying thought came to Mr. Critz as he ate his pie that Mr. Gol- lick might be the key to the situa- tion in some way not. clear. Mr. Gollick was a paper-hanger and his would be the job of scraping the bar- ber-shcp ceiling and putting new pa- per on it if it came to that, but Mr. Critz could not see how an enlighten- ed self-interest would lead Mr. Gol- lick to do anything but vote for the ordinance and get the job, or forgo the job and take the graft money. He decided to see Mr. Gollick that evening. As Mr. Critz got up from the table someone knocked on the kitchen door. Mrs. Critz got hastily out of her chair. “ 'Tain’t for you—I'll go,” she said, and a moment later Mr. Critz heard the fresh young voice of Essie Keech. “It’s all right, Aunt Emmy,” the daughter of Mrs. Critz’ right-hand woman said. “My goodness, hush!” exclaimed Mrs. Critz. “Roscoe is in there, lis- tenin’.” “Come in, Essie; let a person have a look at you,” Mr. Critz called, and when she came to the door he beam- ed upon her. “My! My!” he exclaim- ed. “If you ain't gettin’ better-look- in’ every day that goes by! Whut wags it you was sayin’ was all right, Essie?” In what he said about Essie grow- ing prettier Mr. Critz was right. Simple and sweet, Essie Keech would have been a find for any motion-pic- tur producer. “Oh, I couldn’t tell you what I was talking about, Uncle Roscoe!” she said. “Mother wouldn't like me to. 108 politics, Uncle Roscoe.” | longer any sense in “Well, if it’s politics you might as well speak right out,” said Mr. Critz. “I'm the political boss of this town and the sooner folks knows it the better it'll be for ‘em. It’s goin’ to be a pretty serious thing for folks to get the town-hall ring down on ‘em, I can tell you! We ain't goin’ to have no pity for them that op- poses us, and you can tell your ma keep back no secrets, Essie; we've got underhand methods to find out everythin’.” “Don’t you tell him a word!” snapped Mrs. Critz. “Find out ev- erything! Why, Roscoe Critz, you can’t even find a clean undershirt un- less I come and put it right in your hand, not if it’s right under your nose, and you know it!” “Things get so mixed up in my bureau drawers, seems as if,” said Mr. Critz mildly ,and he went forth to converse with Arthur Gollick and to brace him up if he seemed to be weakening. On the way he stopped to get Chief of Police Binzer and found him in the fire house. \ . “li go 'long with you in a couple of minutes, soon as e Lunk gets back,” Mr. Binzer said. ‘He just run over to the drug store to buy him one of them pound boxes of Dainty Lady nut chocolate candies, twelve varie- ties into each box, special sale mark- ed down to eighty-five cents for this week only.” “«Whut's he buyin’ chocolates for?” asked Mr. Critz suspiciously. “Whut did he say about it?” “I guess maybe he’s got his eye on some girl,” said Mr. Binzer, “but he didn’t say much. All he said was that in his opinion Druggist Colson was a dirty crook but eighty-five cents was cheap for them Dainty Lady nut chocolates, twelve varieties in—" . “Never mind about that now,” said Mr. Critz. “You said it once already,” | “It’s fixed, and—" i so. It don’t do mo good for you to _isfied, if you ain’t. and as -Willie- Lunk :- now appeared, the boss grafter and the promoter of a corrupt police force went to see Mr. Gollick. “Mr. Gollick was not a little sur= prised by the visit. He assured Mr. Critz that he had not swayed an inch from the crooked path and that he hades no thought of doing anything ex- cept vote exactly as Mr. Critz order- ed when the council had its first meeting on Monday eve , With Mr. Binzer, Mr. tz pro- ceeded to visit Councilmen Wulk and Seversham. They found them equal- y staun or graft and a Bigger and Better Camville. In addition, one of the holdover aldermen told Mr. Critz he was to be counted on as a recruit to the graft ring, and Mr. Critz would have been well pleased, if he had not found his wife, when he reached home, seemingly ually satisfied with the outlook. on. Sunday passed uneventfully but on Monday Mr. Critz felt a tingle of menace in the air. Mrs. Critz hum- med as she worked, and was too cheerful -to please Mr. Critz, and when he visited Obert Duff’s shop he found Obert stretched out in his bar- ber chair snoring placidly. A final check-up in the afternoon showed that the four aldermen—out of the total of six—were still true to the graftring, and Plato Hammond could always be depended upon. At dinner Mr. Critz asked Mrs. Critz if she meant to attend the council meeting but she said she wouldn't. “I dare say there’ll be enough folks at council meetin’ without me,” she told him. “We got it all tied up,” Mr. Critz informed her. “Wun’t be nothin’ to: it but jammin’ the ord’nance through if Obert Duff don’t come across with the graft money. I guess we got you beat, Emmy.” “Well, it’s a good thing to know when it’s no use fightin’. Things most ly turns out one way or another, no matter whut folks does. If I'm asleep when you come in wake me up and let me know how it come out,” said Mrs. Critz, and Mr. Critz said he would do so. The council room had never held such a crowd as was jammed into it when Mr. Critz arrived there. Obert Duff had come early and had secured a good seat far up front. Mr. Binzer, his new star gleaming on his coat, met Mr. Critz. “He ain't come across, Roscoe,” he said. “I been goin’ up to him every minute or two but he don’t shell out. And I guess youll have to set along- side of Plato and sort of run things.” Mr. Critz advised Mr. Binzer to stand around where Mr. Duff could see hira in case he decided to come across with the graft money at the last minute, when he saw that the ring meant business. The meeting began stormily with cheers and hisses as Mr. Critz took a chair beside Mayor Hammond, and by the time Mr. Critz asked, “Mr. Town Clerk, is there any ord’nances to take up?” the confusion was most annoying. “Hammer on the table with that mallet,” Mr. Critz shouted in Plato's ear, and when Mayor Hammond said i ¢“Hev?” Mr. Critz himself took the gavel and beat upon the table vio. lently. “Folks,” he said in the moment o: silence, “we got an ord’nance here re. gardin’ pictures on barber-shop ceil in’s—"But before he could say mor« his nephew Sammy came squirming through the crowd to the table. “Uncle Roscoe! Uncle Roscoe!” ht cried in great excitement. “Aun Emma and a lot of ladies have go out the fire pump and they're pump ing the attic over Obert Duff's bar ber shop full of water.” “My goodness gracious!” exclaim ed Mr. Critz. “Is that whut then women is up to? Folks, meetin’ is adjourned. Obert, the ladies is wreckin’ you shop.” Nothing more he said was hearc being lost as the crowd emptied it self into the street. They found Mr: Critz, Mrs. Keech and a dozen othe ladies of the Camville Garden an Poetry Club working the handles © the pump, while Essie Keech an Willie Lunk, on the roof of the she back of the barber shop, poured stream of water into the attic. When Obert Duff unlocked the bar ber shop he found that not only th offending pink pictures but the cei ing itself had fallen. There'was n passing an ol counei ' dinance; the first graft scheme of M. Critz was ruined. “For the land's sake, Emmy!” M Critz said when he was at hom ain. “Town’ll have to pay for new ceilin’ for Obert, seein’ Willie : a town employee and went and too the fire pump out. It’s goin’ to cos the town thirty or forty dollar Tha’s no way to do.” “Well, Roscoe, we got them legs o that ceilin’ and we put a stop to you graftin’ off of Obert D ,” said Mr Critz, “and I guess us ladies is sa I dare say ti Camville Garden and Poetry Chu can give an oyster supper and rai enough to buy Obert Duff a new cei in’, even if whut we had to pay Wi lie Lunk did about empty our trea ury.” Mr. Critz looked at Mrs. Cri sharply. “Whut say?” he demande “Whut did you pay Wilie Lunk?” “Well, Roscoe,” said Mrs. Crit “we sent Essie Keech around to so of get on the good side of him, at when she had him buyin’ candy f her, we had her give him ten dolla to let us take out the fire pump.” “My goodness!” exclaimed M Critz. “Just think of that! Why,! ain’t nothin’ but a dirty crook!” There was a knock on the door, a willie the Rat entered. His cap w pulled over one eye and a cigar hung from his lower lip. He turn his head toward the stove and sp through his teeth, at the same tir tossing a small roll of one-dollar bi to Mr. Critz. “Say, boss, there's your graft,” said. “If it wasn't for me Yy wouldn't get nowhere, see? I sho ‘em down. see? But, say, you list to me! You look out’ for the dame see? They ain't nothin’ but a lot crooks!” Mr. Critz counted the money & put ‘it in his vest pocket. Mrs. Cr. (Continued on page 8, Col. 4.)