AW TAN a’ C— — hd Sv TW WW = Ww WW at n- Id so or es. ys. rood le. ard te., ent OR- - A TALE OF RED ROSES Bo By GEORGE RANDOLPH . CHESTER Copyright, 1914, by the Bobbs- Merrill Co. SYNOPSIS | a typical politician, becomes in- fatuated with Molly Marley, daughter of a street car company president. He sends her red roses. On Molly's invitation Sledge attends a party. Before the crowd disperses Molly thanks Sledge for his kindness, and then he proposes marriage. Her refusal is treated as only temporary by Sledge. Molly attends the "governor's ball, and | her attractiveness results in her climbing the dizzy heights of popularity. The no- table respect accorded Sledge, however, perplexes her. Sledge moves for the car company’s re- organization. He asks Marley for Molly's hand, but is refused. Having financially ‘ruined Bert Glider, Sledge threatens to dc the same to Marley. Marley's loans are ordered called by Sledge. Feeder, who receives a salary for keeping quiet about the public fund scan- dal, confesses during Sledge’s questioning and is roughly handled. Molly becomes angry at her father’s ob- vious fear of Sledge. He tells her to mar- ry him, but she refuses and suggests a «ght on Sledge, which encourages Marley. Sledge visits Bozzam, and a heated ar- gument arises. The chief finds Bozzam 1s working against him. The reorganized rallway company stockholders meet. Mar- wy presides, and Sledge is present. The two votes of Marley and Bert GI! 1a er are sufficient to carry the amendment to the resolution for the purchase of the franchise for $50,000 cash. Sledge receives an announcemen t of tne engagement of Molly and Glider. Bozzam 121s Ysrley Sledge decided not to sell the se at any price, and th financially dead. y _ hee CHAPTER X. The Quarrel. LEDGE'S first step toward “pick. | ing up the beans” was to send Bendix down to round up the Third ward and then to lock himself in the president’s room of the First National for an hour, at the end of which time he sent for Davis. “1 want $750,000,” he directed. “Yes, sir,” hesitated Mr. Davis; then he added apologetically, “You know we expect the bank inspector to surprise us day after tomorrow.” “Wire him to put it off ten days,” or- dered Sledge” ~~ FT Te “I suppose youll fix us up with a temporary acknowledgment of some sort and be ready to turn over some securities in that time.” g “Any way you say,” agreed Sledge indifferently, and fell again to such deep musing that he did not hear Davis’ elaborate explanation of how the thing would be managed. Presently Davis, who carried a peni- tentiary sentence to bed with him ev- ery night in case anything happened to Sledge before morning, :brought him. some papers to sign, and the felony was committed—simply, neatly and with no apparent effort. Sledge, bearing his certificate of de- posit, went over to the Merchants’ bank, where he transacted a little equally expeditious business with Pres- ident Johnson, who. with his forehead corrugated like a washboard, took Sledge’s check and gave him a receipt for it; then the boss went to see Boz: gam, : 3 “you sold those franchises yet?” he demanded. “Not yet,” replied Bozzam. “But I'm going to. Look here, Sledge, why not be reasonable about this thing? Fifty thousand is all we can get. Why not take it, give us our fifth and let us get away. We're disappointed, but we're not saying anything.” “Aw, hang up!” rasped Sledge. “You told Bendix you had a right to sell it and was going to. Why didn’t you?” “T’'ve been waiting because I wanted to act with your consent.” Sledge chuckled. «you mean Marley was afraid to buy until I agreed.” «He would rather have you satis- fled,” admitted Bozzam. _ “Well, 1 ain’t,”” announced Sledge. “We don’t sell.” “Not at all?” asked Bozzam, reveal ing the secret worry under which he had labored ever since the meeting. «Nix!” replied Sledge. “We keep ‘em and build. Dig up for your stock.” Bozzam merely blinked. This was a blow so unexpected that he could scarcely comprehend it. Moreover, it was a blow beneath the belt: “Dig up?’ he faintly repeated. «wo hundred thousand cash,” Sledge rumbled. “I dug.” He tossed Bozzam a receipt from Johnson, the secretary of the Ring City Rapid Transit com pany showing that Benjamin F. Sledge had paid $750,000 cash for 7.500 shares of stock in that live corporation «Here's the stock,” added Sledge throwing down one lone certificate foi the entire amount. «you don’t mean that you're going tc make a bona fide company out of this? Bozzam incredulously questioned. “The money's in the bank. Make good or let go.” . Bozzam felt his circulation stopping “We can’t let go!” he blurted in acute “gure not,” sald Sledge, lifting his ban em sort. tan on a ~~ Perrone ~~ | turned it upside down to look at the . “Mr. Sledge has determined to make a of stock for $35,000 and loaned $50,000 can get half a cent a pound for your * bers applied his eye. Moodson’s face | | oF vscw “Nix!” replied Sledge. “We keep 'em and build.” heavy upper lip to snarl at him vin- dictively. “You cheap crooks thought you could double cross me. You bought stock in Bert Glider’s name. You loaned Marley enough to buy control. Any way you fix it you lose.” Bozzam reflected over that statement carefully He viewed it from every angle. He twisted and slanted it and bottom. It was a flawless statement, sound and solid in every particular, and he admired it. “I believe everything they ever said about you,” he acknowledged and laughed pleasantly. “Now, let's get down to cases, Sledge. HOw can we compromise this mess?” “Nothing doing. No double crosser ever gets away from me.” “So I've been told,” commented Boz- zam, smiling with keen appreciation of some unhinted joke. ‘It seems to me this is now up to Moodson,” and he touched a bell. A girl entered. “Send Mr. Moodson in, please,” said Bozzom, and Sledge looked at his watch. Mr. Moodson arrived and took a chair opposite Sledge and on the other side of Bozzam, his mouth so tightly closed that one wondered how he could induce himself to eat. He looked at his wach, but held the face toward him like a poker hand and dropped it stealthily back in his pocket, as if he feared that some one might get the time of day away from him. “I've a queer little puzzle for you, Moodson,” said Bozzam cheerfully bonafide company out of the Ring City Rapid Transit, and of course will not sell the franchises. He has put up his $750,000 and requests us to put up our $200,000 to complete the capitaliza- tion. He knows that you financed the drama at the recent stockholders’ ‘meeting; that you bought 1,000 shares on $200,000 worth of Marley's. Now, here is the case in a nutshell: If you put up the $200,000 to pay for the stock in this new company it will drive the other one out of business, and you $85,000 worth of stock certificates in the old company. If you don’t make good on this subscription you get ex- actly the same price for your old stock as you would if you did. Now, what is the answer, in view of the fact that | Mr. Sledge is absolutely implacable and means to do us harm? 1 shall leave you gentlemen to discuss the question.” . He left the two experts in silence, facing each other glumly arross his | desk, and went into the adjoining | room, where he surprised the meek lit- * tle stenographer by sinking on the arm | of a bench and laughing noiselessly | until he grew purple in the face. Timbers came in, looking much dis- tressed for a fat man, and surveyed Bozzam in astonishment. “Slip me the good one,” he begged. “I need a laugh worse than I ever needed a drink on the 4th of Janu- ary.” “We've stung Moodson!” snorted Boz- zum. “For that matter, we all get stung, but I'm willing to lose my end of it in order to see that inhuman ghoul get his.” Timbers grinned to his full capacity, which was much. “1 didn’t know you hated Old Gloom as bad as I do. Where did he go to die?” : “Have a look,” offered Bozzam, pointing to the frosted glass partition. In a corner of one of the panes there was a little clear space made by the scaling of the glass, and to this Tim- had turned a sallow yellow and had taken on an expression as if he had just swallowed quinine, but beyond this he had not moved, and neither gentleman had said a word—Sledge, sitting in comfortable enjoyment, wait- ing, and Moodson suffering intense contraction of all his vital organs. Timbers leaned against the wood- | clear down to the village this pathetic hour?” inquired Timbers. “Hand him his,” snickered Bozzam. “Why does anybody get fussy with Sledge? He turns one little trick and unwhiskers the whole bunch of us, heart- breaker.” “Fancy Bert?’ guessed Timbers. “Where does that barber’s pride come in?’ «I don’t think son-in-law pulls off his amusement park, does he?’ Bozzam re minded him, reaching for the telephone “Hello, Marley!” he called. “I'm sut-! prised to hear your voice.” “Why?” inquired Marley stiffly, be ing constitutionally opposed to any- thing in the nature of flippancy and be- ing always severe with Bozzam for that very reason. “Because you're dead,” Bozzam In- formed him. “Hadn’t you heard it yet?” “I dom’t understand you,” reproved Marley. “I'm very busy just now, Mr. Bozzam.,” “What’s the use?’ laughed that gen- tleman. “Nothing you can do will save your scalp. Sledge has just decided not to sell those franchises at any price.” “I thought you were the duly author: ized agent, empowered to act,” protest- ed Marley. “] was as long as it was a phony company,” explained Bozzam. “But Sledge has just played a low down trick on us.” “How could he? What has he done?” “Put up his money. Made the com- pany legitimate. He's going to build.” Marley surprised Bozzam. “I had expected that,” he calmly an- nounced., “Suppose he does?” “Oh, nothing,” answered Bozzam, with a wondering glance at Timbers. “He'll just put you out of the business, that's all.” “1 ‘don’t see how,” insisted Marley, his voice now pompous again. ‘You must remember, Mi 0zzam, that I am now in absolute control of the Ring City Street Railway company and can use to the advantage of the company and of myself, for the first time in my career, my training and ability in man- agement. I fancy that I can protect myself, even against strenuous compe- tition.” “Goodby, old friend,” said Bozzam, in his tremolo. “You may not know what has happened to you, but I do, and I'}V send you a bunch of lilies in the morn ing.” He turned from the telephone in numb amazement. “He actually doesn’t know he's hurt.” he puzzled. "He's been president on his own vote just long enough to get enlargement of the coco. How's the quarrel 7" “Fierce!” grinned Timbers, turning from the peephole. “Sledge has just looked at his watch, and any minute now I expect to see Moodson move a toe.” “They're wonders, both of them,” en- joyed Bozzam. “I'm still admiring how many of us second rate yeggs Sledge nailed to the wall with this one pin—Moodson and you and me, fancy Bert, and Marley and about a million poor lollops of stockholders.” = “That stock would make good ciga- rette lighters,” agreed Timbers. “If Moodson hurries, though, he can sell the shares he put in Glider’s name.” , “But he can hold the bag for the $50,- 000 he loaned ‘Marley. I don’t know how Sledge will do it, but he'll make that stock worth nothing a share and put a curse on whoever holds it.” “Hush!” warned Timbers. “I think Sledge is reaching for a cigar. No; it's only his watch. That's twice.” Bozzam crowded him away from the peephole. Five minutes more passed into eter- nity, and the silent wonders still sat rooted in the selfsame spot; then Sledge suddenly got up and passed out of the door and went down to the depot and took the 2:30 train for the state capital (To be continued.) Them German little Crownprinz, From dead again he arose, He was killed by English papers, As everybody knows. Now he let blow his mighty trumpets To make them Frenchman dance But every step goes backward, Not once do they advance. Them Frenchmen would do better And take another stand. Go to them little Teuton him tha ha the hand, sad nan IT anal & v Reach irienaay im And say “Come on, thou little Dutch- man, : We will be no longer fools, We will send them hungry English- men Far back to their own shores. “And then if we stick together On land and on sea, We can make that mighty ocean For every nation free.” Garrett, Pa. A Dutchman. raisers in the State this year. For swine Iowa and Missouri From the number of request be- ing received daily at the Department of Agriculture for bulletins on poul- try raising, it would seem that there is to be a big increase among poultry Wyoming and Montana are the leading states for the sheep industry ‘with Pennsylvania in nineteenth place. lead CARRANZA NOT TRUSTEDBY U.S. Washington Prepares fo Meet Any Eventuality VILLA DIVIDING HIS FORGES Proposal eof Carranza For Mutual Right to Cross Line Probably Will Be Accepted With Restrictions. Growing distrust exists in official circles concerning the attitude which the Carranza government will assume toward the American expedition into Mexico to capture Villa, following the invasion of American territory at Co- lumbus, N. M., last week and the kill- ing of nineteen persons and the par- tial burning of the town. Unofficial dispatches quote Ameri- can refugees arriving at El Paso from Chihuahua City as stating that Cara- ranza soldiers there were going about the city shouting “death to the grin- goes.” About fifty Americans are said to be at Chihuahua City. Other dis- patches irom the border said the Car- ranza authorities at Juarez were de- claring that no American forces would be permitted to go through that city. Secretary Lansing made public the text of a note, accepting General Car- ranza’s proposal for a reciprocal ar- rangement between the two govern- ments and announcing that the Unit- ed States held this arrangement to be now in force and binding upon both parties. General [unston will carry out his task under this agreement. Plans for the troop movements have gone ahead without regard to the diplomatic exchanges. Mr. Lansing also made public a statement issued in the name of Pres- jdent Wilson, reiterating that every step being taken by the administra- tion is based on the deliberate inten- tion to preclude the possibility of armed intervention in Mexico. Villa with his band is believed to be heading for the fastnesses of the Sierra Madres, further south. He is seeking to get into a wild country of which he knows every foot and where the pursuit of the American troops , will be most difficult. It is impossible to obtain any specific information concerning the regiments making up the different columns or the leaders of the bodies of troops that are to invade Mexico. From dispatches received, how- ever, it was estimated that Genera! Funston will throw about 7,500 men into Mexico on his first move- ment of the punitive expedition. From military stations throughout the west and south additional regi- ents are being hastened to the bor- der at the request of General Funston. Orders calculated to complete every arrangement necessary for the move- ment of the American forces into Mex- ico have been issued by officers of the general staff and heads of the various bureaus of the war department. Noth- ing has been omitted in the program recommended by General Funston. President Wilson is seriously con- sidering the advisability of calling out five regiments of national guard cavalry to go to the border to do patrol duty there in place of the regu- lar soldiers who are being sent into Mexico in pursuit of Villa. In case the president calls ‘on the national guard, cavalry regiments from New -York, Pennsylvania, Michi gan, Ohio aua lllinois, all regarded as crack regiments, will’ be chosen for patrol duty at the beginning. Major .Gemeral Tasker H. Bliss, chief of the mobile army division, in- formed Secretary Baker that machin- ery had been perfected to meet any contingency that might arise incident to the Mexican campaign and could be set in motion at a word. Similar reports came from the adjutant gen- eral, the inspector general, the quartermaster general, the surgeon general, the chief of ordnance and other divisional officials. Every move by the department to execute the president’s order hagleen cloaked in secrecy. Sunday was*duay of activity for the first time since the mobilization of the army on the Mex- ican border two years ago. Secretary Baker postponed his visit to his fam- ily at Cleveland and spent the day conferring with officials of the general staff. Direct telegraphic communica- tion between the department and the border was established. WILL PAY MEAT PACKERS Britain Agrees to Reimburse Ameri- cans For Seized Cargoes. From unc.cial but reliable sources fa icire “an N [NR A ANNI substance. and allays Feverishness. Flatuleney, V. ind Colic, Diarrheea. It o A AN Sad NIN NS NI NINN SNL “KEYSTONE PARAGRAPHS When Thomas Bertrand of Beaver Falls visited his chicken coop he dis- covered that thieves had broken in and stolen a rooster and two hens. On the floor, partly hidden in straw, he found a gold-filled hunting case watch which the thieves evidently had dropped. A local jeweler valued the watch at $18. Foreigners attending a funeral at Monongahela, Pa., unfurled a red flag and 200 of them marched to the ceme- tery, the band playing “Onward, Christian Soldier.” The state police detachment was notified after the fu- neral, but no further developments are expected. Walervia Zastawj, aged eleven, died at the Allegheny General hospital, Pittsburgh, as the result of injuries suffered when she was struck by a train near the Fort Wayne station of the Pennsylvania railroad.. The child was playing around the station when she was struck. Mrs. Martha Werlinch, aged twenty- three, of McKees Rocks, died in a hospital as the result of self-inflicted gunshot wounds in the chest. Pneu- monia developed after the girl had been released from the hospital in February and she was returned to the institution. : Charles J. Rodgers, aged sixty-nine, and Thomas Sera, fifty-nine, of New Castle, were killed by a freight train on the Pennsylvania railroad while going to work. Rodgers leaves his widow and five children. Sera had a wife and seven children. Declaring they are capable of con- ry for SNRNNNN ducting public affairs and that they have more initiative than the men, women of Wolftown, a suburb of! Washington, have launched a cam | paign to secure fire protection for | their homes. Pittsburgh passed the million-dollar mark in postal saving: February with $1,073,851 standing to the credit of 6,543 individual deposit- ors. The gain for the month, $105, 685, was the largest in the history of the postoffice. As a result of a broken neck re- ceived when he fell from a Pennsyl- vania railroad train at Summer sta- tion, John Monahan, aged thirty-six, a railroad employee, died in the Alle- gheny General hospital in Pittsburgh. Mistaken for a burglar, Della by her foster father, Arthur Gray, a farmer, in the Gray residence at Zediker, three miles east of Washing- ton. The child died an hour later. An explosion of gasoline in the kitchen of Willard Cole’s home, Edin- ft is learned that the long-standing cases of the American packers, involv- ing the detention by the British gov- ernment of large quantities of meat products shipped from the United States to the neutral countries of porth Europe, have been adjusted. While details of the settlement are lacking, it is known the British gov- ernment has undertaken to secure the exporters against loss by a sys- tem of long-time contracts. with Pennsylvania twenty-second. work to chuckle. Bozzam drew him kindly away. “Let me look,” he requested. ‘‘Be- sides, you're shaking the partition.” In quiet joy he watched the wi rdless duel within for a moment, and then he 1 i d to the meek little | stenograp! who was placidly read- ing, and asked her to call up Marley. “What do you want with the fluff in alto ren i maine mn 4 bith North Carolina, Virgina, Tennessee. | QChiidren Ory FOR FLEVSHER'S CASTORIA In tobacco growing Pennsylvania | ranks sixth, being led by Kentucky, Ohio and Hstimates of the value of the car- goes seized by the British govern- ment, or detained on the ground that y ultimately were destined to Ger- v or Austria, aggregate from $15 000,000 to $20,000,000. For many months the packers have been con- | ducting negotiations directly with the | British government te secure reim- | pursement. ee SR ; boro, caused a fire that resulted in i the death of Mrs. Hawkins, mother-in- law of Mrs. Cole. Two children of Mr. Cole had narrow escapes. B. R. Murtland of Youngwood Is | dead and Romano Ritenour of New | Scranton is in a serious condition at | the Westmoreland hospital at Greens- | burg as the result of a freight train wreck at Cowansburg. { sre ee. Word has been received at Mercer of the appointment of the following | justices of the peace: D. J. Ker Lackawannock township, and George W. Magee, Delaware township, both Mercer county. { leased for one year the bar mills of | | Morehead Brothers, i deposits in| | | Taylor, aged seven, was shot fatally | | The Carbon Steel company has |jon bushe Tenth and Main | ON ANN = dr a ANE RRR The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his per= sonal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and ¢¢ Just-as-good ’>’ are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor C.., Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotie Its age is its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has becn in constant use for the relief of C ali reculates the Stomach and Dowels, assimilates the #ood, giving healthy and patural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALwAYSs Bears the Signature of It is pleasant. If It destroys Worms onstipation, Troubles and Cecthing N In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought THE CENTAJR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY, a a ad streets, Sharpsburg, and the company will manufacture bar steel of all grades and sizes. One of the first train loads of immi- grants seen at Connellsville in a year passed through over the Baltimore and Ohio railroad. The special con- sisted of five coaches loaded with Nor- wegians. Incendiaries are believed to have started a fire which destroyed the Polish Catholic church and the adjoin- ing parsonage at Herminie, near Irwin, entailing a loss of $10,000. Seven of the twelve new mills recently erected at the plant of the Standard Tin Plate company at Can- onsburg are in operation, giving em- ployment to about 500 men. It cost Westmoreland county $386.75 in automobile hire in addition to $500 as a reward to capture Charles Doug- iass, a condemned murderer, who broke jail Jan. 24. Rose Reed, aged thirty-four, who es- caped with three other prisoners from the county jail at Mercer, Pa. Feb. 29, has been arrested at McKeesport. Willis twenty, Greene county's largest man, died of typhoid fever at his home near Qak- Forest. He weighed 414 pounds. Falling asleep in a chair with her four-week-old infant in her arms, Mrs. Clarence Leicey of Lancaster acci-* dentally smothered the baby. Huffman, aged A state employment agency has been opened at Altoona by Jacob Lightner, director of the state bureau of employment. Henry Priester, a miner, aged forty-seven and married, was killed by a froight train at New Bethlehem. The annual convention of the Pro- hibition party of Washington county is in session at Washington. Triplets, two girls and a boy, were born to Mrs. Annie Reiss in a Pitts- burgh ‘hospital. A PERFECT SPECIMEN Young Woman's Offer to Prove It De- clined by New York Judge. In her breach of promise suit for $10,000 against Ward Hall Ream, who has recanted his promise of marriage for eugenic reasons, Miss Sigma Ahl- gren, a physical culture teacher, of- fered to show in a New York court what a fine specimen of womanly beauty she is. Justice Cohalan declined Miss Ahl- gren’'s offer. Not to be denied, she submitted ber family history to prove that she is one of nine perfectly healthy children and the daughter of good and robust parents now living in Vexio, Sweden, the place of her nativity. The defendant insists that Miss Ahlgren has incapacitated herself for the duties of motherhood by a fond- ness for cocktails and other bever- ages. In reply to this the plaintiff contends that she never drank liquor | until Ream invited her to dinner and | suggested cocktails. Two Greenwich (Conn.) physicians signed certificates which attested that they had mever seen a more mag- | pificent specimen of womanhood. Over seventy per cent. of all the buckwheat raised in the United States is ised in Pennsylvania and New | Yor 7 State lead- rgin of about half a mili over New York. ing by a TRY OUR FINE JOB WORK 3 11 1