ic . 4 ise grade enda- um ch is Arm- 1s for No.. 1 sell at uaran- should le cus- Also gor or hingles. alleys. Station ) Order. PENNA. in, dull grouchy ite your wastes Jans are d—take I'S he World, 0s 2000 ss ————— | A TALE OF RED ROSES | i By GEORGE RANDOLPH CHESTER Copyright, 1914, by the Bobbs- Merrill Co. SYNOPSIS Sledge, & 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 financlally ruined Bert Glider, Sledge threatens to do the same to Marley. Marley's loans are ordered called by Sledge. Feeder, who receives a salary for keéping 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 is working against him. The reorganized railway company stockholders meet. Mar- «sy presides, and Sledge Is present. The two votes of Marley and Bert Glia- er are sufficient to carry the amendment to the reselution for the purchase of the franchise for $50,000 cash. Sledge receives an announcement of the engagement of Molly and Glider. Bozzam tells Marley Sledge decided not to sell the franchise at any price, and that he is financially dead. Je Sledge goes to the state capital and gets everything fixed up for the passage of a dill granting a new car company a fifty year franchise free of charge. CHAPTER XI. Arranging a Little Protection For the People. HAT sterling friend of the pop- ulace, that stalwart defender of the rights and the morals and the welfare and the purses of his admiring constituents, that vo- ciferous choice of the people, State Senator Allerton, was discovered by 8ledge. in the act of serving the public interests by playing poker in the rooms of Assemblyman Buckley, and with these two conscientious patriots, deep also in the exercise of their duties to ‘the commonwealth, were the very men Sledge wanted to see—Franchise Wal- ters, who was heavy set, but not fat, . and who looked like a prosperous shoe merchant, and old Pop Gresham, the red eyed administration wheelhorse from Pickerel county, and Calvin T. Luther, the ministerial looking profan- ity expert, and Cap Digglesby, the avowed and professedly bitter enemy of Sledge, whose every white whisker was needed as a calendar for his many honorable scars of forensic battle. It was Cap Digglesby who was the first to hail the visitor as he entered the door. - | “Hello, malefactor of great wealth,” he called. “Have you a spare queen of clubs about your person?’ “I'm shy on queens,” confessed Sledge, looking down with indifference at the game he played so indifferently. «Buckley, I'm dry.” ; “Beat you to it, old man,” replied Buckley easily. He was a spare person, with the neatly combed appearance of a dancing master, but with intensely clear eyes and deep creases in his cheeks. “I sent word to the bar as soon as the phone announced you. Your stein will be right up.” «Thanks!” grunted Sledge, and con- giderately fell to estimating the jack- pot. Allerton, a smooth featured man with a good forehead and a smiling ava. nicked up the two cards which Bad been dealt him, .compared them judically with the three he held, fold- od them together with minute care and tucked them neatly under the deck. Looking up, he caught the cold- ly disinterested eye of Sledge. Every man of the six at the table had tried that same thing, but Allerten was the only one who succeeded. Sledge, paus- ing to inspect carelessly the bountiful ly arranged sideboard, moved into the adjoining room. Allerton arose from the table. “Deal me out for a couple of rounds,” he suggested. «Buckley, watch my - stack. There's twenty-three fifty in it, and Pop Gresham’s pile is mighty low.” Pop Gresham took ten blues from Allerton’s assortment and added them to his own. “Charge me ten from your friend’s greasury, Buckley,” he chuckled, with a playfulness intended to conceal his real satisfaction: «Well, what's new?” asked Allerton closing the doo behind him and sitting on the edge of Buckley's Sup Ww 1 home,” remarke ked A one are vou in?” | “All cash,” Sledge told him. “On the level.” “You must have a good outlook,” wondered Allerton. “Naw!” repudiated Sledge. ten! No franchises.” “I thought you held easily salable ones, from what I saw in the papers,” puzzled Allerton. “If you haven't, however, you can easily get them from the city council.” “They're no good,” insisted Sledge. “Short terms.” | “That's right,” agreed Allerton, be- ginning to see the light. “Franchises in this state can be granted for twenty years and are renewable in ten year periods at the option of the, city coun- cil. I suppose your new franchises are , for twenty years.” | “Uh-hunh!” assented Sledge. “That's when the profits begin.” “For both the company and its offi- cial friends,” smiled Allerton, “It's rather a good provision as far as the publie is concerned, however. It gives “It's rot- the people a voice.” “Why ?' demanded Sledge. “They only ride.” ” “And pay,” amended Alleston. “We talked this over before at Waver's house and at your office. I think I called attention to the faet that the people were beginning to expect a con- sideration for such valuable property as franchises.” “They expect a private car for a nickel,” claimed. Sledge. ‘“We need franchise legislation.” “It’s a dangerous thing to tackle,” objected Allerton. “The voters are be- ginning to have ideas about such things.” “That's why we have to work quick,” Sledge informed him. “What do you want?’ asked Allerton, “Fifty year franchises—free.” | “Good Lord!” exclaimed Allerton. | “Why, Sledge, the man who would pro- pose that might just as well retire from politics forever.” | “Sure!” agreed Sledge. The senator stopped, with a shock, and reflected. “The street car interests in the state are large, that’s a fact,” he acknowl- | edged. “Great game,” approved Sledge. *I| want stock all over the state. You'd better invest.” “It might be attractive,” considered the senator. “How much stock do you! think I should secure?” “Million.” Even the seasoned senator, used as| he was to private and personal discus- sions involving comfortable figures, was startled at the sound of that word. “That listens very cheerfnily,” he conceded. “Do you suggest that I—buy up—that amount of stock for myself in the various street car companies of the state or that myself and friends should club together for that amount?” “Hundred thousand extra fer them,” responded Sledge with the promptness of a man who has done all his figuring beforehand. : Allerton spent some minutes in quiet thought. : “There’s the “legal business, too,” Sledge reminded him. “That's so,” agreed Allerton. “An at- torney who is also a large steckholder could control that clientage. Suppose 1 see Buckley about this? Send him in, will you?” : Appreciating the convenience of hav- ing no witnesses to conversations which so intimately concern the serv- ing of the public, Sledge loafed out and stood nonchalantly over the table. The five men looked up at him keenly, but Sledge was staring into Cap Dig- glesby’s hand. Buckley finished his deal and glanced up again. He imme- diately arose. | “Take my hand, will you, Sledge?’ he begged, and he removed Sledge’s stein from the sideboard to the table. Sledge sat down and fingered Buck- ley’s chips while he drank at his beer. “Hope you break him.” observed Cal-. vin T. Luther as he presently dealt the cards. “Buckley’s too all fired lucky, .and I think he plays crooked myself.” “House committee!” yelled Franchise Walters. “That's unclublike language.” Sledge looked at his cards and put in chips and drew and bet with the air of a man who is confirmed in the opinion that the general average will “get” a square player in the end, no matter how he guards himself, and, since not caring whether he won or lost Buck- ley’s chips, he bet the same on a flush as he did on a pair of deuces He had increased Buckley's stack slightly when that gentleman returned. Sledge was about to rise, but Buckley sat in Aller- ton’s place instead. “Keep your seat, Sledge,” he observ- ed as he nodded to Cap Digglesby, Sledge’s bitterest and most relentless foe on the floor of the house of repre- sentatives. 5 “Yes, keep it five handed,” urged Digglesby. “I want to stretch my legs a few minutes, and a four handed poker game is about as exciting as a prayer meeting.” Digglesby walked around the room two or three times and looked at the patriotic pictures with which the walls - were plentifully decorated for the ben- { . efit of Buckley's earnest constituents, then he sauntered into the hall and stretched his legs into the next room, where the senator. in deep thought, awaited him. Digglesby returned to the poker game by and by, and as he sat down smiled cheerfully at Buckley. Buckley, who had been playing casino, seven-up | companies from running open or sum- and pinochle with his poker cards and making a mad havoc in Allerton’s chips in consequence, drew a pair to his head off’ with keen esby gave ance DOI { the bedro AC ad Allerton was oungir tn a cushioned window sill, smoking a | immediately | triplets and “bet his | way cigarette, and with his foot pushed the | big leather rocker around % a more { inviting position. “The old veteran found a way,” he comfortably explained. “If we at tempted to railroad a bill empowering the granting of fifty year franchises without remuneration it would be snowed under so quickly that the tell- er couldn’t keep track of the votes. There aren’t ten men in the capitol building who would dare go home to their constituents if they supported gach a measuwe.” “Sure not,” agreed Sledge. “Never Jet anybody do anything in a law. Keep ‘em from it.” “That's the idea,” assented Allerton.’ “Restrictive legislation. The people are strong for that just now, anyhow. Digglesby’s idea is to call the act ‘A bill for the protection of municipalities against the monopolistic perpetuity of street car companies.” “Great!” approved Sledge. “It sounds fierce if they get it.. I don’t myself, but I know it's against the monopo- lies.” “It's almost harsh with them,” dryly commented Allerton. “The bill will restrict the car companies to a painful — Bailey like a book. They know what | he thinks when he locks himself in his room, and he'll tear into this bill as if he were fighting the devil himself, face to face. After he gets through the real argument will begin, and anything any- body else says against it will sound flabby. After that we'll bury the bill In committee until there’s something exciting in the house, split in the fifty year franchise amendment and pass the thing some rainy afternoon when nobody’s In the house but invited friends.” “How long will it take?” inquired Sledge. * “About as long as it will take you to round up and organize the best paying street car corporations in the state.” Sledge looked out of the window in silence which seemed almost moody. “So long,” he said, and left by way of the hall. Meanwhile Bozzam and Timbers were having their troubles. Two big, husky men who looked as if they might be primary leaders jostled them one day ‘and told them they had better leave town. When they protested mildly the huskies snarled and finally gave them twenty-four hours to pack up. They packed. CHAPTER XI. A Friendly Chat on the : Sabbath. ARLEY. as president of the Ring City Street Railway company and as chairman of the impromptu convention of street .car magnates, was so full of business that he felt stuffed like a sau- sage. To his mind the fund they had raised to fight Allerton’s iniquitous leg: islation was woefully inadequate, and the men who should have been most interested were strangely optimistic. He suggested to several of them that they appoint a committee to see Aller ton and arrange some sort of compro Peaceful “|t’s almost harsh with them,” dryly commented Allerton. . degree. It will make a penal offense on the part of the officers to bond a company for more than its capitaliza- tion.” Sledge chuckled. “The bankers’ convention dorse that,” he said. “The bill will prevent street railway will in- mer cars when the thermometer is be low 40 degrees F. It will prevent the running of winter cars without double glass protection for the motormen. It will be made illegal to have more than one strap in every eighteen inches of space. It will be made illegal for a full car to run by a signaling pedes- trian, and it will be made illegal, al- though this will be scattered in three or four places in'the bill, and sur- rounded with a lot of ambiguous lan- guage, for any franchise to be granted for as long a period as fifty years.” “That's the talk,” nodded Sledge. “Restrictive legislation.” “1 thought you could get along with forty-nine years and eleven months,” stated Allerton. “Moreover, I think we can frame the bill to protect the peo- ple.” “Can you slip it through?” “Digglesby thinks so, although he agrees with me that about six months after it's done somebody will explain it so that the voters will understand it, and the man who fathers it will have his name chiseled alongside Benedict Arnold’s.” “He's dead,” commented Sledge, with keen philosophy, “Hmxactly,” coincided Allerton, with a philosophy which, though unexpressed, was still keener. “There’s only one political pest of any worth which would be open to him after the prejudiced public had its erroneous judgment per- manently fixed.” “The senate,” guessed Sledge. “The United States senate,” firmly re- peated Allerton, looking Sledge square- ly in the eye. “That's the one place in which political opprobrium cannot reach a man.” Sledge studied long and carefully and made some painstaking readjustments. In order to make a place for one man be had to do considerable shifting on his political chessboard and eventually push a pawn off the edge. “I'l see what can be dene about that,” he promised. “That matter being clearly under- stood as well as the others we men- tioned—the legal representation amd the amount of stock I am to acquire—I think the bill a feasible one and the legislation to be exactly such as is needed by the changing requirements of our modern civilization.” “Applause,” observed Sledge, devel : fund. because mise, but here again he found an unex pected lukewarmness. Nobody seemed to think that Allerton could be “reached.” and as a matter of fact ev ery time he broached that subject he - found - his fellow magnates evasive. The newspapers need not have blazed so much about the probable corruption there positively was none. The subscription secured was only for the conduct of a publicity cam- paign and to pay for the services of a perfectly legitimate lobbyist, who would explain the reasonable rights of the street car men. On Saturday morning the visitors all went home, looking fagged about the eyes, without having done much more than pass some frothy resolutions and raise the feeble fund referred to and investigate by electric light whatever the keys of the city would unlock; and President Marley, staggering under the burden of his position, was very much worried. , ~ He confided his fears to his future son-in-law after he had seen the last i tired, hard working magnate on a train ‘headed’ for home and remorse. ; «1 don’t think these men appreciate, as I do, the need of controlling street car legislation,” he complained. “Al- lerton’s bill looks like a menace to all my interests, and I am a little bit sur- prised that Sledge, since his entrance into the game on a big scale, does not seem more concerned about it.” “It was Sledge who arranged to have these fellows come together.” Bert re- minded him. “Yes,” admitted Marley, “but he seemed to have such feeble ideas about what to do after he had them here. It wasn’t like his usual vigorous methods.” “Then he has something up his sleeve.” decided Bert. “I wish that fellow would drop dead. I'm afraid of him.” “You've been talking laughed her father. “No; I've been talking to Sledge,” denied Bert. “I had just as lief have a rattlesnake devote its life to the am- bition of sinking a fang into the calf of my leg as to have Sledge fussing in with me. If I can find a buyer for it I'm going to unload my stock in that amusement park while the public still thinks it will be built.” Marley frowned his crushing dis- pleasure. “You are expressing very small con- fidence in me,” he reproved. “I don’t see why your nervousness about Sledge should ‘extend to an operation which depends on my judgment alone. The to Molly,” through. I have already ordered the rails, the franchise cannot be disputed, .and even if Sledge were to parallel the Ridgewood avenue line it would only bring more patronage to your park.” “Not mine,’ corrected Bert hastily. “J'11 get my money out of it as quick as I can, and Ill put that money where Sledge can’t reach it.” «You're scared blue,” charged Mar- ley contemptuously. “How did you come to get tangled up with Sledge?” “I. met him down at the city hall. He was wearing one of his fool red roses, and I think he saw me looking at it. Perhaps I did grin. At any rate, he stopped and asked me when I was to be married to Molly.” “What did you tell him?” «Christmas. Molly, yesterday after- oping an unexpected turn for repartee. “Will Digglesby fight the bill hfnself ? “No; he’ll put Bailey Cooper on the job,” grinned Allerton. too. That young spellbinder is too wise. Digglesby’s almost of him now 3 “Teave it to Digglesby and Buck ley,” advised Allerton. “They know i ST AE ETSI A BET Tae stn “This will be | about the last time he can be used that | noon, warned me not to tell any one, | and particularly Sledge, that it is to be Thanksgiving.” { «what did he say that scared you so?” “Nothing,” confessed Bert. “He only iled I felt as if I had been in a { . 3 \ 4 oe en noth , but 1 didn’t expect | you, Bert. 1 have myself found EE EET I EE “GASTORIA For Infants and Children. ( Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria AVegelable PreparationforAs 1 similating the Food andReguta- Alway 8 ting the Stomachs and Bowels of Bears the 40 INFANTS “CHILDREN [SN | PronoiesDiesionceett | SigDALUTS ‘I ness and Rest.Contalns neither Il | Opium Morphine nor Mineral | OT NARCOTIC. COHO In Use il | Aperfect Remedy for Consfipe bi: Apert Ree on Diario js Worms Convulsions. Feverisk Rall ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. MELE | | PacSimile Signature of THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK. For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA THE CENTAUR COMPANY, [.CW YORK CITY. REJECTED LOVER SLAYS THREE Alexander Toth Kills Two, V/ounds One and Suicides WOUNDED WOMAN MAY BIE | Slayer Wanted Two-Week Bride to De- Exact Copy of Wrapper. to be rather decent in the ast {ew days, and I am only annoyed because he does not seem to see the necessity of using his influence with Allerton to stop this street railway bill. I think I shall see Allerton myself tomorrow. He comes home every Saturday night.” Pursuant to that happy idea, the president drove out to Allerton’s house the next morning and found the sena- tor in the luxury of pajamas, easy slip- pers and lounging robe amid an extrav- agant confusion of Sunday papers. At his right hand was a taboret, on which bubbled an electric coffee percolator. and at his left hand was a feather- weight serving table, on which was a comfortable supply of cigarettes. In front of him sat Ben Sledge. “Hello, Marley,” greeted the senator. Ridgewood avenue extension is to be- | puilt as fast as it can be pushed sert Husband and Elope With Him. You're just in time for coffee. Had Been infatuated With Woman. “Had mine hours ago,” returned Mar- ley, nodding his return to Sledge’s grunt. «Then it's time again,” insisted the senator pleasantly. ringing for another cup. “Or would you prefer a cocktail?” “A little of your exclusive rye, I think, if you insist on anything,” ac- cepted Marley, drawing a chair into the cozy little circle. ‘‘You're trying to save that rye or you would have of- fered it in the first place.” “No; only trying to promote sobrie- ty.” bantered Allerton. “I suppose, however, that a memory of that good Kentucky stock is what brought you out here on this peaceful Sabbath morning.” “Hardly.” denied Marley. “Frankly I suppose 1 came on the same errand as my rival and competitor here.” “What's that?" asked Allerton. with a glance at Sledge. “To find out what the dickens you mean by that infamous street railway bill of which you are the disreputable parent.” Allerton gazed at him blankly for a moment and again glanced quizzically at Sledge. There was a low rumble down in Sledge’s throat, but neither his face nor his eyes betrayed any sen- timent or emotion whatsoever. (To be continued.) Because his former sweetheart, a bride of only two weeks, refused to elope with him, it is said, Alex- ander Toth of Sewickley, aged thirty- five, a tailor employed by a Eitts- burgh firm, killed her father-in-law and her husband, seriously wounded the young woman and committed sui- cide in the home of Stephen Petro, a farmer, in Connoquenessing township, two miles south of Petersville, Pa. The dead are Stephen Petro, aged forty-cix, farmer; Julius Petro, twenty- one, son of Stephen Petro; Alexamder Toth, thirty-five, a tailor, Sewickley. Wounded: Mrs. Teresa Petro, aged twenty-one, wife of Julius Petro; bul- let wounds in arms and head and feet frozen. News of the tragedy reached adjon- ing farms when Mrs. Petro, bleeding from wounds in the arms and head, ran two miles without shoes, through snowdrifts to the farm of Casper Fehl, where she fell unconscious, after tell- ing Fehl that “he killed my father- in-law and husband.” Ivy Fehl, fifteen-year-old daughter of Casper Fehl, mounted a horse and rode two miles to Petersville, where she notified the state police and sum- moned Dr. J. L. Christy. After being revived, Mrs. Petro related a story of the circumstances watch led up to the tragedy. According to Mrs. Petro, Toth had heen infatuated with her for more than a year and repeatedly sought her hand, but on each occasion he was rejected. FOX ADJUDGED IN CONTEMPT Two of Brewers’ Officers Freed of Court Charges. John H. Gardiner, president of the Pennsylvania Brewers’ association, and Edwin A. Schmidt, treasurer of the same association, were acquitted of contempt, with the acquiescence of United States Attorney E. Lowry Humes, by Judge Thomas in United States district court at Pittsburgh after refusing to testify before the grand jury in the probe of political activities of the brewers’ society. ERIE HAULS SUGAR Transporting 6,000 Cars From Hawali to Eastern Refineries. The Brie railroad has received an order for transporting 6,000 cars of sugar from the Hawaiian islands to eastern refineries. The consignment weighs 250,000 tons and is valued at $25,000,000, and the freight charges will approximate nearly $3,000,000. The first shipment of 200 cars is already under way and the first train of 5O cars passed over the line. The shipment is being hauled in solid trains running on passenger time schedule. LOSES LIFE ON DARE Corry High School Boy Killed In it of | Sledge | Boarding Freight Train. Claude H. Lauer, aged seventeen, i president of the sophomore class of ‘the Corry (Pa.) high school, lost his life because he took a dare. Lauer and two chums dared each other to board a rapidly moving { tretent train. The latter boarded the | train, but Lauer missed his footing jand was killed. At the same time Judge Thomson took under advisement the contempt charge against Gustav W. Lembeck of Jersey City, treasurer of the United States Brewers’ association, announc- ing he would make his decision later. Hugh F. Fox of New York, secretary of the United States Brewers’ as- sociation, also accused of contempt, ann and once committed to Jail, was re- Men Beat Mother. committed by Judge Thomson, who Joseph and John Sweeney, both dismissed the habeas corpus proceed- n of Youngstown, O., were | ings on which he was released, but stalwart m found mothe | counsel for Fox promptly filed a wri > took an appeal to the court of appeals, T, if 3 gircuit 1ICUITUrt agents ina iv takes over 6,00,000 tons of feed to supply | FOLEY the livestock of the State each year. % (8) 1 WILY WO NDE Always Successful= Children Like If