JOHN BURT CHAPTER XXX Continued How much L O have you lie lemanded Thirty five thousand shares re plied Mr Mason How many have you sold ad dressing his son About seventy flvc thousand Fine outlook Forty mousanu snares snort on a stocK witu only a hundred thousand shares in all growled Randolph Morris By God if I pull out of this thing with a dollar Ill placo it where you cant ilnd it with a set of burglars tools Randolph MorriB glared at his son fumbled for his glasses and bent over the tape Fifty live bid for L O it read Bid sixty for any part of ten thou sand Phares Gimme that telephone Go to the exchange Mason and get on the other end of this wire and Ill give you the orders Shortly before noon a news agency made public a statement which hastened the crisis It read The deal in L O was engineered by Mr James Blake the dashing young operator whose advent in New York was signalized by the recent up heaval in prices For several weeks Mr Blake has quietly been absorb ing blocks of L O To day he se cured ten thousand shares from Gen oral Marshall Carden which with the holdings of Mr John Hawkins gives the syndicate of which Mr Blake is thf head absolute control of this valu able property Another railroad com pany has been a bidder for control but the Carden stock gives Mr Blake the coveted advantage It is rumored that a well known and powerful banking house is short this stock to the amount of nearly fory thousand shares It opened at 29 Y2 and rapidly advanced to 75 and then by leaps and bounds reached 125 It is believed that only a few scat tered shares are yet in the market and that the stock is cornered TSy FREDERICK UPHAM ADAMS Author of Tho Kidnapped Millionaires Colonel Monroes Dccirlne Etc CoiTiHcirr JSftJ nr FHEDEiiICK UlIIAM ADAMS All rights reserved COPTIIIOUT 1003 BT A J DUBIIEIi BID D LB What are you oing there de manded Randolph Morris Cashing a check was the sullen reply You are a thief as well as a fool roared Randolph Morris his hand on the door and his features convulsed with passion No officer of a bank on the point of suspension has a right to accept or withdraw funds and you know it He grabbed Arthur Morris by the shoulder and dragged him through the narrow doorway My curse goes with that money he shouted his face convulsed with rage You have dragged me down to shame and poverty in my old age I hope by God that everything you buy with that money will give you pain I wish to God His voice was choked the blood surged to his temples his hands clutched at his throat and with a gasp for breath he fell heavily to the floor Before Arthur Morris realized what had happened others were by his fathers side The stricken old finan cier partially recovered consciousness before a physician arrived but again sank into a most alarming condition Apoplexy said the physician in answer to a question Is this his first attack he asked Arthur Mor ris I dont know was the reply Ive seen the governor so mad he couldnt speak several times but never so bad as this As he spoke Randolph Morris opened his eyes and they rested on his son Take him away he said averting his eyes Take him away and give me a chance to live Youre all right governor said Arthur Morris as the doctor gave him a signal to stay out of sight Keep cool and youll come out on top I feel as bad as you do about it but theres no use in kicking Brace up 1 UfijSJgw Groping bb massw fcH borfwJ rone bebrcxtfbt it dorm on the az dome Later It is rumored that the banking house of Randolph Morris Company has suspended CHAPTER XXXI Father and Son One by one the directors of the bank had entered the room where Randolph Morris was making his tignt against overwhelming odds Some he recognized by an almost im perceptible bow but no words came from his lips as he bent over the tape The faces of the directors were pale and drawn from tension When L O had mounted to eighty dollars a share Randolph Mor ris changed his tactics and attempted to check the rise by throwing all his holdings on tho market In less ihan an hour he hurled thirty five thousand shares into the speculative whirl pool It was like stemming Niagara with a straw The price did not sag The powerful interests back of L O pledged three millions of dollars for this stock and clamored for more In response to a demand for mar gins Randolph Morris deposited sev eral millions cash and valid securi ties Alarmed by rumors patrons of the bank formed in leng lines and de manded their deposits There was no gleam of hope but grim in defeat the old banker stood by the wheel and watched the ship of his fortunes as she swiftly neared the reefs of ruin A clerk entered anS handed to Ran dolph Morris the yellow slip of paper containing the bulletin He read it slowly crumpled it in his hands and threw it on the floor Grasping his massive gold headed cane he brought It down on the glass dome which covered the delicate mechanism of the ticker One of the flying fragments cut his cheek and a few drops of blood slowly trickled down his face The corporation of Randolph Mor ris Company is bankrupt he said rising to his feet and looking into the faces of his astounded associates The Board of Directors will convene at once and take formal action to that effect Be seated gentlemen and come to order You may make the motion for suspension Mr Mason When Randolph Morris adjourned tho directors meeting he looked about for his son but he was not in the room He found Arthur Morris with in the caged enclosure occupied by the paying teller In his hands were several packages of money and take j cur medicine like a man we may win out yet To which encouraging advice Ran dolph Morris made no reply and the son left the room As Randolph Morris was tenderly carried down the steps through an angry crowd and placed in an ambu lance he opened his eyes and looked longingly at the building which bore his name Thus he made his last journey away from the roar and tur moil of Wall street a mental physi cal and financial wreck cast on the shores of oblivion by a storm terrific and unforeseen Arthur Morris stripped of all power by the act on of the directors stood amid the wreck of his fortunes He was a witness to the compro mise by which a representative of James Blake Company agreed to terms which while protecting the de positors called for the sacrifice of the millions which once stood in his name The fifty thousand dollars he had suc ceeded at the last moment in draw ing from the bank was all that was left to him Through the long hours of that eventful day General Cardens eyes were fixed on the stock board Few of the excited customers of James Blake Company recognized the ex banker and none knew the reason for his absorbing interest in the fluctua tions of the stock labeled L O Who was this man Blake and why had he offered to place a fortune in his hand Why had this stranger come from out the West and by the magic of his touch transformed a worthless stock into one of so great value that millionaires struggled mad ly for its possession When he took his last look at the stock board L O was quoted at 105 He nervously drew a slip of paper from his pocket and made a rapid calculation If Blake chose to realize at the quotation General Car dens share of the profits would be nearly eight hundred thousand dollars The figures puzzled him and he made the calculation anew only to find it accurate This represented more than the fortune he had lost A wild impulse came which urged him to demand of Blake the sale of his stock What right had he to im peril that which would insure the hap piness of his daughter and the repose of his old age Hurriedly he retraced his steps until he reached Broadway and again ha entered Blakes office An hour had passed and he hardly dared look at the quotations Per haps the deal had collapsed Per haps L O 145 145 146 called cut the man who was reading the ticker Two thousand L O at 150 An exultant shout went up from tho crowd of men who surrounded James Blake His handsome face was aglow with pleasure as they slapped him on the back My congratulations general Blake said grasping the old soldiers hand Our little pool is working splendidly Do you feel like getting out at 150 general I wouldnt ad vise you to do so but if you wish it can be arranged I have a customer who will take the stock off your hands at that figure I I am entirely satisfied to let it alone said General Carden drawing himself up proudly Handle my stock according to your judgment The subordinate should not question tho policy of a victorious command er Mr Burton wishes to see you whispered a clerk to Blake and the famous head of the firm turned and left General Carden He heard the shouts of victory and found himself shaking hands and laughing with strangers He felt a strong grasp on his shoulder and turned to see James Blake We settle with Randolph Morris Company at 175 he whispered Your share of the profits is nearly a million and a half Ill call at your house this evening and give you a check for tho exact amount I can find no words to express my feelings said General Carden deep ly affected I do not think that I am entitled to so large a share of these profits I I really I do not know what to say to you Mr Blake God bless and reward you Dont thank me replied -James Blake A strange expression came over his face and a look of pain to his dark eyes I am not I should not He paused released General Cardens hand and turning abruptly rushed across the room and vanished into an inner office In the turmoil of his own feelings General Carden paid little attention to this strange action Six hours be fore he had entered these rooms all but penniless He left them more than a millionaire In a darkened room in a remote quarter of the city a gray haired man gasped for breath and moaned in his dolirium A great financial battle had been fought Randolph Morris was one of the stricken victims and Mar shall Carden Vas one of the victors In this age of commercial and indus trial barbarism man must climb to glory over the dead and mangled od ies of the losers Commercial compe tition has all tne horrors and none ol the chivalry of phjsical warfare Thoughts such as these came to John Burt when the news circulated that Randolph Morris had been strick en in his office The blow aimed at the son had fallen with crushing force on the father In the hour of victor John Burt was silent and sad and John Hawkins was not slow to glean the reason I wouldnt worry over Randolph Morris he said with a gruffness which was assumed The old man will recover One stroke of apoplexy wont kill him Write to Randolph Morris said John addressing Blake and say that his personal property is exempt in this settlement He has schedule it as having a value of nearly a milvon dol lare I shall not take it from him Hes an old man with daughters and others dependent on him Good for you Burt exclaimed John Hawkins It isnt business but business is hell as old Sherman said about war Im going to my hotel to take a nap Where can I see you this evening Dine with me at the hotel at nine oclock What dye say You too Blake To be continued Causes of Nervous Prostration Believe me said a Spruce street physician who makes a specialty of treating nervous disorders it isnt overwork that superinduces nervous prostration The men who succumb to nervous strain are not the men who work continually under high pressure The man who has no relaxation has no time to brood over his health and brooding is fatal to a man whose nerves are highly strung If a man is constantly busy in mind from morning until night he isnt in any danger of nervous trouble Its only when he re laxes and gives himself a certain amount of leisure that he is danger A man is a good bit like a piece of machinery Its the relaxation that tells Take Russell Sage for in stance He celebrated his 88th birth day to day and he is in the harness all the time Should he give up even a part of his daily routine the proba bilities are that he would be a dead man in six months The man whose nerves trouble him is the man of com parative leisure Philadelphia Rec ord Mountain Air to Blame A new guest arrived at a New Hampshire farmhouse where a Bos ton gentleman happened to be holding forth on the piazza The newcomer was much impressed by the speakers fluency I declare he remarked to the landlord that man has an extensive vocabulary hasnt he The landlord was mightily pleased Thats so he said Thats what mountain air will do for a man He aint been boardin with me but two weeks and I know he must have let his waistband cut much as four times Rochester Herald Since Mothers Gone Since mothers pone I miss the Htnlle And gentle voice that used to cheer My boyish heart day after day And put to Hlght each cure and fear Which chanced to be along- my way No more about the humble homo I see her ply her daily care Or hear her sing some sacred sons- Or plead with God In fervent prayr For right to triumph over wrong J love to hear some sacred song Or hallowed hymn she used to sing Or pray tho prayr she used to pray That I to Ilim may firmly cling Who was her comfort day by day The memry of her holy life Remains to cheer nie on my way Strengthens my soul as I press on Amid lifes toil from day to day To that sweet place where mothers gone Alva N Turner in Washington Post Fun with a Fly Seesaw Here is an amusing little trick that you will find lots of fun Stick a long See Saw in Operation lead pencil in the end of a spool of thread so that it will stand upright Now get a piece of very stiff blotting paper and from it cut a strip two inches wide and about a foot long On each end of this put a drop of molasses or syrup Now balance the strip of blotting paper with the syrup side up on the point of the pencil You should have two players although one will do Each player chooses an end of the paper In -a moment a fly will alight on one end attracted by the syrup and that end of the paper will go down a trifle Then another fly will light on the other end or perhaps sev eral will come there for the sweets and things will be reversed As more flies come alighting on the ends the paper will lean first this way then that till it overbalances and falls to the tables Then the player whose end grew so heavy as to cause the tumble wins We would not advise you to try this in the house but rather out of doors in the warm sunshine where the flies will not bother any one A Quiet Game If mother has asked you not to get dirty after you have dressed for a drive and you do not know just what to do to amuse yourself get some one to play the following little game with you It is very simple but will help the time to pass pleasantly I see a color you dont see says one What color may it be asks the other It may be pink or some other col or in the room says the first in quirer Then he begins the question ing Is it the paper The ribbon on your hair The pink in the dolls dress And so on until happily the guesser mentions the exact article of pink that has been chosen The suc cessful guesser than takes her turn at saying I see a color that you dont see Washington Star The Rat and the Dove There can be no doubt that strong attachments are formed between ani mals and that they are capable of emotions of pity and acts of generos ity not only toward their own kind but even toward creatures of another species A gentleman who had a great num ber of doves used to feed them near the barn At such times not only chickens and sparrows but also rats were accustomed to come and share the meal One day he saw a large rat fill its cheeks with kernels of corn and run to the coach house repeating this performance several times On going over to investigate he found a lame dove eating the corn which the rat had brought Such an action on the part of human beings would be looked upon as a charitable desire to relieve the neces sities of a helpless cripple and we must also so consider it in the case of the rat In a Lions Mouth Not all of the delights of spring are for the country boy We who live in the city have a host of them and can see many a strange and pleasing sight if we keep our eyes open A few days ago while riding my bicycle down Madison avenue I heard the twittering of sparrows and looking up saw in the mouth of the stone lion on the corner of the building of one of the citys prominent clubs the re mains of a last years nest and two sparrows getting ready to build a new one for this year It was such a novel place for a bird to choose for housekeeping that I stopped and made a sketch of it While standing on the opposite corner sketching the policeman of that beat came over to talk with me He seemed pleased that I should have noticed the birds He said that the sparrows had been keeping house there for severnl years He had often stopped to watch them build their nests and later feed their little ones which later would play around the lions head sitting on his nose or eyebrows as saucily as could be as much as to say You may look fierce but whos afraid St Nicholas Indoor Garden Patch This is a source of endless delight to a little girl just able to use her needle The necessary requisites are a small square of green art denim some pret ty remnants of flowered chintz and a small box of tiny crystal beads If the little one is able to sit and use her needle she will take unlimited pleasure in clipping the flowers and foliage from the chintz and transfer ring them to her square of green in artistic and odd effects The crystal beads are a good substitute for dew and with a little ingenuity can be most effectively placed When com pleted the garden patch can be utilized for a pillow top or can be made the nucleus of a quilt Tragedy of a Pet Rat I once had for a pet a white rat which was very cunning and mischiev ous One day when papa and I were going to town we stopped at a neigh bors on business Mr S and papa were discussing their business affairs when Mr S be gan laughing and asked papa What is that thing Papa looked around and there was that rat sitting on tho seat beside him as contented as could be It had been in papas pocket I had to carry it to town and get a box to bring it home in I kept the rat in a cage but it al ways managed to get out and gnaw the clothing One day my sister and I were driving when I felt something in my sleeve It kept running up and down my sleeve and frightened mo so that I slipped off my jacket and out jumped the rat and ran under the wheel and was killed instantly How it got into my jacket and remained there so long without my knowing it is a mystery to this day Christian Endeavor World Pindertoy This frolicsome frog needs only to be cut out and the three parts pierced through the dots with a pin sticking Q Co the pin into a cork or stick to hold it firm If pasted on an old visiting card it will have more body and last longer A Chinese Story Two sh6rt sighted men Ching and Chang always quarreled over who could see the best Hearing that a tablet was to be erected at a neighbor ing temple they determined to visit it together and put their eyesight to the test Neither Ching nor Chang was as honest as he might have been Each triqd to get ahead of the other so visited the temple by stealth Standing very close Ching read To the great men of the past and the future Chang also went and peering closer read To the great men of the past and the future In smaller letters he read what had escaped Chings notice This tablet is erected by the family of Ting On the day appointed standing at a distance from which neither could read Ching exclaimed The inscrip tion is To the great men of the past and the future True said Chang but there is more I can see what you cannot There is written in small letters Erected by the family of Ting There is no such inscription said Ching There Is replied Chang They grew very angry and afte calling eachother hard names agreed to refer the matter to the high priest He heard their story and said gent ly Gentlemen there is no tablet to read It was taken into the interior of the temple yesterday Fruit Jar Battery A correspondent writes Seeing that somebody asked if I ever made a battery out of my mothers preserve jars I will answer yes First I obtained a few old dry bat teries and took the carbons out of Ficl CARBOK I A o yziNc Tltll vVyy yy - them at the store I obtained a num ber of zincs stick sometimes called pencil zincs I then washed out a few jars and made pasteboard covers like Fig 1 I then put the zinc and carbon in the cover filled the jar two thirds full of sal ammoniac and put in carbon and zinc my battery then being com plete Mile-a-Minute Flies It is easy enough to understand why we have so much trouble in catching that fly that comes buzzing around our ears when we stop to consider that flies have been known to fly at the rate of about two miles a minute The common house fly moves at the rate of twenty five feet to the second or about eighteen miles an hour When frightened though the house fly settles right down to business and travels at the rate of 160 feet a sec ond If it should keep up this rapid flight for a mile it would cover the distance in exactly thirty three sec onds or faster than any lightning express has ever moved The common bumble bee blunders along faster than a horse commonly trots and even the fairy like butter flies flit ahead of the fastest boy run ner without trouble Indeed insects as a rule fly taster than birds so that only a few of the cleverest birds can catch them on the wing If you dont believe that an insect can go like chain lightning just knock down a hornets nest and try to get away from a mad hornet that is com ing for you Shell show you A New Coin Trick Here is a very simple little trick which looks not at all easyand quite as if the performer must be very skill ful indeed Take a silver coin a quarter or a half dollar and pick it up by placin the points of two pins one on eithei side of the coins edge You may hold the coin securely in this position it you press firmly with both pins Now blow smartly against the up per edge of the coin and it will fly around and around revolving with great rapidity between the pins How Elephants Gather Fruit The elephant says Capt Sikes in his book on the Tropical Nile does not bother to pick fruit singly off a tree but will but the trunk with such force that all the ripe fruit is shaken off He then picks it off the ground with his trunk and pops it into his mouth His favorite species is the wild plum though he will eat manj other fruits HOW TO MAKE A SUCKER aaxj j ff 1 Wlk Induce a shoemaker to give you a piece of sole leather about 4 inches square Then with a sharp knife trim the corners away until the leather is perfectly round after which the bot tom must be pared away smoothly ray a quarter of an inch back from the edge until a good bevel is as sured resulting in a very thin edge Bore a hole through the center and insert a piece of strong cord Tie a knot in the end large enough to pre vent it slipping through the hole and cut off the superfluous end Soak the leather in water until it is pliable The softer the better When thoroughly soaked place the leather on top of a half brick press the leath er hard against the surface with your foot and then carefully lift the brick by means of the string If the work has been done properly the square of leather you began work with has been transformed inte a sucker and you can surprise ycur play mates by lifting heavy articles with tha innocent looking piece of leather