modish garb and exceeding good looks, up- on whom porter and cavalier .alike danced a worshipful attendance. Eastlake straightway flattened himself in- - to the friendly shadow of a baggage truck. ‘‘Betty!”’ he gasped. Whereupon, throngh the brightly lit windows of the Pullman, he saw the group straggle down the aisle, peering at the sec- tion numbers, and finally halt with hostile glances at a point where, in sign of pre- emption, a man’s luggage filled the rear seat. ‘‘Betty!”’ breathed the hypnotized spec- tator again. ‘‘And in my section!’ In tranced amaze, he followed a panto- mime to which the lady contributed a bat- tery of taking graces and her companion an air of extreme devotion. This latter per- son wae prodigal of magazines, flowers and like trifles for the beguilement of a long journey; lavish, too, with his talk, to which his listener lent a pink-tipped and apparent ly willing ear; while his leavetaking as the wheels began to turn was that of one who ventured with his eyes intimacies which he durst not as yet put more elo- quently. He dropped to the platform just as Eastlake, curbing a fierce primitive im- pulse to mar and maim, swung himself aboard. Eastlake’s progress toward his section was less impetuous. Indeed, it was only after several false starts and a futile parley with the sleeping-car conductor that he plucked up courage to present himself be- fore his seatmate. The moss casual wit- ness would have agreed that his reception justified his reluctance. To call it glacial would snggest a warmth it could not boast; compare it rather with the unchanging cold of some dead world. The man shivered elaborately. ‘‘Yes,”’ he confessed apologetically;‘ ‘this is really my seat, Betty.”’ The lady hridled. ‘‘Betty!”’ she repeated indignantly. ‘“Elizabeth,’’ amended the offender. ‘Not to you.”’ ‘Well, then—Mrs. Eastlake! I dare say that’s scarcely more palatable, though I remember you thought it a pretty name when you married it.”’ She seemed unmoved by this reminis- cence. ‘‘I was about to explain,’”’ added her husband, ‘‘that I have tried to get a birth elsewhere, and failed. The travel is nn- usually heavy tonight.’’ Another pause. ‘‘However,I will try not to annoy you,”’ some candid thinking since we took differ- ent roads, Betty;and I see, as I couldn’$ once, that I’ve been a loafer—just one of the ‘idle rich’ that the socialists and that lot carse.”’ ‘“You weren’t really idle,”’ came an un- expected demurrer. “I might as well have been idle. Auto- racing, fox-hunting, polo are well enough as sport; as a profession they’re just what you once told me—useless. I see that now. 1 realize how I disappointed all your fine ambitions for me. Gad, the chances I’ve let slip! Think of that Wall Street offer, that berth with the Steel Trust; think of the Congressional nomination! Why, I'll wager there are a million deserving beggars who’d pawn their souls for a go at any one | of the opportunities I chucked away.’’ For an interval he sat glooming down the aisle. His wife gazed steadfastly out into the night. ‘I guess it was my throwing over the political chance for a polo tournament that cut you deepest,’ he went on presently. That was a chance. Yon always said that I'd get on if I were to go in for politics, Betty, and I feel it in my bones that you’re right. I can mix with all sorts of people; it’s as easy as breathing for me to make a speech. That brownstone district is our party’s by rights. It belongs to the men who either don’t register, or play golf all election day when they do. The candidate who can poll that full silk-stocking vote will turn the scale. And I could have got it out! You remember what the fellows in the clubs said they’d do? I’d have won, Betty, won hands down. For once in my life at least you’d have been proud of me.”’ ‘‘I was proud of you in other ways, Tom,’ said his wife softly, Eastlake’s splendid horsemanship flashing uppermost in her mind’s eye. “‘Truly! Don’t think I wasn’t. And don’t think, either, that I hold myself blameless. I coald have given you more sympathy than I did. I, too, helped wreck our marriage.’’ He flushed at her admissson. ‘*That’s mighty square of you,’’ he said; ‘‘but it’s more generous than troe.’’ ‘Oh, its true enough. It’s plain enough, also, like all wisdom of the day after. But we can’t live our lives twice. The big chances don’t come twice a-begging.’’ The man straightened suddenly. ‘‘One chance bas come again.’’ Hisaltered tone stirred her. “One chance has?’ ' she ‘“Which?”’ He bent to her eagerly. - repeated. NOTE.—The Socialists polled 5 votes for State Treasurer al nd 13 for Supreme Court; the Socialist Labor polled 6 votes for State ‘‘But it is,’’she answered in a low voice. OFFICIAL VOTE CAST IN CENTRE COUNTY ON TUESDAY, NOV. 7TH, 1905. Demorealic alan With that he went from white to angry oo Le ar > red. - ae remap — ——— ——— TT - = i Eom - = - — — re a ergs ore S——r— rr ——— ee et - ————— i a——— RE bie —" . ~~ . . “I’vedone you no wrong,’’he exclaimed. Presid ent.|| Treas. || C. Superior Court Sheriff |[C. Tress} Record. ||Register|| Commissioners. Auditors. ||Coroner **You can’t lay that at my door. I've lived Hr fe | 3 * w { ®n 1 i wil wy = - os { w Bellefonte, P2., Nov. 17, 1905. a foolish life, but, by Heaven, it’s been a BOROUGHS g z £2 g zB g SBE El gis 2 F gl gg 2IEI2|3B sg EI E= ER TAA LAAT CTR, clean one. What cause —"’ AND 2 ge z 3 3 2 $e > 2 gE ! z 2 | 2 = a 7% : 2 | = 3 g o> g & — z= > 2 | e Ee “Cause!” she echoed bitterly. ‘‘Isn’é it TOWNSHIPS. Z| RI BISA PI IS ei wi 2 ir CS ESIC B|2 2 EZ Pp ”” ae eo - : 2% : - | » | > 3 | “IN ETERNUM, DOMINE. cause enough that we’ve heén spoiling one PEI pl ifm BELL | Pheri PIP lif PlelplirimFlililr ris another’s lives?’ ts |i IRIE HE EL PH Theta tf Tl LENE Ebb aH This woman's soul and mine are one; He watched her a moment in baffled si- § bod i i : dopd og ia {Ee fd : i qi toi ibd Bo flit i 0 One spirit, one career; lence. Then his eyebrows suddenly met in : North ward..............| 300| 12s, 11/| 162 234!| 384/| 220| 2g6| 240] 131] 44 261! 135 237| 153/| 194] 210|| 258 144|| 260| 241| 153] 140|| 241 264| 133] 140 ol 174 Not only till the days are done a stern, black line. Bellefonte, < South ward,, .| 206] 171] 8 150 23 364 17s % 1 7 3 2 1 192 190 is 234 175) 214 9 158 25 15 3 198| 188| 186/| 179] 203 here. i y est war: 6 148 | 04] 87) ! | 7| 8 76! 98! 56 | 7 8! 90, 65/ 69|| 76] 72 Ofonr comuianion hier ‘Who was that man at the station?’’ he Centre Hall borough... 5 21) o7ll 123)| 81 41) 42 84 15 41 so 34 ss| 33 sol 3s sa 30 34 or) || 43) 35| s2| s6| 33] eo But after, though we singly brave demanded barskly. The effecé upon his Howard borough..... 5 95) 48|| 141|| 102 109 104 35 7 102) 42 101 43103 38/| 103 30/ 102 104 40 38)| 106 los| 36| 36107 34 The passage’ perilons wife was marked. Wonder, incredulity, Mileshurg borough, ol = 1 oF BS 8l 2 2 ree BD a Sa. » 1B = WBE e ” : . Millhein borough. ....ccusseeeiss cosinsssrinnnis 6 5 B i \ i 2 35 | 37) 122|f © 5 26| 122/| 33 126 That small seclusion of the grave then anger, played in rapid sequence across z i 9/| 66] 105!| 165/| 101 109| 97 52 23 110/ 61) 30] 149| 110, 71|| 101 70|| 105 100| “g6| 65(| 103 o8| 59 100] 65 Has room for both of us. her mobile face. With anger mounted an- Philipsburg borough, 16) 96) 169|| 252 182) 127] 114) 107| 25/| 130) 136); co 209|| 155 125(| 132] 137| 121] 124] 142) 132)| 149| 130] 121) 121|| 137) 125 other flood of color. Svath Philieshats b T 13| > 1 201 1s 12 107 > 34 2 34 58 1% 1 = 1s 87 1s 1s 77 = 131) 114) 77| 72|f 131] 70 9 ; i ife— : South Philipsburg boro............ 4 voll 45 39) 38 27... { 22 | | 30 \ 29 45 39 30 31 5 4 Both! Weare a singie life *‘It does not concern you,’’ she replied. Brot Colon: Doar, 631 241 al! Sol 1io|| 198) 127) 14 198 62 9p 124] 7To|| 104] 95 117, sal] 121 su|| 123 126] 76| 70|| 190 138 a] 36 19, = ¥ g 131 75! 9 { 20 jak 1 76} 121, 78 And death itself shall spare ‘*Who was it?’’ he repeated. ‘‘Who, I ri a, RRA | 56] 22| 1a! 44) Boi 78|| 44 AO 46/ 26] 10 44 30 a7) 37 54) 22) 45 20/| 43) 47] 31] 30{| 46) 45 27 20 a5 28 The dust of husband and of wife say?” Benner township { Souihiern precinct. 76 64 4 3 so) 56, a x 80 eee i 5 5 > i 5 = 57 3 w 3 391 51 62 ok 54 49 66 That slowly mingles there. - s = outhern precinct..! 67| 56. .... | 30, - 48! hil, ! { 52] 39] 5 i | 48 od 4] 4211 431 48] 39) 52|| 45] 49 That slowly ming For a space they read one another, will : orthern precinct...| 58 22 1! 41 20/| 61 41 44 411 18 2; 41 181 39 20 43) 18) 45 10f 43) 39 gp 18 2 45 17} 17/| 40, 20 One may go first, and one remain fighting will. Then, seeming to lay hold Boggs township, Eastern precinct.. | cal 36/ 2/| 39 30 roll 45 46| 46 31 o2| 50 2 44-34) 42) 36| 46 3z| 42 30 46 32 45 46 32 3) a I To hail d call: apon her resolution by main strength, she : { Western precine 148 48] 6|( 106] 64/| 165(| 110 114] 107 52 6} 121! 51i) 113] 53/| 120 54/| 123; p5o|| 101) 1120 gg 60 112 117) 48] 55 122] 51 0 halla second ca: 5 id in. Burnside townshiPu....cceeeuseesannne 45 20]... 31 18/| 49{ 31; 30! 30 18... | 80 20/ 311 19! 32 19{| 32] 18] 80| 30] 211 21|| 32 32| 18] 18|| 31 18 But nothing now can make us twain. sas: | EoDeeTD | YoU I roluce to College , township i 1 102l 60l 23 us 4] 219 a 158 148 3 14 137 64 11 2 1s & 17 6 1% 1% & o 152 154/ G8. 65] 136) 66 . . Artin LOWRShIP.....ccovcsissessesnsnasivivninns 70: 450..ias } 99 ol 59 56 20... 1 59 { Bb ¢ 1 48 2 60; 57] 44 44]; 59 43 Hy tell.” Ferguson I {Sestern precinct. ol 125 4} 65 131 1s (4) 0 us 3 = 120 4 120 = sm 9 » uy 12 or esl 122 117 07 123 i od 5 8 es : | 3 75 3 [ 78) 3 5 7| 3311 s1/ 78] 3 3 For we have long since pass’d the bounds “The real cause?’’ he taunted. Noel Precinct: 9 » ul 9 66 a 30 13 ® 61 4 17 58| 16 50 10 63! 14! i 100 10 5 65] un 3 28 bi $3 a Of Self, of Time, of Space. Her chin quivered, then grew firm. Gregg township{ Eastern precinct....... 200 105] 2|| 28 104) 182 28) 31 27 101 11 31 lo3|| 32 103|| 29)105! 30! 104] 27 27| 107 130]! 32. 29| 102] 105] 28! 105 And felt the freedom that surrounds “‘You wrong me,’’she replied with a dig- Western precinct...... 76! 123 5)| 48} 135/| 178|| GO| 70] 57 13 8 62 12311 63 122) 651118 63 122) 55 66 124 129} 74 50! 124) 1121 59) 125 Love's final dwaling place nity which instantly tonobed him. “That Haines townaiy { Sistornprocincl) sn) ep 3 3 don A) 4 4) 2) BS om) ww Se om 6 WE 8A —Arthur Munby, in The Spectator. | map is nothing to me. He is a lawyer.” Halfmoon township brecinct..| S11 1201 31 7 ll lal sa fb oo 7 3 53 | ol 39 sla sila sos) ‘a zl 0% N21 00 Smm— Eastlake drew a long breatb. rags Sl Enlil w= om bE am em i gE Be So ce ” 3 V: Hii 7 id 3 JE 581! i T 2 od) A STAY OF PROCEEDINGS. wT take that back, Betty,” he said. He Covet : 4 7 ool 141] 75] 75 71] 57) 3 75 esl se e2i| 78) 65] 70 o5|| 76 74 eo] 62] 74f 74 €3 63 70 69 a You always played fair. I was a brute to Litorci townshi Ji precinct.........| 158 66 7/| 100 56/| 156 lo7 107 104 47 1] 108 49) 108 48) 100 49|f 105 53 106 106 54 53 103 105 49) 52107 49 Eastlake moodily patrolled the platform | speak as I did; but when I saw you with pe y re 'P § West precinct........ 12] 4... | PB 2 16) 12| Is 12 - 1 Bl By 12) 4 Li Siz al I i 3 - 12] 1 4 4 1 5 of the dismal _trainshed, while the green | him to-night, pressing his gimeracks, look- Na dy 8) of 1 i al TI a 2 nal ot Gill 1a 57! 25 53] 23 M8|| vo sa 19 22 33 58) 31 2 54 al nl 5 porter of the Esmeralda pottered over the | ing as if——’’ He choked wrathfully at Miles township Nd precinct, 51) 141] 3) 43] 135) 176|| 43] 48 42121) 3) 41] 136] 49) 130|| 41|138|| 40] 140f 36 43 136 143] 41| 36| Mo 137) 41] 137 berths of a regiment of women with small | the recollection, and abruptly ended: ‘I : ~~ | Western precin 14 7 2) 1 66) 74 13 14 u 22 0S To 7} 03 2 9 Uo B B. 67 = 14 1 od of 13 66 children who had made prior demands up- | could bave jammed his handsome face be- Pom fownanippormere een | 1900 0 LL O00 107) 908] 31) 33 51 91 19) 35 189 5 191) 30 192]] a| 10) 2 201 193] 14]| 31| 28 199] 198] 3] 10d on his incompetence. The waiting man | neath the wheels.” 3 Northern precinet..| 35 107] 2|, 35 98/| 127 34 38 33] 94 3 97)! 34 o7|| 36) 96l| 36} 96 34 331 99 98 321 33 100] 97/| 30 101 was well into his second cigar,and the pro- She stole a bewildered glance at him. Potter township < Scuthern precinet...] 44! 97 vernal Be 86/| 111 3 id 34 a 2 id = 35 i 5 80! i 711) 3 2 it 2 36] 35 81; 80|| 35 82 found conviction that he bad botched life | His own face had a wholesome comeliness Noster precinel al Wl 3 Hl Sirol mm Mm ml a Hl od em Rela a ala oe from the outset, when his eyes were arrest- | which suffered nothing by comparison wish Rush township Easier precinct. dal gal 2 20/| 40 2 20) 20 1 Pl I 21) 19 2 18 22 2 0) 2 20 20 20 20) 20 20] 20 20 2 ed by a gleam of lilac petticoat. the one he would have marred, and it just Southern precin 212 32| 4 80/| 173 o 99 96| 70| 4/| 98] S6|| 92 93 112} 75 | 85 99! 78 70|| 105| 102) 76| 173i 108] 72 ” t . . s s i 100! Jig i 152 3 1 2 Now, lilac, for a sufficient reason, was | now reflected something infinitely more de- Snow Shoe Twp. Tn Dict no 4 162 1s 2s I> 1% i 0 10 To » = Tai 152 as a 38 = wr a Bl 5% b pb oo with him a touchstone, and his speaking | sirable than physical charm. As she look orthern precinet...| 120] 57(c...|| 104 (58) 100]1 110] 114) 105 2 | lar a 108 a 102 8 112 59 1p 168 6 2 109 liz | 105 64 : i i with to a closer surve ) h ned and with a flas Spring township Southern precinct... 149 116| 2|| 140| 115}| 250(| 146] 155) 146! 97 1/| 202. 62}| 157| 108}, 147] 117|| 159 104|| 11 148) 154] 107] 111) 119, 145 detail led him forthwith toac : y | ed and puzzled, he turned and PHng DW rn Prosar] 109 115 2 96) 62] 158|| 9o| 105 93 56] 14|| 125 42(| 101] o4| 101 59] 100, c6|| 87 87 s7| 02 95| 102 63{ 56/| So 71 of a litsle procession which wound its way | of insight read her thought. Taylor township. 107] 20 =2| 64 13|| 17/l o4f 58 0] 12] 1] 6s II 65 15)! 72{ 7|| G4 16 62 66 14 15 67 63] 14| 14/| 67 13 throngh the wicket from the Waieing foes ‘“Yes, I care, little woman,’’ he owned. Union township... 110{ 38) 17/| 85 57| 140/j 90 8) 87| 42 5 93 3 88 52/1 08 421 91 48|| 2 88 50 3 901 89) 48 48 88 50 ntly ended its leisured march at | ‘I’ve always cared.’’ E D. 62! 58 1(| 54] o2|| 110); 52 56! 53 £7 2|| 69 49] v8 40| 56 62[| 56 61] 55 58 61 59 56| 57) 61] 49! 69 and Drager a hes Tooon.| Her li J ted Walker TwpAM. Fo. aif s1 1 33] ol 108] 20| 47 42). c6| 10|| 68 dof| 91 31 31) s7|| 40 7|| 41 36 so 7r|| 36 38 74| s0/| 3 70 the step of the watcher's own car. Tecon-| Her lips parted. u Woe ran asl 00....[| 23! os|| ss|| 30 34 e8 s6| ‘ull 51 40|| 30 5a|| 2s| all sz ssl 25 27 er] o2)| 290 as Go| 63) 10 se sisted of a station porter buen with Don’t say hi 2 Spargsd. Nobody| worth township... 136] 43 3 100) 47|| 145] 107) 106] 105] 42} 3] 107 42} 101) 48|| 103] 45|| 108 d42|| 97/107) 47| 45 107} 105 43) 41) 105| 44 feminine belongings; a gentleman of ingra- | knows better than I how seldom my actions {rmmmme| om mom mtn fra mr fmm res pees || stan | mize ee | tess mee or = bes | aa : - 244 | } 4144/4 5739874 23(405! 3 2 tiating address; and a young woman of | squared with my words. But I've done 3 ET eR onl lo | 3071 R01 30] [oer 301 | 212] 20] ator 4183 ly along the obscurity of the floor for his down one of its elusive columns, peered hurriedly at his watch,and began to scram- ble into his clothes. He grouped fruitless- footwear, and, between impatient jabs at the electrie button, probed with an um- brella underneath his berth; but Betty's traveling-bag alone rewarded his soundings. Nor was there any response to his call, though he could hear the porter’s bell trill in the far corridor above the rumble of the wheels; and rummaging an extra pair of shoes from his own bag be tore toward the dressing-room. His toilet complete, be ran the Pullman conductor to cover in a near-by coach. It was on his mind to read this person a vig- orous lesson on the management of sleep- ing-cars, but the intention lost itseif in a laugh which still shook him as he re-enter- ed the Esmeralda and carefully explored its floor. He hesitated before his own sec- tion, then, gathering courage, stooped and with all caution drew his wife's bag from beneath the lower berth, and tried its fastenings. To find it locked was but a momentary embarrassment. Betty's du- plicate keps still hung beside his own, and in a trice the bag yawned before him with the object of his burglarions quest lying obligingly at hand. He had only just clos- ed the bag and popped it back again when the throes of the hangings warned him that Betty was astir, and hunting out a step- ladder which he placed within her reach, he retreated to the corridor and posted him- self before the porter’s annunciator to await events. They came. The call sounded once, twice, a third and then a fourth time at di- winishing intervals, and a little metal finger quivered at the number indicating Betty’s berth. At the final summons the mechanism hissed like a maddened insect, and Eastlake reconnoitred from the rope portiere at the end of the main passage to behold an indignant young woman, with lilac conspicuous in her dishabille, take her way toward the opposite dressing-room. His smile was bland as he readjusted the annunciator. A fifth summons lured him into the central aisle, now filling with the dishevel- ed people, where he bowed gravely to Bet- ty, who, her skirts drawn close about her feet, was perched upon the stepladder, hor- ing the tip of her umbrella into the elec- tric button. Eastlake imperturbably col- *‘It should be.”’ **With shoes in it?" ‘Of course.”’ Then it’s plain sailing, isn’t it? The bag- gageman surely won’t refuse to let you open it.” His wife dimpled. ‘‘I could bardly parade the train like this,’ she rejoined, with a twinkle of silk- en hoisery by way of illustration. “But I conld go for yon—if Iseem trust- worthy.” A long pause. Then: ‘‘Betty,’’ began Eastlake. “Yes?” Would it make this rervice—and others’ perhaps—any more acceptable if’ you knew that I wired ‘Yes’ last night for my own sake?" “Tom! You understood? Oh, why aren’t we alone?” Eustlake considered their agitated fel- low travelers, and then laid sudden bands upon a berth hanging. ‘‘We are as good as alone,’”’ he declared. ‘*Anyhow, what if they do take us fora rural bride and groom?” Mrs. Eastlake recaptured a shining strand of hair which the curtain bad dis- placed. “And now, Tom,’”’ she sail briskly, “I'm quite ready for that pair of slippers I bappened to see vou purloin.”’—By Mark Lee Luther in The Saturday Evening Post. They Must Have Agent Hamilton. Mr. McClain Told He Must Order Missing Insurance Agent Home. Probers Demand Accounting. New York, Nov. 14.—John A. Mc- Call, president of the New York Life Insurance company, was called before the Armstrong committee of insurance investigation and peremptorily ordered by the committee to demand the return from Europe of Andrew Hamilton, the lawyer who has had charge of legisla- tive matters for the New York Life. Mr. McCall was further ordered to de- mand an accounting from Hamilton of the moneys expended by him and of the balance which he owes the New York Life. Mr. Call denied that it was the policy of his company to have Mr. Hamilton remain abroad until after ance firm that places all the risks on the properties of the Metropolitan is composed of W. D. Edmister and Silas B. Dutcher, the latter a director of the Metropolitan Life. The low rate of interest at which Mr. Hegeman secured loans and the reason of the rebates of this interest that Mr. Hegeman received from the old firm of Vermilye & Co. was testified to by several members of that firm, which has since gone out of business. This firm was the banker of the Metropoli- tan Life, but since last March the busi- ness has been taken over by Wm. A. Reade & Co. Mr. Reade was a wit- ness and said that Mr. Hegeman got these loans at a rate below the market rate because Mr. Hegeman had been a client for a number of years and be- cause of the volume of business he transacted with the firm of Vermilye & Co. ATLANTIC CITY ELEPHANT GONE Odd Feature of the Island Destroyed By Fire. Atlantic, N. J, Nov. 13.—The fa. mous wooden elephant, built 18 or 20 years ago in South Atlantic City by James lLaferty, caught fire and was destroyed. There is no city water in South Atlantic City, and though word was sent here no apparatus was sent. The elephant has been an odd fea ture of the island since it was first built. It was constructed of wood, of huge dimensions, and in the interior were rooms fitted up for a restaurant. The “eyes” were large windows, form- ing an observatory which commanded a fine view of the ocean. CUBA FEARS COUP D’ETAT Number of Police at Palance Have Been Trebled. Havana, Nov. 14.—It is believed that the government fears a coup d’etat, as the number of police at the palace has recently been trebled and for the last two nights the policemen have been WITTE’'S CAB..._. MEETS Part of Upper Housz of National As. sembly to Be Elective. St. Petersburg, Nov. 14.—The sec- ond session of Count Witte’s new cabi- net was held yesterday. One of the matters under consideration was the project for placing the council of the empire, the upper house of the na- tional assembly, to a certain extent on an elective basis, which Count Witte fasisted upon before accepting the premiership, and which was one of the principal causes of the long delay in tssuing the imperial manifesto of October 30. The project, as elaborated, provides for the representation of land owners, Orthodox, non-conformist and non- Christian clergy and boerse commit- tees. Ten representatives each are to be chosen for five years by owners of over 5000 acres, the Orthodox and the non-conformist clergy and six by the hoerse committees. The number to be chosen by the non-Christian clergy has not yet been decided. Count John Tolstoi, who resigned the position of head of the Academy of Fine Arts owing to General Tre- poff’s repressive policy, was appointed minister of education. Emperor Nicholas will resume his residence at Tsarskoe Selo on No- vember 16. No Freedom For Poland. St. Petersburg, Nov. 13.—Poland is not to be permitted to become a sec- ond Finland. The Russian government in a strongly worded communication serves notice on the Polish National- ists that for good or ill the ancient kingdom of Poland has now become an integral part of the Russian empire, and that while the government intends to fully observe the national rights of Poland, any attempt to wrest Polish autonomy from the emperor would be considered an act of revolt and would lead the Poles into the sorrowful paths trodden by them in 1831 and he went on. ‘‘A shade more cordiality on ‘“The political one. Conditions haven't : : compelled to sleep on the palace floor. your part would prevent our being taken changed much since two years ago. The Jocted part 90 hiv lofiany Su mga this investigation had been cencluded b hn : 1863. for a eelf-conscious bridal pair; but suit | distriot leader has been to me again. He's | © 0% "0 "eo. anxiously consulting ber | 80d said that on the contrary he would Two Burned to Death In Jail. HIS" ENTIRE FAW MURDERED yourself as to that. If, on the other hand, it pleases you to treat me as a stranger— vou’re acting the part capitally just now, by the way—at least permit me as a strang- er—a courteous one-—to offer youn the rear seab.’’ ‘No, thank you.” ‘But it always makes you sick to ride backward. Be—Mrs. Eastlake,” he re- monstrated. ‘‘Do take it.”’ : The lady eclipsed her face with one of her numerous magazines. Her husband smilingly outflanked her by means ofa mirror across the aisle, but she promptly detected and blocked even that loophole. At this moment of seeming utter root the great god Luck, who sometimes befriended him, deigned to smile. As the train jolted over the last suburban switch to an unim- peded track, he saw a small glove slip gently from Betty’s lap to the floor, and struck for it like a raving hawk. Unhappily its owner was no less alert, and, the train forwarding their joint efforts, they collided between seats in an attitude which, ina less impassioned moment, the man could only liken to that classic marble styled The Wrestlers. Speech for the instant failed him. Not so his wife. ‘‘How like you,”’ he dropped. Her husband accepted the rebuke with humility. ‘‘I suppose 0,’’ he assented. *‘‘I never was much of a carpet-knight. Probably that was why we didn’t make a go of it to- gether.” ‘‘How unjust!’’ she protested. know very well I never wanted ——?’ The conductor cut in with a 1equest for tickets—a respite which Eastlake employ- ed in a vain eucdeavor to learn his wiles destination. The ticket’s reverse side per- sistently confronted him, however, and it was not until the official bad gone his way and Betty was coiling the thing’s inordi- nate length into a microscopic pocketbook that its legend squarely mes his astounded eye. ‘Sioux Falls!’ he hroke ont. ‘“Then it’s true, Betty? You’re going to apply for a Dakota divorce? They told me to expeot it, but I laoghed them in the face. I wouldn’t—I couldn’t believe it of you. Tell me it’s all a mistake, little woman! “You asked me a second time to make the run. Shall I wire him ‘Yes’ Betty? Shall I do it for your sake?”’ His eyes held a meseage which she bad not read there since their hetrothal. Her lips half framed an answer whicha more sober thought withheld. ‘Leave my sake ous of it,”’ she answered steadily. ‘‘The decision must be yours alone.” ‘‘Oh,”’ said Eastlake slowly, his face shadowing. ‘‘I forgot. For a moment I imagined you still cared.” She made no rejoinder, and the raw p ter here put in an appearauce with the not altogether inept remark that he had come to make them up. Hisready assumption that they were man and wife grimly amus- ed Eastlake. Betty seemed to miss its humor. : ‘*‘Mine is the upper berth,’’ she whipped in crisply. ‘‘And my shoes are muddy, porter. Please don’t forget.”’ Eastlake detained her an instant longer. *‘At least use the lower,”” he entreated in a low tone. ‘““You got a two-day head- ache from your last upper berth. Do you remember those queer little shelves we had to put up with on that narrow-gauge Mex- ican road? Take it, Betty.’’ His wile shook her head without looking at him. He could not see her mouth. His own hardened. ‘No favors from me, eh?”’ he muttered, making way for her to pass. “‘I’m beyond the pale?” ere Was no answer. He sat long in the smoking compartment but he brooded more than he smoked. Once when the train halted for a time in a vast cavern of a station he got out. When he sought his berth at last it was after midnight and the porter was collecéing the shoes. Eastlake saw to it that Betty’s were not forgotten. Sleep came tardily, and some telepathic sense told him that another ‘was wakeful. Once he started listen. He could have sworn he heard a woman’s sob. The noise of shrilling brakes roused him at sunrise, and, raising his curtain, East- lake eraned to 1ead the signhoaid of a rural station which the train was passing at slackened speed. Then he jerked a rail- bolt upright from a doze and strained to watch. She held herself rigidly erect, but to her husband’s discerning eye her stature seemed over night to have lost at least one, if not two, of its inches. ‘“The bell appears to be out of order,” she remarked. “It’s not the bell that’s out of order,’’he informed her calmly; ‘‘it’s the porter.” ‘‘But I mast see him.”’ “I hardly think you’ll be able.” ‘But I must,’’ she repeated. *'I cannot find my—my property.’ “‘Shoes?’’ he suggested. She shot him a look which he felt to be full of suspicion. “I missed mine, too,’’ he explained. ‘Indeed, the whole carful seems engaged in what a punster wonld call a bootless quest. The sad fact is, Betty, our footgear is probably two hundred miles away.” ‘“What?’’ wailed Mrs. Eastlake. ‘Yes; you see the colored person who controls our destinies happened to fall asleep in a rear car which was laid off in the small hoars.”’ *‘With my shoes!” ‘‘With all our shoes.” ‘‘But you have yours.’ ‘‘An extra pair. I trust you are as lucky. It will be duced awkward when the train reaches Chicago, but I presume the compa- ny will provide invalid chairs or some- thing of the kind. From all appearances,’’ he added, taking in the rising hubbub as the dire news circulated the Esmeralda, ‘‘the supply will scarcely meet the de- mand.” Betty seemed aghast. “This is horrible,”” she exclaimed. ‘Why, I simply can’t arrive in Chicago in my stocking-fees.’’ ‘‘It does look formidable,”” her husband agreed impersonally. ‘‘Besides, you'll have to cross the city for your— Western connection.’’ Silence greeted thie contribution. ‘‘But perhaps some makeshilt will ocour to youn,”” he continued hopefully. ‘How about slippers—or rubbers even, if it came to a pinch?’ ‘I haven’t even sandals. I thooght a pair of ties were in my bag. but I can’t find them.” ‘No?’ sympathized Eastlake. ‘‘How Tell me it isn’t so.?’ She met his look frankly. road folder from a miniatnre hammock slung near his head, ran eye and finger very much like to have Mr. Hamilton return. Mr. McCall, replying to Mr. Hughes, counsel for the committee, said he had called. the attention of the board of trustees to his testimony before the committee relative to Hamilton and gave Mr. Hughes a copy of his state- ment, which said that if Hamilton did rot return to the New York Life the sum of $235,000 by December 31 he would himself pay it to the company. Mr. McCall said Mr, Hamilton was either in Paris or Nauheim. Another interesting line of examina- tion was opened up just before the ad- journment for the day when John Mc- Guinness, an employe of the Equitable Life, was called. He produced letter books and memoranda which Mr. Hughes read and was in the midst of reading when adjournment was taken: These were instructions from former Comptroller Thomas D. Jordan, of the Equitable, to A. C. Fields relative to the killing or assisting the passage of every bill introduced into the legisla- ture that would affect or help the in- terests of the insurance company or any of its officers. The letter referred Fields to a bill relative to taxation which Mr. Jordan instructed Fields to have killed if it affected Suffolk county. Mr. Hughes who had been reading the memoranda, stopped here and asked the witness what interest the Equitable had in Suf- folk county. Witness hadn’t sufficient information to clear this point, but when asked if it wasn’t because James H. Hyde had a residence there, witness replied he thought it was. Other witnesses were John R. Hege- man, president of the Metropolitan Life, and Vice President Fiske, who were in- terrogated along the line of agents’ sal: aries, legal expenses of the company, real estate holdings and the methods of acquiring properties, and the fact about your trunk? Do you suppose it is aboard this train?’’ was brought out that the fire insur- Lake City, Ia., Nov. 13.—George W. Buttrick and William Jackson were burned to death in the city jail by a fire started by Buttrick. These, with J. I. Hipple and Isaac Allen, were ar- rested for carousing on the streets. Soon after being lodged in jail smoke was seen issuing from the cell occu- pled by Buttrick and Jackson. Marshal Miles arrived in time to rescue Hipple and Allen, but the other two were dead when the officer reached their cell. Before the discovery of the blaze some boys heard Allen saying that Buttrick was trying to fire the jail. Cunliffe Gets Six Years. Pittsburg, Pa., Nov. 13.—Edward G. Cunliffe, the express company clerk, who on October 9 stole $101,000 from the Adams Express company agency in this city, and whose flight and cap- ture 10 days later attracted the at- tention of the entire country, was sen- tenced by Judge James R. MacFar- lane in criminal court to two terms of three vears each in the western peni- tentiary and two fines of $100 each and all costs of the prosecution on two charges of larceny, making a to- tal term of six years’ imprisonment. Prince Charles Will Be King. Christiania, Norway, Nov. 14.—The returns of the plebiscite are still in- complete, but no changes in its main feature are now possible. The results in 418 constituencies show 235,935 votes in favor of Prince Charles of Denmark as king of Norway and 62,- 78 9against him. The Republicans ex- pected to poll 33 per cent. of the vote, but only obtained 21 per cent. ——Chief—'‘Do yon mean to say that you baven’t heen able to get a single clew to the perpetrator of this erime?”’ Detective—‘‘Naw. Them newspaper re- porters is down on me and they won’t tell me anything.” Philadelphia Jew Lost 25 Relatives In Massacre at Odessa. Philadelphia, Nov. 14. — Max Bu- towski, a Russian Jew residing in this city, has received a cablegram from Russia that his entire family has been murdered by Russians in Odessa. The family, he says, consisted of his father, mother, married sister with five children, two unmarried sisters, two brothers, sister-in-law with four children, her mother and his aunt and her six children—25 persons in all. He said they resided in the Chris. tian section of Odessa. WON'T ACCEPT OFFICE Can't Conscientiously Take Oath.As He Gave Opponent $1000 to Withd: w. Lancaster, Pa., Nov. 11.—The Intelli- gencer, Democratic, announces that Edward D. Reilly, Democrat, will not accept the office of county commis. sioner, to which he was elected Tues- day, after one of the bitterest political battles in the history of the county. Reilly won over Eli Hess, the Lincoln candidate. The reason advanced by Mr. Reilly for his action is that he cannot conscientiously take the oath of office, as he gave Hess a note for $1000, ostensibly to cover campaign expenses, to secure Hess’ withdrawal in the Democratic convention, which assured Reilly’s nomination. Hess never cashed this note, the receipt of which he publicly acknowledged, and it figured prominently in the cam- paign. The Intelligencer claims that it is common knowledge that as a con- sequence of Reilly's refusal to as sume the office the court will reap: point J. Val Wise, the present Demo- cratic commissioner, whom the Intel: ligencer declares has not acted in har. mony with Democratic inter 3. Mr. Reilly announced the dissolui.on of his law partnership with John D. Tetrick. He will remove from the . -