6 | The I Princess Elopes By HAROLD McGRATH | Author of "Th© Mar\ on lh« Box," | "H«arts and Masks," Etc. H (Copyright, IMb, liubbt-MerriU Co.) SYNOPSIS. Arthur Warrington, American consul to Harscheit, tells how reigning Grand Puke attempts to force his neice, Prin- Hildegarde, to marry Prince Dopple- Jitnn, an old widower. Warrington does not know the princess even by sight. While horseback riding in the country night overtakes him and he seeks accom modations in a dilapidated castle. Here he linds two women and an old man servant. One woman is Princess Hilde garde and the other a friend. Hon. Betty Moore, of England. They detain him to .fitness a mock marriage between the princess and a disgraced army officer, Steinbock, done for the purpose of foiling the grand duke. Steinbock attempts to kiss the princess and she is rescued by Warrington. Steinbock disappears for good. Max Scharfenstcin, an old Ameri can friend of Warrington's reaches Uar scheit. CHAPTER IV. He came straight to the consulate and I was so glad to see him that I sat him down in front of the sideboard and left orders that I was at home to no one. We had been classmates and roommates at college, and two better friends never lived. We spent the whole night in recounting the good old days, sighed a little over the de parted ones, and praised or criticized the living. Hadn't they been times, though? The nights we had stolen up to Philadelphia to see the shows, the great Thanksgiving games in New York, the commencements, and all that! Max had come out of the far west. He was a foundling who had been adopted by a wealthy German ranch man named Scharfenstein, which name Max assumed as his own, it being as good as any. Nobody knew anything about Max's antecedents, but he was eo big and handsome and jolly that no one cared a hang. For all that he did not know his parentage, he was a gen tleman, something that has to lie bred in the bone. Once or twice I remem ber seeing him angry; in anger he was arrogant, deadly, but calm. He was a god in track-linen, for he was what few big men are, quick and agile. The big fellow who is catlike in his move ments is the most formidable of ath letes. One thing that invariably amused me was his inordinate love of uniforms. He would always stop when he saw a soldier or the picture of one, and his love of arms was little short of a'mania. He was an expert fencer and a dead shot besides. (Pardon the parenthesis, but I feel it my duty to warn you that nobody lights a duel in this little history, and nobody gets killed.) On leaving college he went in for medicine, and his appearance in the capital city of Barscheit was due ob viously to the great medical college, famous the world over for its nerve specialists. This was Max's first ad venture in the land of gutturals. I ex plained to him, and partly unraveled, the tangle of laws; as to the language, he spoke that, not like a native, but as one. Max was very fond of the society of women, and at college we used to twit him about it, for he was always eager to meet a new face, trusting that the rew one might be the ideal for which he was searching. "Well, you old Dutchman," said I, "have you ever found that ideal wom an of yours?" "llah!"—-lighting a pipe. "She will never be found. A horse and a trusty dog for me; those two you may event ually grow to understand. Of course, I don't say, if the woman came along —the right one—l mightn't go under. I'm philosopher enough to admit that possibility. I want iier tall, hair like cornsilk, eyes like the corn-flower, of brilliant intellect, reserved, and digni fied, and patient. I want a woman, not humorous, but who understands humor, and I have never heard of one. So, you see, it's all smoke; and I never talk woman these times unless I'm smoking,"—with a gesture which ex plained that he had given up the idea altogether. "A doctor sees so much of women that he finally sees nothing of woman." "Oh, if you resort to epigrams, I can see that It's all over." "All over. I'm so used to being alone that I shouldn't know what to do with a wife." He puffed seriously. Ah! the futility of our desires, of our castles, of our dreams! The com placency with which we jog along in what we deem to be our own particular groove! I recall a girl friend of my youth who was going to be a celibate, a great reformer, and toward that end was studying for the pulpit. She is now the mother of several children, the most peaceful and unorative wom an I know. You see, humanity goes whirring ov«r various sidetracks, thinking them to be the main line, till fate puts its peculiar but happy hand to the switch. ScharfeiisteiU had teen plugging away over rusty nails and grass-grown ties —till he came to Bar echeit. "Hope is the wings of the heart," said I, when I thought the pause had grown long enough. "You still hope?" "In a way. If I recollect, you had an affair once," —shrewdly. I smoked on. I wasn't quite ready to speak. "You were always on the hunt for ideals, too, as I remember; hope you'll find her." "Max, my boy, I am solemnly con vinced that I have." "Good Lord, you don't mean to tell me that you are hooked?" he cried. "I see no reason why you should use that particular tone," 1 answered stiffly. "Oh, come now; tell me all about it. Who is she, and when's the wedding?" "I don't know when the wedding's going to be, but I'm mighty sure that I have met the one girl. Max, there never was a girl like her. Witty she is, and wise; as beautiful as a sum mer's dawn; merry and brave; rides, drives, plays the 'cello, dances like a moon-shadow; and all that," —with a wave of the hand. "You've got it bad. Remember how you used to write poetry at college? Who is she if I may ask?" j "The Honorable Hetty Moore, at present the guest of her highness, the Princess Hildegarde,"—with pardon able pride. Max whistled. "You're a lucky beg gar. One by one we turn traitor to our native land. A Britisher! I never should have believed it of you, of the man whose class declamation was on the firey subject of patriotism. Hut is it all on one side?" "I don't know, Max; sometimes I think so, and then I don't." "How long have you known her?" "Little more than a month.'* "A month? Everything moves swift ly these days, except European rail way cars." "There's a romance, Max, but an- "Max, There Never Was a Girl Like Her." other besides her is concerned, and I can not tell you. Some day, when everything quiets down, I'll get you into a corner with a bottle, and you will find it worth while." "The bottle?" "Both." "From rumors I've heard, this prin cess is a great one for larks; rides bicycles and automobiles, and general ly raises the deuce. What sort is she?" "If you are going to remain in Bar scheit, my boy, take a friendly warn ing. Do not make any foolish attempt to sec her. She is more fascinating than a roulette table." This was a sly dig. Max smiled. A recent letter from him had told of an encounter with the goddess at Monte Carlo. Fortune had been all things but favorable. "I'm not afraid of your princess; be sides, 1 came here to study." "And study hard, my boy, study hard. Her highness is not the only pretty woman in Barscheit. There's a raft of them." "I'll paddle close to the shore," with a smile. "By the way, I'll wake you up Thurs day." "How' —lazily. "A bout at Mueller's Rathskeller. Half a dozen American lads, one of whom is called home. Just fixed up his passports for him. You'll be as welcome as the flowers in the spring. Some of the lads will be in your classes." "Put me down. It will be like old times. I went to the reunion last June. Everything was in its place but you. Hang it, why can't time always goon as it did then?" "Time, unlike our watches, never has togo to the jeweler's for repairs," said I owlishly. Max leaned over, took my bull-ter rier by the neck and deposited him on his lap. "Good pup, Artie —if he's anything like his master. Three years, my boy, since I saw you. And here you are, do CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, *907. ing no-hing and lallygagging at crrtft with the nobility. I wish I had an uncle who was a senator. 'Pull' is everything these days." "You Dutchman, 1 won this place on my own merit," —indignantly. "Forget it!"—grinning. "You are impertinent." "But truthful, always." And then we smoked a while in' silence. The silent friend is the best of the lot. He knows that he hasn't got to talk unless he wants to, and likewise that it is during Ihese lapses of speech that the vine of friendship grows and tightens about the heart. When you sit beside a man and feel that you need not labor to entertain him it's a good sign that you thorough ly understand each other. I was first to speak. "I don't understand why you should go in for medicine so thoroughly. It can't be money, for heaven knows your father left you a yearly income which alone would be a fortune to me." "Chivalry shivers these days; the chill of money is on everything. A man must do something—a man who is neither a sloth nor a fool. A man must have something to put his whole heart into; and I despise money as money. I give away the bulk of my income." "Marry, and then you will not have to," I said flippantly. "You're a sad dog. Do you know, I've been thinking about epigrams." "No!" "Yes. I find that an epigram is pro duced by the same cause that produces the pearl in the oyster." "That is to say, a healthy mentality never superinduces an epigram? Fudge!" said I, yanking the pup from his lap to mine. "According to your diagnosis, your own mind is diseased." "Have I cracked an epigram?"—with pained surprise. "Well, you nearly bent one," I com proaised. lUen we both laughed, and the pup started up and lickod my face before I cculd prevent him. "Did I ever show you this?"—taking out a locket which was attached to one end of his watch chain. He passed the trinket to me. ' What is it?" I asked, turning It over and over. the one slender link that con nects me with my babyhood. It was around my neck when Scharfenstein picked me up. Open it and look at the face inside." I dfd so. A woman's face peered up at me It might have been beautiful but for the troubled eyes and the drooping lips. It was German in type, evidently of high breeding, possessing the subtle lines which distinguish the face of the noble from the peasant's. From the woman's face I glanced at Max's. The eyes were something alike. Who do you think it Is?" I asked, when I had studied the face sufficient ly to satisfy my curiosity. "I've a sneaking idea that it may be my mother. Scharfenstein found me toddling about in a railroad station, and that locket was the only thing about me that might be used In the matter of identification. You will ob serve that there Is no lettering, not even the jeweler's usual carat mark to qualify the gold. I nothing; life with me dates only from the wide plains and grazing cattle. I was born either in Germany or Austria. That's all I know. And to tell you the honest truth, boy, it's the reason I've placed my woman Ideal so high. So long aa I place her over my head I'm not fool ish enough to weaken into thinking I can have her. What woman wants a man without a name?" (TO BE CONTINUED.) Life Insurance Figures. Statistics show that there are now in the United Kingdom 27,940,260 persons carrying life insurance for a total amount of nearly £2,000,000.000. The total amount of premium* paid a about £37,000,000. THE PEACEFUL SUBURBS. "Sort of an endless chain war with your neighbor, eh?" said the visitor from the city. "How is that?" "Well," replied the suburbanite, "his chickens flew over the hedge and ate all my garden seed. I got even by getting a big tomcat and the cat ate the chickens." "Ah, an 'eye for an eye,' eh?" "Yes, but it wasn't long before he got a bulldog and the bulldog finished the tomcat." "Great Scott! I suppose that end ed the feud?" "Not at *ll. I borrowed a cata mount from a wandering circus- and that killed the bulldog. Now, if he don't get an elephant to finish the cat amount before 1 can return it to the show I guess I'll come out winner." In the Forest. "1 must spruce up," said Dame Na ture, as she took a glance at the woods about her. "Well," returned the West Wind, "you needn't pine to a waste about it with all those new firs." —Baltimore American. PAT'S LOGIC. Squire—l say, Pat, that's the worst looking horse I ever saw. Why don't you fatten him up? Pat —Fatten him, is it? Shure, the poor baste can hardly carry what lit tle flesh he's got now. The Method of Indolence. De lazy man sits in de sun De bes' part of de day. An' braga of work he hasn't done An' kicks about de pay. —Washington Star. Sure Cure. "You will never break up automo bile speeding by timing the automo biles," bantered the stranger in the big goggles. "Maybe not, neighbor," drawled the rural constable with the huge star, "but we have broken up a lot of speed ing by timing the chauffuers." "Timing the chauffuers?" "Yes, giving them sixty days' time in the county jail."—Chicago Daily News. The Art of Milking. Suburban Resident—Yes, I want a useful man about my country place. Can you milk? Applicant—Yis, sor. "Which side of a cow do you sit on when milking?" "Wull, sor, Oi never milked but wan cow, AO' she wuz a kicker; an', bedad, a good dale av Uae toime Oi was on both sides av her, sor." —Washington Star. Sufficient Credentials. Careful Parent—Before I can give consent to your proposed marriage to my daughter, I must know something about your character. SuffSr —Certainly, sir, certainly. Here is my bank-book. Careful Parent (after a glance)— Take her my son, and be happy.—N. Y. Weekly. Sounded Familiar. Eva—Uncle Tom made millions with his mines. When he went over to Europe he could offord a private cabin for himself. Edna —Gracious! How funny! Eva —What is funny, dear? Edna —Why, it must have been "Uncle Tom's Cabin." —Chicago Daily News. Not for Doggie. Mrs. De Stile —Are you going to take your poodle to the country with you? Mrs. LeGrand—Mercy, no! They have such miserable food there.— Cleveland Leader. The Inevitable Result. Stage Manager—l got the leading man to run over his lines in that au tomobile part. Manager—Well ? Stage Manager—He simply mangled them. —Baltimore American. Sweets or Meat. She —Before we were married you used to bring me chocolate every time you came. He —Yes, dear, and It cost a good deal less than the meat and potatoes I bring you now. Rural Music. Country Boarder —For heaven's sake, listen to those mosquitoes! The Landlord —Skeeters nothin'— that's my darter playin' the mandolin. —Cleveland Leader. Only Then. ""loes yocr husband snore in his * - >, madam?" Veil, doctor, 1 have never noticed hiai snoring at any other tims. —Balti- I more American. FIVE MONTHS IN HOSPITAL. Discharged Becaues Doctors Could Not Cure. Levi P. Hrockway, S. Second Ave., Anoka., Minn., says:"After lying for live months in a hos df ~ iiitai I was dis charged as incurable, S.gZ&. and Kiven only six "j| rnonths to live* My j heart was affected, I r liad smothering spells, and some times fell uncon soious - 1 e°t so i 'WlftSlFw cou ' ( ' n 't use my arms, my eyesight was impaired and the kidney secre tions were badly disordered. I was completely worn out and discouraged when I began using Doan's Kidney Pills, but they went right to the cause of the trouble and did their work well. I have been feeling well ever since." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents "a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. WHEN MILESTONES CHEER. They Always Gladden the Heart of the Pedestrian. In a walking trip a milestone along the way is the most companionable fellow in the world; your spirits rise as you near him as though you were about to greet a human friend, and they keep almost consistently on his high level till his brother a mile dis tant advances to meet you. And when you overlook one of this friendly company because of an en croaching bank or screening boughs, says the Travel Magazine, his neigh bor further on comes to you doubly welcome. At the latter end of this passage in the journey your spirits flag a trifle as though oppressed by a sense of desertion. You may even scowl at the overhanging bank which is more than a party to this conceal ment. Those worthy persons who attend to the roads should see to it that every milestone within their province stands out frankly from its leafy background. Observance of this, however, would rob the wayfarer of that leap of the heart which is his when the stone tells the story of two miles done rather than one. For however much the land scape and the minute world at his feet may claim the footfarer's admiration he is still keenly alive to the virtue of decent distances covered in his day's journey. Saw It Come Out of a Cow. A little city boy and his sister Dorothy were taken to the country for the first time. The two children were happy as the day was long.. In the late afternoon they watched the cows come home, heard with delight the tinkling cow bells, and the little boy even went to the barns to see the milking done. At supper, just as Dorothy was lift ing her glass to her rosy lips, the boy cried out: "Oh, Dotty, don't! You musn't drink that milk. It's not fit to drink. It came out of a cow; I saw it." STAT* or OHIO, CITY or TOLEDO, I , . LUOAS COUTY. ( FRANK .J. CHKNKY niakca oath that he la senior partner of tb« firm of F. J. CIIEXKY in Co., doing business In the City of Toledo. County and Stats aforesaid. aijd that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each ami every case of CATABRH that caunot be cured by the uae of HALL'S CATARKU CURE. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed lu my presence, this tit h day of December, A. D., IHB6. A. W. GLEASON, J NOTARY PVBLIO. Hairs Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally and »ct« directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of tho system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family fills for constipation. Says It's Not So. Report to the effect that electric lights are detrimental to the eyesight are pronounced unfounded by an elec trical expert in the London Times. He says that the trouble arises from too direct exposure of the eye to the light, and that effect would be the same or worse with any other light. The shortest and surest way to live with honor in the world'is to be in reality what we would appear to be. — De Scales. FOR STIFFNESS, SORENESS, SPRAIN OR BRUISE, NOTHING IS BETTER THAT YOU CAN USE; LUMBAGO'S PAIN, RHEUMATIC TWINGE, YOUR BACK FEELS LIKE A RUSTY HINGE; SCIATIC ACHES ALL PLEASURES SPOIL, 25c .-ALL DRUGGISTS—GOo. FOR HAPPINESS USE ST. JACOBS OIL. I W. L. DOUGLAS A $3.00 & $3.50 SHOES THE S WORLD JtfjMwbL FOR EVERY MEMBER OF THE FAMILY. AT ALL PRICES. ***» 43**2 BZ nifM CTo any one who can prove W. L. virok 9*9|(WCI \ Dougias does not ntako £ eeli jfSgT; Otfiuffavtfl J more Men'a S3 A S3.SO shoes nc^vlfcar# If {than any other manufacturer. THE REASON W. L. Douglas shoes are worn by more people In all walks of life than any other make, is because of their excellent stylo, easy-tlttiiig, and .superior wearing qualities. fwffm The selection of the leathers and other materials for each par® ' Wfiff of the shoe, and overy detail of the making is looked after by Wv the most completeorganization of superintendents,foremenand skilled shoemakers, who receive the highest wages paid in them athoe industry, ami whose workmanship cannot be excelled. ff and show you how carefully W. L. Douglas shoes are made, you & 41 would then understand why they hold their shape, tit better, o wear longer and are of greater value than any other male. co My 94.00 and SS.OO Gilt Edao Shoo, cannot bo equalled at any prloo. CAUTION! The genuine have W. IJ. Douglas name and price stamped on bottom, lake > T o Substitute. Ask your dealer for W. L. shoes. Jf he cannot supply you, send direct to factory. Shoes sent every whero by mail Catalog free. W.LDougUs. Brockton. M*m» IN LIFE'S BRIEF SPAN. Experiences, Joys and Sorrows of the Human Existence. The loves and friendships of indi viduals partake of the frail character of human life, and are brief and un certain. The experience of a human life may be shortly summed up: A little loving and a good deal of sor rowing; some bright hopes and many bitter disappointments; some gor geous Thursdays when the skies are bright and the heavens blue, when Providence, bending over us in bless ings, glads the heart almost to mad ness; many dismal Fridays, when the smoke of torment beclouds the mind and undying sorrows gnaw upon the heart; some high ambitions and many Waterloo defeats, until the heart be comes like a cliarnel house filled with dead affections, embalmed in holy but sorrowful memories; and then the chord is loosed, the golden bowl is broken, the individual life—a cloud, a vapor, passes away.—Matthew Hale Carpenter. Only Royal Doctor. The only royal doctor in Europe is Duke Carl Theodore of Bavaria. Few German princes have had a more ro mantic career than Duke Carl Theo dore. He recently completed, with his wife as his assistant, his flve-thou sandth operation for cataract. Poor people flock to his hospital, where they are treated free, the duke asking payment only from those who can easily afford it. He it was who successfully treated the kaiser, when, eight years ago, he was temporarily blinded by a swinging rrtpe when cruising on the Hobenzollern in the North sea. Delicate Shade of Meaning. A keen retort is credited to the late Dr. Haig-Brown, master of Charter house. His brother-in-law, Dr. Porter, the master of Peterhouse, another famous English school, wrote him, inquiring his precise meaning in a certificate that a boy's character was "general ly" good. "When I say generally," he replied, "I mean not particularly." Fair Warning. "Well, I see that slim girls will be the style this winter," remarked the harmless idiot. "Yes," responded his sister, "and if any of my girl friends suddenly get slender over night 1 don't want yon to ask any fool questions. Hear me?"— Pittsburg Post. Old Church. The one thousandth anniversary of the founding of St. Peter's church, Chester, England, finds the structure ; in good condition, portions of it hav : ing been rebuilt in 1440 and 1673. jS3OAN HOUR MERRY GO ROUNDS Wo also manufacture Razr.le Dazzles. Strikers, etc. HIBRBCHKLL-SPI LI-MAN Co.. Amu semen! uuttiiUTs. Uept. &!. MOUTH TONOWANDA, N. Y. A. N. K.—C (1907—43) 2201.