6 The Princess Elopes By HAROLD McGRATH Author of "The Man, on the Box," "Hearts and Masks," Etc. n p (Copyright, laui, Bobbs-Merrlll Co>) SYNOPSIS. Arthur Warrington, American consul to Barscheit, tells how reigning Grand Duke attempts to force Ills neice. Prin cess Hlldegarde, to marry Prince Dopple kirin, an old widower. Warrington does not know the princess even by sight. While riding horseback in the country night overtakes him and lie seeks accom modations in a dilapidated castle. Here he finds two women and an old man servant. One woman is Princess Hilde irarde and the other a friend, lion. Betty Moore, of England. They detain him to witness a mock marriage between the princess and u disgraced army officer, Steinboek, done for the purpose of foiling the grand duke. Steinboek attempts to kiss tile princess and she is rescued by Warrington. Stoinbock disappears for good. Max Scharfenstein, an old Ameri can friend of Warrington's readies Bar scheit. Warrington tells Win of the prin cess. Scharfenstein shows Warrington a locket with a picture of a woman in side. It was on his neck when he, as a boy, was picked up and adopted by his foster father, whose name he was given. He believes it to be a picture of his mother. The grand duke announces to the princess that she is to marry Dopple kinn the following week. During a morn ing's ride stie plans to escape. She meets Scharfenstein. He finds a purse she has dropped but does not discover her iden tty Warrington entertains at a public restaurant for a number of American medical students. Max arrives late and relates m Interesting bit of gossip to the effect that the princess has run away from Barscheit, He unwittingly offends a native officer and subjects himself to certain arrest. Max Is persuaded to take one of the American student's passports and escape. The grand duke discovers the escape of the princess. She leaves a note saying she has eloped. CHAPTER Vlll.—Continued. The valet hurried to the dresser and returned' with the duke's state eye glasses. These the duke perched de liberately upon the end of his noble nose. He opened the letter and read its contents. The valet, watching him slyly, saw him grow pale, then red, and finally purple,—wrath has its rainbow. His hand" shook, the glasses sllppe d from his palpitating nn'.-o. And I grieve to relate that his serene highness swore something marvelous to hear. "Damnation!" he said, or some such word. "The little fool!" Then, sud denly remembering his dignity and the phrase that no man is a hero to his valet, he join ted to his glasses, at the same time returning the letter to its envelope, this letter which had caused this momentary perturbation. "Call the minister of police. You will find him in the smoking-room off the con servatory. Make all haste!" The valet flew out of the door, while the dtxlce began pacing up and down the room, muttering and growling, and balling his lists, and jingling his shin ing medals. He kicked over an inof fensive hassock and his favorite hound, and I don't know how many long-wind ed German oaths he let go. (It's a mighty hard language to swear in, especially when a man's under high pressure.) "The silly little fool! And on a night like this! Curse it! This is what comes of mixing Spanish blood with German, of letting her aunt's wishes overrule mine in the matter fit education. But she shall lie brought back, even if 1 have to ask the assist ance of every sovereign in Europe. This is the end. And I had planned such a pleasant evening at cards!" The duke was not wholly unselfish. In less than ten minutes' time the valet returned with the minister of ] police. The duke immediately dis missed tho valet. 1 "Your serene highness sent for me?" asked the minister, shaking in his | boots. There had been four ministers of police in three years. "Yes. Read this." The minister took the letter. He read it with bulging eyes. "Good heav ens, it must be one of her highness' jokes!" "It will be a sorry joke for you if she crosses any of the frontiers." "But—" "But!" roared the duke. "Don't you dare bring up that word scandal! Seek her. Turn everybody out, —the army, the police, everybody. When you locate her, telegraph, and have a special engine awaiting me at the sta tion. And if you play a poor game of cards to-night I'll take away your port folio. Remember, if she passes the frontier, off goes your official head!" "And the fellow, who is he?" "The good Lord only knows! That girl! . . . Witness these gray hairs. But the rascal in irons; I'll attend to his case when I arrive. . . . Where is Steinboek?" "He was arreted this morning in Berlin; I have already applied for his extradition." "Good! Now, be off with you! Leave 110 stone unturned. The expense is nothing; I will gladly pay it out of my private purse." "I'll find her," said the minister grimly. His portfolio hung in the bal ance. All at once the duke struck his hands together jubilantly. "What is it?" asked the minister, j "A clew?" "Nothing, nothing! Ise gone; you j are wasting time." The minister of police dashed out of the room as if pursued by a thousand | devils. lie knew the duke's mood; it was not one to cross or irritate. No sooner was lie gone than the duke left his apartments and sought those of his niece, it might be a joke; it would do no harm to find out positively. But the beautiful suite was empty; even her highness' maid was gone. He then knocked ou the door which led into Betty's boudoir, not very gently either. "Open!" he bellowed. "Who is it?" demanded a maid's frightened voice. "The duke! Open instantly!" "it is quite impossible," said another voice from within. It was calm and firm. "I am dressing." "I must see you this instant. Open or I shall force the door!" "Is your serene highness mad?" "Will you open this door?" "You command it?" "A hundred timeß, yes!" "Since you command it." The voice was no longer calm; it was sharp and angry. The wait seemed an hour to his se rene highness, serene no longer. At length the bolt slipped, and the irate duke shouldered his way in. The tab leau which met his gaze embarrassed him for a space. He was even ashamed! The Honorable Betty stood behind a tall-backed chair, an opera cloak thrown hastily over her bare shoulders. Her hair was partly down. A beautiful woman in a rage is a fascinating sight. The duke stared at her irresolutely. "Will your highness explain this ex '' * j 'i The Duke Stared at Her Irresolutely. traordinary intrusion?" she demanded. "You have literally forced your way into my room while I am dressing. It is utterly outside my understanding." ''l am old enough to he your father." "That is the weakest excuse you could give me. At your age one's blood ought to be cooled to a certain discre tion. My father, if lie had had any thing important to say, w uld have re mained on the other side < 112 the door. 1 am not deaf. Your explanation is in order." The duke had never been talked to so plainly in all his life. For a while he was without voice, but had plenty of color. "It is easily explained," he finally bawled out to her. "Her high ness has eloped!" The girl stared at him with wide eyes. "Eloped?" she breathed faintly. "Yes, eloped." Betty wondered if she heard aright, or if the duke were out of bis mind; and then she recollected her conversa tion with the princess. Her mouth opened as if to speak, but instead she closed her lips tightly. That wilful girl; whatever would become of her! "Give this letter to your mistress," said the duke to the maid. "I will sta tion myself in the window while she reads it." He strode over to the window and drew the curtains about him. Below, the night crowds were wandering about the streets; the band was play ing in the Volksgarten; carriages were rolling to and from the opera; the fountain in the center of the square sparkled merrily in the glare of the arc lights. But the duke saw none of these things. Rather he saw the tele graphic dispatches flying to the four ends of the globe, telling the peoples that he, the Grand Duke of Barscheit, had been outwitted by a girl; that the Princess Hildegarde had eloped with a man who was not the chosen one. In other words, he saw himself laughed at from one end of tho continent to the other. (There is something very funny in domestic troubles when they occur in another man's family!) No, the duke saw not the beauty of the night; instead of stars he saw aster isks, that abominable astronomy of the lampoonists. He had never doubt ed the girl's courage; but to elope! . . . And who the devil had eloped with her? He knew the girl's natural pride; whoever the fellow might be. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1907. he could be no less than a gentleman. But who, who? "Your highness?" called a quiet (I might say deceptive) voice. The duke came forth. "Your highness will do me the honor to make out my passports to-night. I desire to leave the palace immediate ly. The affront you have put upon me, even under the circumstances, is whol ly unpardonable. You imply that I have had something to do with her highness' act. You will excuse me to her serene highness, whom I love and respect. My dignity demands that I leave at once." A flicker—but only a flicker —of ad miration lighted the duke's eyes. was a plucky little baggage. "I will issue your passports upon one condition," he said. "And that condition?"—proudly. "Tell me everything: Where has she gone, and with whom?" "I know absolutely nothing." Silence. The duke gnawed his mus tache, while his eyes strove in vain to beat down hers. "Thank you, I believe you." Then, giving way to his wrath; "You Eng lish people, you are all the same! You never understand. I have brought up this giri and surrounded her with every luxury; against my will and reason I have let her become educated In for eign lands; I have given her the utmost freedom; this is how I am repaid." "You forgot one important thing, your highness." "What ?"—haughtily. "Affection. You have never given her that." The duke felt himself beaten into silence, and this did not add to his amiability. "Your passports shall be made out immediately; but I beg of you to re consider your determination, and to re main here as long as you please. For the sake of appearances, I desire your presence at the dinner table." "I shall leave as soon as the dinner is over." This girl's mind seemed im movable. The duke shrugged. There was no use in beating against this wall. "I wish you knew whither she has gone." "Frankly, if I knew I should not tell your highness. My father taught me never to betray a confidence." "As you will. I beg your pardon for the abruptness of my entrance," he said, choking down his wrath. He could not allow himself to be outdone in the matter of coolness by this chit of an English girl. "I grant it you." The duke then retired, or, I should say, retreated. lie wandered aimlessly about the palace, waiting for news and making wretched all those with whom he came in contact. The duchess was not feeling well; a wrangle with her was out of fjuestion; besides, he would make himself hoarse. So he waited and waited, and re-read the princess' letter. . At dinner he ate nothing; his replies were curt and surly. The Hon orable Betty also ate nothing. She sat, wondering if her maid could pack five trunks in two hours. I had quite a time of it myself that night. As 112 predicted, I received a visit from the police in regard to Mr. Scharfenstein. I explained the matter the best I knew how, and confessed that he had hurriedly left the city for parts unknown. I did not consider it absolutely essential that I should de clare that I had seen him enter a rail way carriage for Dresden. Besides this, I had to stand sponsor for the other boys and explain at length that they were in no wise concerned with Mr. Scliarfonstein's great offense. The police were courteous and deferential, admitting that Max was the culprit. He had drawn a revolver in a public restaurant; he had broken a grave law. The inspector wrote a dozen telegrams and dispatched them from the con sulate. i had, at his request, offered him the blanks. (TO BB CONTINUED.) There's a Difference. Patch by patch is good housewifery, but patch upon patch is plaiu beggary. PROOF FOR TWO CENTS. If You Suffer with Your Kidneys and Back Write to This Man. G. W. Winney, Medina, NT. Y., in cites kidney sufferers to write to him. « To all who enclose postage he will re fply telling how Doan's Kidney Pills cured him after ho had doctored and had been in two different hospitals for eighteen months, suffering intense pain in tho back, lameness, twinges when stooping or lifting, languor, dizzy spells and rheumatism. "Before I used Doan's Kidney Pills," says Mr. Winney, "I weighed 143. After taking 10 or 12 boxes I weighed IG2 and was completely cured." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. MEAN FLINGS AT EDITORS. Tributes by Lafcadio Hearn to Class of Workers He Disliked. "Lafcadio Hearn, that wonderful writer, worked on newspapers in his youth," said a publisher, "and the ruthless way his studies were changed, cut and butchered was a great woe to his heart. "In after years Hearn took a mali cious joy in collecting stories about editors —editors and their superior and omniscient way with manuscript. "One of his stories was of an editor to whom a subscriber said: " 'I enjoyed that poem on the three ages of man in to-day's paper, Mr. Sheers; I enjoyed it immensely. Do you know, though, I thought it was originally written the seven ages of man?' "'So it was, sir; so it was,' said Editor Sheers, pompously. 'Yes, the extract was originally written the seven ages of man, but I had to cut it down for the lack of space.' "Another story concerned a weather report. A reporter, discussing the weather, wrote that winter still lin gered in the lap of spring. "The editor, as he read over the article, called the reporter to his desk and told him that lie would cut out that sentence about winter lingering in spring's lap. He said the idea was : good enough, and all that sort of thing, but it would not do to publish because the high moral tone of the paper had to be maintained in a town full of school girls." HIS TURN TO CRITICISE. Youngster Felt Called onto Manifest Disapproval of Prayer. Little John, who, at. the mature age of four, has learned the Lord's Prayer, is often criticised by his sister, two years older, for slight mistakes which he cannot always avoid in offering the j petition. A few Sundays ago he was | taken to church for the first time. | When the moment for the prayer ar rived and the congregation bowed their heads John's mother took the precaution to whisper to him that he must be very quiet. "Listen,' she said, "and you will hear the minister pray." This interested John at once, and his little face took on a look of serious attention, but his mother, watching him covertly, saw his ex pression change presently to one of surprise and disapproval. A few min utes more, and he could stand it no 'onger. What could this man be say ing? Not a word of the prayer did he recognize as the only formula he had ever heard called by that name. "Why, mother," he exclaimed, in a tone audible over nearly half the church, "do you hear? He isn't say ing it right at all!" Experience. "Experience is the best teacher," remarked the man who indulges in trite sayings. "Yes," answered tho skeptic; "but occasionally, as in distinguishing be tween mushrooms and toadstools, your education comes too late to be of any service." BEGAN YOUNG. Had "Coffee Nerves" from Youth. "When very young I began using coffee and continued up to the past six months," writes a Texas girl. "I had been exceedingly nervous, thin and very sallow. After quitting coffee and drinking Postum Food Cof fee about a month my nervousness disappeared and has never returned. This is the more remarkable as I am a Primary teacher and have kept right on with my work. "My complexion now is clear and rosy, my skin soft and smooth. As a good complexion was something I had greatly desired, I feel amply repaid even tho this were tho only benefit derived from drinking Postum. "Before beginning its use I had suffered greatly from indigestion and headache; these troubles are now un known. "Best of all, I changed from coffee to Postum without the slightest incon venience, did not even have a head ache. Have known coffee drinkers who were visiting me, to use Postum a week without being aware that they were not drinking coffee. "I have known several to begin the use of Postum and drop it because they did not boil it properly. After explaining how it should be prepared t) have tried it again and pro ih ced it delicious." me given by Postum Co., Battle Clinic, Mich. Read the booklet, "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. "There's i a Reason."' EQUAL 70 THE OCCASION. This Servant Girl Was Evidently a Person of Resource. As a source of humor the Irish ser rant girl has long since fallen from her high estate, a result probably due to the better class of young women from the Emerald Isle who come here annually to help confuse the eternal "servant girl question." But now and again one of the old. naively ignorant sort turns up in a New York house hold, as was demonstrated the other Jay to a caller at a house on the West Side. The girl who responded to the bell was asked if her mi-stress was at home. To this inquiry she surprised the caller by putting her arms behind her back and replying in a rich brogue, as she thrust her face toward the caller: "Put tli' tickets in me mouth, ma'am, an* I'll go an' see. Me hands is wet"—N. Y. Press. AS SHE HAD BEEN ORDERED. Domestic Cleared Everything Left Over Out of the Ice Box. There recently entered the service of a Cleveland family a domestic of Scandinavian origin. She had never seen a refrigerator before, and the lady of the house, after initiating her Into its mysteries, instructed her never to leave anything old or left over in the ice-box, but to keep the refrigerator perfectly clean and fresh by throwing the old things away each morning. The very next day the mistress, looking out of the window, observed something peculiar in the yard. "What is that, Sophie?" she asked. "And how did it get there?" "That is old Ice, ma'am," was the proud response, "left over from yes terday. I t'rew it away lake you tol' me."'—Harper's Weekly. One Waiter with Sense. Man in a restaurant, happening in 'ust as a new shift of waiters came on. And having eaten a very modest luncheon this man laid down a mod est tip, to be exact, five cents. And did the waiter shy off or sniff at this nickel? He did neither, but on the contrary he seemed to regard it as an augury of good fortune that his first customer should have given him something, and— "Thank you," he said, politely, to the customer, and as he turned away he added to himself: "That's a start er."—N. Y. Sun. SORES AS BIG AS PENNIES. Whole Head and Neck Covered—Hair All Came Out—Cured in Three Weeks by Cuticura. "After having the measles my whole head and neck were covered with sca'.y sores about as large as a penny. They were just as thick as they could be. My hair all came out. I let the trou ble run along, taking the doctor's blood remedies and rubbing on salve, but it did not seem to get any better. It stayed that way for about six months; then I got a set of the Cuticura Reme dies, and in about a week I noticed a big difference, and in three weeks it was well entirely and I have not had the trouble any more, and as this was seven years ago, I consider myself cured. Mrs. Henry Porter, Albion, Neb., Aug. 25, 190 G." A Frank Advertiser. The new commercial morality has spread to Ceylon. From one of the newspapers of that balmy island we take the following: "CH. A. HORSE—Rising seven, fine mouth and paces, about 15 hands; fine Lady's Hack; shows a lot of breed ing; Reason for selling, bad with mo tors; won't go in harness; jibs when leaving stables; catches rider by seat of breeches when mounting; but a darling pet. Apply, &c."—London Daily Mail. How's This? Vo offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any ea«a of Catarrh that cannot bo cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY A CO., Toledo, O. V?c, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 yoars, and believe hi in perfectly hon orable In all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. Walimno, Kinnan A Marvin, Wholesale Drugget*, Toledo, O. Flail's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the iyatem. Testimonials sent free, l'rlce 75 ccuttt per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Fills for constipation. Training Lion for Exhibition. 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