MILLION COLLAR MOTTLES SIO,OOO FOR 100 WORDS: " The Million Dollar Mystery" story will run for ticenty-lico consecutive weeks in this paper. By an arrangement with the Thanhouser Film company it has been made possible not only to read the story in this paper but also to see it each week in the various moving picture theaters. For the solution of this mystery story 910,000 will be given. CONDITIONS GOVERNING THE CONTEST. The prize of SIO,OOO will be won by the man, woman, or child who writes the most acceptable solution of the mystery, from which the last two reels of motion picture' drama will be made and the last two chapters of the story written by Harold MacGrath. Solutions may be sent to the Than houser Film corporation, either at Chicago or New York, any time up to midnight, Deo. 14. This allows four weeks after the first appearance of the last film releases and three weeks after the last chapter is published in this paper in which to submit solutions. • A board of three judges will determine which of the many solutions received is the most acceptable. The judgment of this board will be absolute and final. Nothing of a literary nature will be considered in the decision, nor given any preference in the selection of the winner of the SIO,OOO prize. The last two reels, which will give the most acceptable solution to the mys tery, will be presented in the theaters having this feature as soon as it is pos sible to produce the same. The story corre sponding to these motion pictures will ap pear in the newspapers coincidcntally, or as soon after the appearance of the pic tures as practicable. TTitft the last two reels will be shown the pictures of the win ner, his or her home, and other interesting features. It is understood that the news papers, so far as practicable, it printing the last two chapters of the story by Har old MacGrath, will also show a picture of the successful contestant. Solutions to the mystery must not be more than 100 words long. Here are, some questions to be kept in mind in connection with the mystery as an aid to a solution: No. I—What becomes of the r. illionalret No. 2 —'What becomes of the $1,000,0001 No. B—Whom does Florence marryt No..{ —What becomes of the Russian countess t Nobody connected either directly or in dircctly with " The Million Dollar Mys tery " will be considered as a contestant. _________ SYNOPSIS OP PREVIOUS CHAPTERS. I Stanley Hargreave, millionaire, after a miraculous escape from the den of the Kan* of brilliant thieves known as the Black Hundred, lives the life of a recluse for eighteen years. Hargreave one night enters a Broadway restaurant and there comes face to face with the gang's leader, Braine. After the meeting, during which neither man apparently recognises the other, Hargrrave hurries to his magnlil cent Rlverdale home and lays plans for making his escape from the country. He writes n letter to the girls' school In Ken Jersey where eighteen years before he had mysteriously left on the doorstep his baby daughter, Florence Gray. He also pays a visit to the hangar of a daredevil aviator. Braine and members of his band sur round Hargreave's home at night, but as they enter the house the watchers oat aide see a balloon leave the roof. The safe Is found empty—the million which Hargreave was known to have drawn that day was gone. Then some one an nounced the balloon had been punctured and dropped into the sea. Florence arrives from the girls" school. Princess Olga, Br.iine's companion, vis its her and claims to be a relative. Two bogus detectives call, but their plot Is foiled by Norton, a newspaper man. By bribing the captain of the Orient Norton lays a trap for Braine and his gang. Princess Olga also visits the Ori ent's captain and she easily falls Into the reporter's snare. The plan proves abor tive through Braine's good luck and only hirelings fall Into the hands of the police. [Copyright: 1914: By Harold MacGrath.] CHAPTER IV. THE FLAT ON THE TOP FLOOR. BRAINE crawled from his uncomfort able hiding place. His clothes were soiled and damp, his hat gone. By a hair's breadth he had escaped the clever trap laid for him. Hargreave was alive, he bad escaped; Braine was as cer tain of this fact as he was of bis own breathing. He now knew how to account for the flickering light in the upper story of the warehouse. His ancient enemy had been wp.tehing him all the time. More than this, Hargreave and the meddling reporter were in collusion. In the flare of lights at the end of the grin-play he had caught the profile of the reporter. Here was a dangerous man, who must be watched with the utmost care. He, Braine, had been lured to commit an overt act, and by the rarest good luck had escaped with nothing more serious than a cold chill and a galling disappointment He crawled along the top of the pier, listening, sending his dark-accustomed glance hither and thither. The sky In the east was growing paler and paler. In and out among the bales of wool, bags of coffee, and lemon crates he slowly and cautiously wormed his way. A watchman patrolled the office side of the warehouse, and Braine found it pos sible to creep around the other way, thence Into the street. After that he straightened up, sought a second hand shop and pur chased a soft hat which he pulled down over his eyes. He had half a dozen rooms which he al ways kept in readiness for such adventures as this. He rented-them furnished in small hotels which never asked questions of their patrons. To one of these he went as fast as his weary legs could carry him. He al ways carried the key. Once in his room he donned fresh wearing apparel, linen, sboesj and shaved. Then he proceeded downstair*, the second hand hat still shading his 'yes and the upper part of his face. At half past 12 Norton entered the Knick erbocker cafe-restaurant, and the first per son he noticed was Braine, reading the morning's paper, propped up against th<» water carafe. Evidently he had just or dered, for there was nothing on his plate. Norton waiked over and laid his hand upon Braioe's shoulder. The man looked up with mild curiosity. " Why, Norton, sit down, sit down I Have you had lunch? No? Join me." " Thanks. Came in for my breakfast," said Norton, drawing out the chair. Braine was sitting with his back to the wall on the lounge-seat. " I wonder if you newspaper men ever eat a real true enough breakfast. I should think the hours you lead would kill you off. Anything new on the Hargreave story?" " I'm not handling that," the reporter lied cheerfully. " Didn't want to. I knew him rather intimately. I've a horror of dead peo ple, and don't want to be called upon to iden tify the body when they find it." "Then you think they will find It?" " I don't know. It's a strange mixup. I'm not on the story, mind you; but I was in the locality of Duffy's warehouse late last night and fell into a gunman rumpus." "Yes, I read about that. What were they after?" " You've got me there. No one seems to know. Some cock and bull story about ther* being something valuable. There was." " What was it? The report In this papei does not say." "Ten thousand bags of coffee." Braine lay back in his chair and laughed. "If you want my opinion," said Norton, " I believe the gunmen were out to shoot up another gang, and the police got wind of it." " Don't you think it about time the police called a halt in this gunman matter?" "O, so long as they pot each other the police look the other way. It saves a long trial and passage up the river. Besides, whenever they are robbed some big polßician manages to open the door for them. Great is the American voter." "Take Mr. Norton's order, Luigi," said Braine. "A German pancake, buttered toast, and coffee," ordered the reporter. "Man, eat something!" "' It'B enough for me." , " And you'll go all the rest of the day on tobacco. I know something of you chaps. I don't see how you manage to do it." " Food is the least of our troubles. By ■the way, may I ask you a few questions? Nothing for print, unless you've got a new book coming." " Fire away." " What do you know about the Princess Perigoff? " " Let me see. H'm. Met her first about a year ago at a reception given to Nasimova. A very attractive woman. I see quite a lot of her. Why?" "Well, she claims to be a sort of aunt to Hargreave's daughter." " She said something to me about that the other night. You never know where you're at in this world, do you?" The Oerman pancake, the toast, the coffee disappeared, and the reporter passed his cigars. " The president visits town today and I'm off to watch the show. I suppose I'll have to interview him about the tariff and all that rot. When you start on a new book let me know and I'll be your press agent." " That's a bargain." * Thanks for the breakfast." Braine picked up his newspaper, smoked and read. He smoked, yes, but he only pre tended to read. The young fool was clever, but no man is infallible. He bad not the least suspicion; he saw only the newspaper story. Still, in some manner he might stumble upon the truth, and it would be just as well to tie the reporter's hands effectually. The rancor of early morning had been sub dued ; anger and quick temper never paid In the long run, and no one appreciated this fact better than Braine. To put Norton out of the way temporarily was only a wise pre caution ; it was not a matter of spite OP reprisal. He paid the reckoning, left the restaurant, and dropped into one of his clubs for a game of billiards. He drew quite a gallery about the table. He won easily, racked his cue, and sought the apartments of the princess. What a piece of luck It was that Olga had really married that old dotard, Perigoff! He bad left her a titled widow six months after her marriage. But she had had hardly a kopeck to call her own. " Olga, Hargreave is alive. He was there last night But somehow he anticipated the raid and had the police in waiting. The question is, has he fooled us? Did he take that million or did he hide it? There Is one thing left; to get that girl. No matter where Hargreave is hidden, the knowledge that she is in my hands will bring him out into the open." "No more blind alleys." "What's on your mind?" " She has never seen her father. She con fessed to me that she has not even seen a photograph of him." There was a long pause. "Do you understand me?" fehe asked. "By the Lord Harry, I do! You've a head on you worth two of mine. The very simplicity of the idea will win out for us. Some one to pose as her father; a message handed to her in secret.; dire misfortune if she whispers a word to any one; that her father's life hangs upon the secrecy ; she must confide in no one, least of all Jones, the but- THE TELEGRAPH, HARRISBURG, PA„ JULY 1914. ler. It all depends upon how the letter gets to her. Bred in the country, she probably sleeps with her window open. A pebble at tached to a note, tossed into the window. I'll trust this to no one; I'll do it myself. With the girl in our control the rest will be easy. If she really does not know where the money is, Hargreave will tell us. Great head, little woman, great head. She does not know hor father's handwriting?" " She has never seen a scrap of It. All that Miss Farlow ever received was money. The original note left on the doorstep with Florence hns been lost. Trust me to make all these inquiries." SHI? CHANCE© TO LOOK WTO TXkCfiACKKD MRKCE. IN IT SH& SW "Tomorrow night, then, immediately after dinner, a taxicab will await her just around the corner. Grange is the best man I can think of. He's an artist when it comes to playing the old man parts." " Not too old, remember. Hargreave isn't over 45." " Another good point. I'm going to stretch out here on the divan and snooze for a .while. Had a devil of a time last night." "When shall I wake you?" "At C. We'll have an early dinner sent in. I want to keep out of everybody's way. By-by! " In less than three minutes he was sound asleep. The woman gazed down at him in wonder and envy. If only she could drop to sleep like that! Very softly she pressed her lips to his hair. At 11 o'clock the following night the hall light in the Hargreave house was turned off and the whole interior became dark. A shadow crept through the lilac bushes with out any more sound than a cat would have made. Florence's window was open, as the archconspirator had expected it would be. With a small string and stone as a sling he sent the letter whirling skillfully through the air. It sailed into the girl's room. The man below heard no sound of the stone hitting anything, and concluded that it had struck the bed. He waited patiently. Presently a waver ing light could be distinguished over the silt of the window. The girl was awake and had lit the candle. This knowledge was suf ficient for his need. The tragic letter would do the rest, that is, if the girl came from the same pattern as her father and mother strong willed and adventurous. , He tiptoed back to the lilacs, when a noise sent him close to the ground. Half a dozen feet away he saw a Bhadow creeping along toward the front door. Presently the shadow stood up as if listening. He stooped again and ran lightly to the steps, up these to the door, which he hugged. Who- was this? wondered Bralne. Patient ly he waited, arranging his posture so that he could keep a lookout at the door. By and by the door opened cautiously. A man, hold ing a candle, appeared. Braine vaguely rec ognized Olga's description of the butler. The man on the veranda suddenly blew out the light Braine could hear the low murmur of voices, but nothing more. The conversation lasted scarcely a minute. The door closed and the man ran down the steps, across the lawn, with Braine close at his heels. " Just a moment Mr. Hargreave," he called ironically ; " just a moment! " The man he addressed as Hargreave turned with lightning rapidity and struck. The blow caught Braine above the ear, knocking him flat. When he regained his feet the rumble of a motor told him the rest of the story. By the dim light of her bedroom candle Florence read the note which had found en trance so strangely and mysteflously into her room. Her father! He lived, he needed her! Alive but in dread peril, and only she coulj save him ! She longed to fly to him at once, then and there. How could she wait till to morrow night at 8? Immediately she began to plan how to circumvent the watchful Jones and the careful Susan. Her father 1 She slept no more that night. "My Darling Daughter—l must see yon. Come at 8 o'clock tomorrow night to 78 Grove street, third floor. Confide in no one, or you seal my death warrant. " Your unhappy " FATHER." What child would refuse to obey a sum mons like this? A light tap on the door started her. "Is anything the matter?" asked the mild voice of Jones. " No. I got up to get a drink of water." She beard his footsteps die away down the corridor. She thrust the letter into the pocket of her dress, -which lay neatly folded on the chair at the foot ot the bed, then climbed back into the bod itself. She must not tell even Mr. Norton. Was the child spinning a romance over the first young man she had ever mpt? In her heart of hearts the girl did not know. Her father! It wns all so terribly and tragically sim ple, to match a woman's mind against that of a child's. Both Norton and the sober Jones had explicitly isarned her never to go anywhere, receive telephone calls, or letters, without first consulting one or the other of them. And now she had planned to deceive them, with all the cunning of her sex. The next morning at breakfast there was nothing unusual either in her appearance or manners. Under the shrewd scrutiny of Jones she was just her everyday self, a fine bit of acting for one who had yet to see the stage. But it is born in woman to act, as it is born in man to fight, and Florence was no exception - to the rule. She was going to save her father. She read with Susan, played the piano, sewed a little, laughed, hummed, and did a thousand and one things young girls do when they have the deception of their elders la view. All day lonsr Jones went about like an old hound with his nose to the wind. There was something in the air, but he could not tell what it waß. Somehow or other, no matter which room Florence went into, there was Jones within earshot. And she dared not show the least impatience or restiveness. It wns a large order for so young a girl, but she filled it She rather expected that the reporter would appear some time during the after noon; and sure enough he did. He could no more resist the desire to see and talk to her than he could resist breathing. There wns no use denying it; the world had suddenly turned at a new angle, presenting a n»w face, a roseate vision. It rather subdued his easy banter. "What news?" she asked. " None," rather despondently. " I'm sorry. I had hoped by this time to get somewhere. But it appears that I can't get any further than this house." She did not ask him what he meant by that. "Shall I play something for you?" she said. " Please." He drew a chair beside the piano and watched her fingers, white as the ivory keys, flutter up and down the board. She played Chopin for him, Mendelssohn, Grieg, and Chaminade; and she played them in a sur prisingly scholarly fashion. Ho bad expected the usual schoolgirl choice and execution; Tltania, the Moonlight Sonata (which not hnlf a dozen great pianists have ever played correctly), Monastery Bells, and the like. He bad prepared to moke a martyr of himself; instead, he was distinctly and delightfully entertained. " You don't," he said whimsically, when she finally stopped, " you don't, by any chance, know ' The Maiden's Prayer' ? " She laughed. This piece was a standing joke at school. " I have never played it. It may, however, be in the music cabinet. Would you like to hear it? " mischievously. " Heaven fortend ! " he murmured, raising his hands. All the while the letter burned against her heart; and the smile on her face and the gayety on her tougue were forced. " Confide in no one," she repeated mentally, "or you seal my death warrant." " Why do you shake your head like that? he asked. "Did I shake my head?" Her heart flut tered wildly. " I was not conscious of it." " Are you going to keep your promise ?** "What promise?" "Never to leave this hmise without Jones or myself being with you.'' " I couldn't if I wanted to. I'll wager Jones Is out there in the hall this minute. I know; it is all for my sake. But it bothers me." Jones was indeed in the hall; and when he sensed the petulance in her voice, his shoul ders sank despondently and he sighed deeply if silently. At quarter to 8 Florence, being alone for a minute, set fire to a veil and stuffed it down the register. " Jones," she called excitedly, " I smell something burning!" Jones dashed into the room, sniffed, and dashed out again, heading for the cellar door. His first thought wns naturally that the devils incarnate had set fire to the house. When he returned, having, of course, discovered no fire, he found Florence gone. He rushed into the hall. Her hat vai missing. He made for the hall door with a speed which seemed in credible to the bewildered Susan's eyes. Out into the street, up and down which he looked. Far away he discovered a dwindling taxicab. The child was gone. In the house Susan was answering the tele phone, talking incoherently. " Who is it?" Jones whispered, his lips white and dry. " The princess. . . began Susan. He took the receiver from her roughly. "Hello! Who is it?" " This is Olga Perigoff. Is Florence there?" '' No, madam. She has just stepped out for a moment. Shall I tell her to call you when she returns?" " Yes, please. I want her ahd Susan and Mr. Norton to come to tea tomorrow. Good by." Jones hung up the receiver, sank into a chair near by and buried bis face in his hands. "What is it?" cried Susan, terrified by the haggardnesa of his face. " She's gone I My God, those wretches have got her! They've got her! " Florence was whirled away at top speed. Her father! She was actually on the way to her father, whom she bad always loved in dreams, yet never seen. Number 78 Grove street was not an at tractive place, but when she arrived she was too highly keyed to take note of its sordid ness. She was rather out of breath when she reached the door of the third flat. She knocked timidly. The door was instantly opened by a man who wore a black mask. She would have turned then and there and flown but for the swift picture she had of a well dressed man at a table. He lay with his bead upon his arms. * F%ther!" she whispered. The man raised his careworn face: so very well done that only the closest scrutiny would have betrayed the paste of the theater. He rose and staggered toward her with out ■tretched arms. Bat th« moment they closed about her Florence , experiences a peculiar shiver. "My child! " murmured the broken man. " They caught me when I was about to com« to you. I have given up the fight." A sot; choked him. What was it? wondered the child, her hear! burning with the misery of the thought thai she was sad instead of glad. Over hia shoul der she sent a glance about the room. There was a sofa, a table, some chairs, and an enor mous clock, the face of which w%s dented and the hands hopelessly tangled. Why, at such a moment, she should note such details disturbed her. Then she chanced to look into the cracked mirror. In it she saw several faces, all masked. These men were peering at her through the half closed door behind her. " You must return home and bring me the money," went on the wretch who dared to perpetrate such mockery. "It la all that stands between me and death." Then she knew 1 The insistent dally warn ings came home to her. She understood now. She had deliberately walked into the spider's net. But instead of terror, an extraordinary calm fell upon her. " Very well, father. I will go and get It." Gently she released herself from those hor rible arms. ~ Wait, my child, till I see If they will let you go. They may wish to hold yon as hostage." When he was gone she tried the doors. They were locked. Then she crossed over to the window and looked out. A leap from there would kill her. She turned her gaze toward the lamp, wondering. The false father returned, dejectedly. "It is as I said. They insist upon send ing some one. Write down the direction* I gave to you. I am very weak I" " Write down the direction* yourself, father; you know them better than I." Sine* she saw no escape, she was determined to keep up the tragic farce no longer. " I am not your father." " So I see," she replied, still with the amaz ing calm. Braine, in the other room, shook his head savagely. Father and daughter; the same steel in the nerves. Could they bend her? Would they have to break her? He did not wish to injure her bodily, but a million was always a million, and there was revenge which was worth more to him thaa the money it self. He listened, motioning to the others to be silent *' Write the directions," commanded the ■coundrel who discarded the broken man style. " I know of no hidden money." 44 Then your father dies this night. Grange put a whistle to his lips. " Sign, write! " "I- refuse! " " Once more. The moment I blow this whistle the men in the other room will under stand that your father is to die. Be wise. Money is nothing; life is everything." MJ . j CJJ2AT " I refuse! " Even as she had known this vile creature to be an impostor so she knew that he lied, that her father was still free. Grange blew the whistle. Instantly the room became filled with masked men. But Florence was ready. She seized the lamp and hurled it to the floor, quite indifferent whether It exploded or went out. Happily for her it was extinguished. At the same moment she cost the lamp she caught hold of a Chair, remembering the direction of the window. Bh* was luporhumunly strong in this moment. The chair went true. A crnsa followed. " She has thrown herself out of the win dow ! " yelled a voice. Some one groped for the lamp, lit It, And turned in time to see Florence pats out of the room into that from which they bad com*. The door slammed. The surprised men heard the key clicks She was free. But she was no' longer a child. [TO BE CONTINUED.J