i''" "TrijMtiiptriMMiipKniiiiiMimiMw n r-"MIM,,ll"lM,l",,l,lllw " 11 ' "' " ' " ILLUSTRATIONS COPYRIGHT 1908 y THE COPYRIGHT 190g by THE 8YNOPSIS. Count dl llonltil, the Italian ambas sador, If at dinner with rUplonmta when a hiemennar luminous lilm to the em basiy, whre a beautiful young woman aeki for a ticket to the embassy ball. The ticket la made out In the name of Mini Iaabul Thome. Chief Campbell of tlie ii-cipi service, and Mr. Urlium, hla head detective, are warned that a plot la brewing In Waahlnglon, and Orlintn icnea to th elate ball for Information. Hla at tention la railed to Mies Ieubel Thurna, Who with her companion, dleuppeara. A allot In heard and Senor A I varus of the Mexican leirntlon, i found wounded, (jrlimn la assured Mini Thome did It; he vIMIa her, dmandlriK kuowledKe of the affair, and arrest. ictro Petroxlnnl. Miss Thome visits an old boinh-muker, and they discuss a wonderful experiment, fifty Ihoueand dollura la stolon from the office of Benor HodriKUcx, the mlnlaler from Venezuela, and while detectives are In VeallKatlnic the robbery Miss Thorno itp peara aa a truest of the legation. Orlimn accuses her of the theft; the money Is restored, but a new mystery occurs In the rilsuppearanea of Monsieur Itolsseur the French ambassador. Elusive Miss Thorno reappears, bearing a letter which tat.js thut the ambassador has been kid naped and demanding ransom. The am buesador returns anrl ugnln strangely U. appear. Later he Is rescued from an old hoUBe In the suburbs. It Is discovered that 1'lutro ivtroilnnl shot Benor Alvareg and that he la 1'rlnce d'Abrui.l. firimrn flgiin-s In a mysterious Jail delivery. He orders both Miss Thome and d'Ahrtizxl to leave the country; they are conveyed to New York and placed on a steamer out return. Orlinm's coffee Is drugged and upon regaining consciousness he finds a sympathetic note from Isabel Thorn. 1 lie conspirators against the government are located and their scheming l.i over heard. Urimin orders d'AbruMl to de stroy tho unsigned compact. Isshol rwj pels him to obey and Is termed a trait ress by the conspirators. The detective Informs high government officers of the enema. Prince d'Ahruzl leave the country and the plot Is ubundonvd. CHAPTER XXVI. In Which They Both Win. Mr. 'Grimm dropped Into a chair with bis teoth clenched, and Ills face like chalk. For a momeut or mora ho at there turning It all over In his mind. Truly tho triumph had been robbed of Its splendor when the blow fell here here upon a wouinn he loved. "There's no shame In the confes sion of one who Is fairly beaten," Iaa bel went on softly, after a little. "There are many things that you don't understand. 1 came to Washing ton with an authority from my sov ereign higher even than that vested In the ambassador; I came as I did and compelled Count dl Roalnl to ob tain an Invitation to the state bull for me In order that I might meet a representative of Russia there that night and receive an answer as to whether or not they would Join In the compact. I received that answer; Us substance Is of no consequence now. "And you remember where 1 first met you? It was while you were In vestigating the Bhootlng of Senor Al varez in the German embaBisy. That hooting, as you know, was done by Prince d'Abruzzl. so almost from the beginning my plans went wrong be cause of the assumption of authority by the prince. The paper he took from Senor Alvarez after the shoot ing was supposed to bear vitally upon Mexico's attitude toward our plan, hut, as it developed, It was about an other matter entirely." "Yes, I know," said Mr. Grimm. "The event of thnt night which you did not learn was that Germany agreed to Join the compact upon con ditions. Mr. Rankin, who was at tached to the German embassy In an dvli;ory capacity, delivered the an swer to me, and I pretended to faint la order that I might reasonably avoid you." "1 surmised that much," remarked Mr. Grimm. "The telegraphing I did with my fan was as much to distract your at tention as anything else, ond at the same time to Identify myself to Mr. Rankin, whom I had never met. You knew him, of course; I didn't." "When next I met you it was in tho Venezuelan legation; you were inves tigating the theft of the fifty thousand dollars In gold from the safe. I thrust myself Into that case, because I was afraid of you; and mercilessly destroyed a woman's name In your yes to further my plans, made you believe that Senorita Rodriguez stole that fifty thousand dollars, and I re turned It to you, presumably, while we stood in her room that night. Only It was not her room It was mine! I stole the fifty thousand dollars! All tho details, even to her trip to see Mr. Grlswold In Ilaltlmore In company Uh Mr. Cadwallader, had been care fully worked out; and she did bring Die tho combination of the safe from Mr. Grlswold on the strength of a forged letter. But she didn't know it. There was no theft, of course. I had no lutentlon of keeping the money. It was necessary to take it to distract attention from the thing I did do weak a lock InBlde the safe to get a sealed packet that contained Vene zuela's answer to our plan. I sealed that packet again, and there was "ever a suspicion that it had been opened." "Only a suspicion," Mr. Grimm cor rected. "Then came the abduction of Mon sieur Bolssegur, the French ambassador- I plunged into that case as I did in the other because I was afraid of Ju and had to know Just how much u knew. It was explained to you , Rn attempt at extortion with do 'ails which I carefully supplied. As a matter of fact. Monsieur Dolssegur opposed our plans, even endangered h e,n: anl U was not advisable to ave him recallod or even permit m to resign at the moment. So we umnCted hlm, '"tending to hold him fro n'rect order couW reach him all!h Understand, please, that byth thlnB8 were msule P88lble Bcoi &ld and c-Peration of dozens, ordo ' f nEenU who were under my that ,cvery Person who appeared In roctln Was worklnK at m? dl" e(1 Tne ambassador's unexpoct escape disarranged our plans; but wa taken out of the embassy br ausiw ISABEL JACQUES fUTRELLE M.G.Ksrrtivsii- ASSOCIATED SUNDAY MAGAZINES B0BB3 - MERfclLL COMPAJNy force the second time under your very eyes. The darkness which made this possible was due to the fact that while you wore looking for the switch, and I was apparently aiding, was hold ing my hand over It all the time to keep you from turning on tho light. You remember that?" Mr. Orlmrn nodded. "All tho rest of it you know," she concluded wearily. "Vou compelled nie to leave tho Venezuelan legation by your espionage, but In the crowded hotel to which 1 moved I had little dif ficulty avoiding your Mr. Hastings, your Mr. Illalr and your Mr. Johnson, so I came and went freely without your knowledge. The escape of the prince from prison you arranged, bo you understand all of that, as well as tho meeting and attempted signing of the compact, and the rapid recovery of Senor Alvarez. And, after all, It was my fault thnt our plans failed, be cause If I had not been born un easy as to your condition and had not made the mistake of going to the de scried little house where you wero a prisoner, tho plans would have sue ce ded, tho compact been signed." "I'm beginning to understand," said Mr. Grimm gravely, and a wistful, ten der look crept Into his eyes. "If It hud not been for that net of consid eration and kindness to me " "We would have succeeded In spite of you," explained Isabel. "We, were afraid of you, Mr. Grimm. It was a compliment to you that wo considered It necessary to account for your whereabouts at the time of the sign ing of tho compact." "And If you had succeeded." re marked Mr. Grimm, "the whole civi lized world would have come to war." "I never permitted myself to think of It that way," she replied frankly. "JuBt a word of assurance now," she weut on after a moment. "The Latin compact has been definitely given up; the plan has been dismissed, thunks to you; the peace of the world Is unbroken. And who am I? I know you have wondered; I know your agents have scoured the world to find In a Stride He out. I am the daughter of a former Italian ambassador to the Court of St. JamcaJ My mother was an English woman. I was born and received my early education In England, hence my perfect knowledge of that tongue. In Rome I am, or have been, alas, the Countess Rosa d'Orsettl; now I am an exile with a price on my head. That Is all. except for several years 1 was a trusted agent of my government, and a friend of my queen." Sho rose and extended both hands graciously. Mr. Grimm seized the slender white fingers and stood with eyes fixed upon her. Slowly a flush crept Into her pallid cheeks, and she bowed her head. "Wonderful woman!" he said softly. "I Bhall ask a favor of you now," sho went on gently. "Let all this that you have learnod take the place of whatever you expected ti- loarn, and go. Believe me, there can only be one result If you meet If you meet the Inventor of tho wireless cap upon which so much was staked, and so much lost." Sho shuddered a little, then raised the blue-gray eyes be seechingly to his face. "Please go." Go! The word straightened Mr. Grimm in his tracks and he allowed her hands to fall limply. Suddenly his face grew hard. In the ecstasy of adoration he had momentarily forgot ten his purpose here. His eyes loBt tholr ardor; his nerveless hands dropped beside him. "No," ho said. "You must you must," sho urged gently. "I know what It means to you. You feel It your duty to unravel the secret of the percussion cap? You can't; no man can. No one knows the inventor more Intimately than I, and even I couldn't get it from him. There are no plans for It In existence, and even If there were be would no more sell them than you would hare accepted a fortune at the hands of Prince d'Abruzzl to remain silent. The compact has failed; you did that. The agents have scattered gone to other duties. That Is enough." "No," said Mr. Grimm. There wa a strange fear tearing at his heart, "No one knows the Inventor more in timately that I." "No," he said again. "I won from my government a prom ise to be made good upon a condition I must fulfill that condition." ' "Won't you go If you know you will be killed," and suddenly her face turn ed scarlet, "and that your life Is dear to me?" "No." Isabel dropped upon her knees be fore him. "This Inventor this man whom you Insist on seeing Is half Insane with disappointment and anger," she rush ed on desperately. "Remember that a vast fortune, honor, lame were at his finger tips when you you placed them beyond his reach by the destruc tion of the compact. IIo has sworn to kill you." "I can t go!" "If I tell you that of the two hu man beings In this world whom I love this man Is one?" "No." A shuffling step sounded In the ball way Just outside. Mr. Grimm Btepped back from the kneeling figure, and turned to face tho door with his re volver ready. "Great God!" It was a scream of agony. "Ho Is my brother! Don't you see?" She came to her feet and went Btag gcrlng across to the door. The key clicked In the lock. "Your brother!" "He wouldn't listen to me you wouldn't listen to me, and now and now! God have mercy!" There was a Bharp rutlllng. a clam or at the door, and Isabel turned to Mr. Grimm mutely, with arms out stretched. The revolver barrel clicked tinder his hand, then, after a moment, he replaced the weapon In his pdeket. "Please open the door," he request ed quietly. "He'll kill you!" she screamed. Exhausted, helpless, she leanrd against a chnlr with her (ace In her hands. Mr. Grimm went to her sud denly, tore the hands from her face, an.l -met the tear-stained eyes. "1 love you," he said. "I want you to know that!" "And I love you that's why It mat ters so." leaving her there, Mr. Grimm strode straight to the door and threw It open. He saw only the outline of a thin little man of Indeterminate age, Was Beside Her. then came a blinding flush under his eyes, and he leaped forward. Thoro was a short, sharp struggle, and both went down. The revolver! Ho must get that! He reached for it with the one Idea of disarming this madman The muzzle was thrust toward him, ho threw up hU arm to protect his head, and then came a second flash. Instantly ho felt the figure In his arms grow limp; and after a moment he rose. The face of the man on the floor was pearly gTay; and a thin, scarlet thread flowed from his temple. He turned toward Isabel. She lay near the chair, a little crumpled heap. In a stride he was beside her, mid lifted her head to his knee. The blue gray eyes opened Into his once, then they closed. Sho had fainted. The first bullet had pierced her arm; It was otily a flesh wound. He lifted her gently and placed her on a couch, aft er which he disappeared Into another room. In a little while there came the cheerful tlng-a-llng of a telephone bell. "Is tills the county constable's of fice?" he Inquired. "Well, there's been a little shootlug accident at the Murdock Williams' place, five miles out from Alexandria on the old Haiti more Road. Please send some of your men over to take charge. Two hours from now call up Mr. Grimm at Secret Service headquarters In Wash ington and he will explain. Good-by." And a few minutes lator Mr. Grimm walked along the road toward an au tomobllo a hundred yards away, bear ing Miss Thorne In his arms. The chauffeur cranked the machine and climbed to his seat. "Washington!" directed Mr. Grimm. "Never mind the speed laws." THE END. For the The Yarn Charm to Find Partners. One of the oldest stuuts for Hallo we'en was to find one's future mate by the aid of a ball of yarn. A maiden was to take a ball of yarn and toss it through an open window and then hold the end lu her hand and walk away If she was to carry with in the year the ball would be picked up by the man Inside, who began to wind up the yarn and thus draw her back to him. A young matron should ubo this method of flndlug partners for her Hallowe'en supper, which Is to be served at 8:30. Knowing the preference of her guests, she will have the" right man for each maid conceal ed In the garage. One at a time the girls will be given a ball of warn, there being one ball for each girl, and she Is to go alone through the yard, which is to be llghled only with "Jacks" In the trees. When the man winds up his maiden, who Is Instruct ed not to drop her end no matter what happens, they will go out a rear door of the garago and Into the bouse by a sldo entrance Then the next man Is slipped Into tho hiding place and another girl Bturted to meet her fate. There ure to be ten couples, so this will add much to the fun aud mystery. If the details as given here are not practical, the same scheme may be worked by throwing the ball over a transom or over a bannister down stairs. Recipe for Chop Suey. I give the recipe for chop suey which Is flno to serve at Hallowe'en feasts. The rice is to bt eaten with chop sticks, which aro .o be retained as eouvenlrs, each pair being tied with red ribbon. One five-pound chicken. A pound and a half of tender beef. One pound of celery. Two pounds of bean sprouts. One ounce of Chinese sauce, known as boI. One can of mushrooms. Salt, thickening. Cook the chicken and beef together till they are very tender, tako out all the bones, add the mushrooms, onions sliced In very thin slices, tho celery sliced in thin pieces, and do not cook very long; then add the bean sprouts and the thickening, and last the sol. Enough for ten people To obtain the bean sprouts soak benns In water till they absorb it all, then keep them damp and in a very warm place. The sprouts come very quickly, so there is plenty of time to prepare them. Sol may bo purchased at a large grocery or at a Chinese store; lacking these, use Worcester shire sauce. Serve the chop suey In bowls with rice and the tea in cups without handles. For the table cen terpiece have a witch's kettle with In cense burning Inside. New and Old Trick. "We are tired oi bobbing for ap ples," said a young devotee of the de partment who was asking me for new stunts for Oct. 31. Hut did you ever bob for them prepared In this way? In a light zinc tub which may be brought from the laundry put at least InvalicTs Anything that tends to tho comfort and ease of an Invalid, who may for a long period be confined to bed, Is well worth attention, and our sketch Illustrates a capital suggestion that may be carried out without much diffi culty. The bed should be placed In the corner of the room against the wall, and a shelf about nine Inches wide by two feet six Inches long, fastened to the wall In the position shown. This may be easily done, and a piece of board of the size mentioned should be procured, and three Btrong metnl brackets of the nature Indicated by dlugrnm "A" bn the sketch fastened on underneath. Brackets of this kind can be obtained for very little at any Ironmonger's, and tho shelf cau tho 1 wm- Green Is the ruling favorite for even ing gowns. Three piece suits of serge aro in great flavor. White serge has Jumped Into favor with a bound. Skirts show a decided tendency to ward drapery. There seems to be no end of black velvet Bashes. Satins contlnuo to bold a firm posi tion In fashion. Rows of tiny buttons are used on wraps and gowns. The dlrectolre coat may be a fea ture of full fURhions. There Is again springing up a feeling In favor of boarders. Mission handles aro still in excellent slylo for umbrellas. Each week sees long skirts coming iVJie uif. tore into favor. y ...r.. 'KtS. "fill s- 11 1 1 :i 1 E ' 2fM? """" a Hostess a dozen red apples, and In four of them conceal a ring, a thimble, a but ton and a coin. Just press the arti cles carefully Into the fruit and the mutilation Is not discernible In the water. The boy or girl getting the ring will be married or engaged with in the year. The thimble means no such luck; the one getting It must remain single or unattached for an other twelve months. The coin means wealth and the button means one must win tame or fortune by one's own exertions. Who remembers the old trick of trying to get a coin out of a pan of flour with the teeth, the hands being tied behind the back? This Is a laugh able sight. Sometlmos a wedding ring Is concealed in the flour, and The one getting It will bo married within the year. Of course, tho coin denotes wealth. Party Given In Barn. I must tell you briefly of one pnrty to be given In a barn, where the deco rations fill be branches of at.ttimn leaves, which remnln brilliant In the country far longer than In town. There are to be grinning "Jacks" set on posis along the driveway, and In side the barn all the lanterns are to have electric lights to avoid possibil ity of tire. Cucumbers, squash and many oilier vegetables are to be made Into lanterns and candle holders. The hostess is to dress as an old witch, nnd all tho girls are to have witches' hats, surmounted by black cats, pre sented to them. The hoys will wenr hats of scarlet und adorned with horns. A Chinese feast Is to be served at a table where black and scarlet drag- Litis will run rampant. The part of the barn reserved for the party Is to be guy with Chinese lanterns, fans, screens and parasols. Hallowe'en Cakes. Often a few novel recipes have to creep Into the department, bo now for these very unusual and seasonable rules. First for "Jack o'lantern" cakes: From a plain loaf cake baked In a sheet cut pumpkin-shaped cakes about two and a half Inches wide and two Inches thick and Ice with frosting colored yellow, with the yolk of eggs or with saffron. While the Icing I still moist. Insert two small red can dles for the eyes and nose aud a row of them for the teeth. For the "clock faced" cakes, buy a few vanilla wafers, coat with vanilla frothing and let them dry. With melt ed chocolate and a new small paint brush you make the numerals of the clock, the hands In the center point ing to midnight, "the witching hour Children ndore these confections. which require only a little time and patience. I am sure every mother Is more than willing to do this. MADAME MERRI. Coats for Children. For children little couts of taffeta are in vogue. A pretty little model of dark navy blue silk has collar and cuffs of brighter blue, edged with sil ver buttons. Bed Shelf 2 facr Cinchcs - be (securely nailed to tho wall. Diagram "IV shows the under sldo of the shelf and Indicates tho posi tion in w hich the three brackets should bo fastened. For appearance sake, a little flounce of some pretty cre tonne can he tacked all round the edge of the shelf, and tho material may easily be arranged so thnt It forms a tiny frill at the top with a flounce hanging down underneath', A shelf of this kind will prove the greatest boon to an Invalid, as on It may be kept we!l within reach all those little things In tho shape of books, papers, watch, glass, etc.. that are always so necessary for the In valid to have handy, and who may thus obtain them with the leat pos sible exertion. VARIETY IN FALL COLLARS Simple and Effective Designs Seen In Latest Offerings of Dame Fashion. A large variety of collars Is being shown for fall. While tho newer mod els do not show the regulation sailor collar, many are made with the new ahnped Biilior, which almost reaches to the waist line, but Is considerably nar rower th it 11 the old style. Large, round collars and pointed collars-are also much in evidence. Hoods and hood efforts are meeting wllh considerable success. Some of the, coats have tho collars tnado.so as to fiavo an adjustable hood which can bo used to cover tbo head, when de sired. When unbuttoned It forms a Bailor collar. Double collars, consisting of a deep capo collar coming over tho shoulders and a small turndown collar, usually of another material, are alsrk'secn In tho lines. While the majority of coatB havo the turndown' collar, a- few are mndo with tbo standing military col lar. DRINK HABIT AMONG WOKEN Americans Consume More Liquor Than Do Their English Sisters Much of It la Done Openly. Amerlcnn women drink as much as, If not more than. English women, ac cording to Dr. John D. Quackeiibos, who has made a study of the ques tion. I'nllke Dr. Murray Leslie, a ln don physician, who asserted that there Is far more Kecret drinking among women than lis generally known, Dr. Quuckenbos says that In America women make no effort to conceal their drinking, but proclaim their overfond iiess for highballs, cocktails and chain, pagne by Indulging to excess In pub lic cafes, rpRtattrants and the big ho tels. Smoking, too, ho says, is a vlco coupled with the drink habit that Is working havoc among women as well us giiis. "There Is not so much secret drink ing hero as In England," Dr. Quucken bos said, "because women can be seen any night drinking what they fancy and without trying to keep any ono from knowing what they are drinking. American women lu doing anything good or bad generally ro to extremes, and my experience lu New York shows It Is very difficult to control tho drink habit a more; them because of their un willingness to make any social sacri fices, "For Instance, they keep goliig to so cial functions where punch and other alcoholic drinks me served, and they give wine dinners themselves. They will play with lire and tempt Provi dence continually. There is one wom an now who Is a patient of mine who will take as many as ten glasses of brandy at a Bitting. And the most un fortunate thing about It U that the habit Is developing among young girls, and debutnntes at their luncheons and dinners couple It with smoking cig arettes and playing games of chance for money. "Tho women of the middle classes In America drink beer, but not to ex cess, as a rule. It Is a custom to have beer with dinners, and If the stuff were pure the harm would be less than It Is. "Hut tobacco Is doing Just as much harm as alcohol, for the two go to gether. And 1 know that too much tobacco leads to too much alcohol, because the tobacco habit depresses tho nerve centers and causes a de mand In the system for an antidote, and tl antidote for tobacco poison is whisky. "1 can safely say that 75 per cent, of the drink troubl among men, and women, too, Is due to tobacco. Where women are not so particular about concealing the fact that they drink they are careful to conceal the fact that they smoke. "I know that many raise the ques tion as to whether a woman hasn't as much right to smoke as a man. It doesn't turn on the question of moral right. The answer turns on the ef fect smoking has on the woman's char acter. It destroys womanliness." Drunkenness Not Found Alone. Drunkenness is never to be found alone, never unaccompanied by some horrid crime, If not by a wicked crowd of them. Go to the house of the drunknrd, consider his family, look on his affairs, listen to tho sound that proceeds from the house of drunkenness as you pass, survey the Insecurity of the public ways aud of the night streets. Go to the hospital, to tho houso of charity and the bed of wretchedness. Enter the courts of Justice, the prison and the condemned cell. Look at the haggard features of the lamed crlmlnni. Ask all these why they exist to distress you, nnd you will everywhere be answered by tales and recitals of drunkenness. And the miseries and the vices and the sorrow, and scenes of Buffering that have harrowed up your soul were, almost without exception, cith er prepared by drinking or were un dergone for procuring the meuns for satisfying this vice which sprang from It. Archbishop Vllathrope. German Social Life. Writing on German social life In the English press recently, Sir Henry Johnston says: "I am told by so many thoughtful Germans that the abuse of alcohol still strangles the mental and physical efficiency of a large proportion of German men In the upper and lower classes, mat I .. . . i i i .. 1 1 am compeiiea to oeneve in un mi hlch Is only Just lessoning Its hold over our own people, and which Is be ing fiercely chased out of tho United States. Yet I am pleased to state that I never encountered a drunken person In Germany throughout my re cent tour, though I was aware from the newspapers nnd reviews that a growing Indignation was making It- elf felt among the tiourgeosie ana professional classes npalnst the cureless eighteenth-century iraui- thins of German studenthood." Temperance In Hawaii. The friends of temperance In Ha nd nm havlna a difficult time to prevent the Blow but steady extinc tion of the native race by ins muta tion of the vices of the white man. At the hist meeting of tho Anil Saloon eague In Honolulu the president mailo eiious charges of apathy or hostility ..ninci tim tuihltc officials of the Islands. Dr. Doremus Scudder, speak ing at tho same meeting, extolled tho local option Idea; frankly recognized the soclnl appeal of the saloon, which must be conserved In nil rational at tempts to rival It, and told of his sur prlso In finding saloons In tho outly ing sections of the Islands Which could not exist wero tbo Christian land owners nnd well-to-do proprietors hos tile to the liquor drinking habit. "Catch-My-Pal" Crusade. The "Catch-My Pal" crusade In Lon don has had considerable success. Over 1,500 people took the workers' pledge In the first few dayB. STATE CAPITAL NEWS Outside Firms Withdraw. Four manufacturing firms which Bent candy Into the Stato under a guarantee that it compiled with the laws were forced to withdraw their goods from sale, because chemlHts' re ports to Dairy aud Food Commissioner Eoust detuonstiated that the candy was adulterated. Over two hundred samples of candies were taken In vari ous parts of the State this fall and the chemical tests showed five in all were not up to tho simulants required. In one case a Pennsylvania manufac turer was sued and fined, bis wares being taken off the market Immediate ly after, but in tho other four In stances, all of which occurred In Alle gheny county, It was found that mer chants were selling goods under a guarantee from the makers that it would be in accord with tho Statu laws. The merchants were not ar rested, but were required to ship all the candy buck to the factory. Wants Old Ticket Redeemed. A supplemental complaint was filed with tho Stato Railroad ('ommlHBlon here by W, H. Holt against the ln cieit: rs of siihurhun rules of faro on the Philadelphia & Reading Hallway outside of Philadelphia. He filed a complaint some time iiko signed by six hundred persons. The commission has been asked by C. W. RittcnhouHe. of S'Tanton, to Investigate refusal of the Pennsylvania Railroad to redeem a ticket bought September .10, 18X0, at Tyrone. The railroad contends thVt punch marks show the ticket to havo been used in part and that the record of the su'o lias been lost. Harrlsburg Curbing Condemned. Contractors for curbing and paving of llairisburg city streets have been thrown Into a panic by the strict in spection methods adopted by Highway Commissioner W. V. Caldwell. More than two thousand feel of granite curbing on Seneca street have been condemned, some of it after being lu place, aud sections of asphalt paving are being Inspec ted by experts. Dairy Inspection. Dr. C. J. Marshall, State veterinari an, who has taken over the direction of the State's dairy inspection serv ice, conducted until a few months ago by the Stuto Department of Health, has received close to three hundred responses from veterinarians through out the State who have expressed a willingness to co-operate with the In spection work and to make inspections in their districts for tho State. Disturbed By Church Rule. Members of tho United Brethren Church In this vicinity are consider ably disturbed over the action of the conference at Reading directing that the camp meeting at Mt. Gretna be discontinued unless the controversy between the clericul and lay members ends. This action has been communi cated to llarrlsburg members of the church, by the conference ollicers, and meetings will be held lu au effort to reach un agreement. Harrlsburg'i Open Air School. Tho city school authorities have established an open air school for children under the plan adopted In Philadelphia, those having a tendency to tuberculosis being cared for In this manner. Tho school has proved a great bucccbs and another probably w ill be opened. Pennsylvania Charters. The following charters huvo been Is sued: Smlthton Water Company, Smithton, capital, $:i(l,0u0, and Salts burg Electric Company, Saltsbtirg, Indiana County, $5,000. Charters were also Issued to six water companies to operate In townships of Washington and Allegheny Counties, with head quarters at McDonald, tho capital of ouch to bo $5,000. Pastors Petition Wilson. The llarrlsburg Ministerial Associa tion passed resolutions requesting Sec retary of Agriculture James Wilson not to preside at the brewers' national convention at Chicago. Tho resolu tions will be forwarded to the Secre tary. State Engages Alexjndsr. If arrangements made by Samuel D. Ramlil, Superintendent of Public Grounds and Muildlugs, ure ratified by the State Hoard, John W. Alexander, of New York, will paint the mural decorations for the north corridor of the capitol. One Vote Nominates Man. It. II. Koch, Republican and Citizens' candidate for Judge of Schuylkill coun ty, was declared the Prohibition noral neo as well, because on the o'.llclul re turns he received a single vote undr thnt party caption. Centipede Is Harmless. The centipede or "thousand legger," as It Is better known in many parts of th.o State, Is Just as harmless In these latitudes as a butterfly according to a bulletin which, Stnte Zoologist II. A. Surface has completed. The poison with which Keystone State centipedes nyo credited with Is not strong enough, to harm anyone, hut to enable them to overpower their enemies or prey. Dr. Surface says that the prejudice against the Insects is unreasonable and that tey dctroy much vermin. Complaint Cf Frankford Fare. Rev. John I). Ijilrd, of Philadelphia, has filed a complaint with tno State Railroad Commission, complaining of the rate of fare on tho Pennsylvania Rnd Philadelphia & Reading from Rroad Street Station to Frankford, and attacking tho Heading service. The companies will bo asked to make answers. Capital Stock Doubled. Tho Reading Hardware Company, of Reading, filed notlco of an Increase of its Brock from $710,000 to St.fi 17,000.