Bellefonte, Pa., Au; 0 FRECKLES By Gene Stratton Porter COPYRIGHT, 1904, BY DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO. [Continued from last week. | SYNOPSIS. Freckles, a homeless boy, is hired by Boss McLean to guard the expensive tim- ber in the Limberlost from timber thieves. Freckles does his work faithfully, makes friends with the birds and yearns to know more about nature. He lives with Mr. and Mrs, Duncan. He resolves to get books and educate himself. He becomes interested in a huge pair of vultures and calls his bird friends his “chickens.” Some of the trees he is guarding are worth $1.000 each. Freckles’ books arrive. He receives a call from Wessner. Wessner attempts to bribe Freckles to betray his trust, and Freckles whips him. McLean overhears them and witnesses the fight. bot in there. You couldn't be expected to bear it for hours and not he moving. | can take you back around the trail almost 10 where you were. Then you cau get up iu the carriage. aud | will go tind the Bird Woman.” “You'll get killed if you do! When she stays this long. it means that she has a focus on something. You see. when she gets a focus. and lies in the weeds und water for hours. and the sun bakes ber. and things crawl over her, and then some one comex along and scares her bird away just ax she has it coaxed up—why, she kills them If I melt, you won't go after her 8he’s probably blistered and half eaten up, but she will never quit until she is satisfied.” “Then it will be safer to be taking care of you.” suggested Freckles. “Now you're talking sense!” sald the ange! “May 1 try to help your arm?’ he asked “Have you uny iden how it hurts’ she parried “A little,” said Freckles. “Well, Mr. McLean said we'd prob- ably find his son here" — “His son!" cried Freckles. CHAPTER VIII THE BIRD WOMAN, RECKLES was amazed to hear bimself escusing. “It was so “That's what he said. And that you | would do anything you could for us. and that we could trust you with our lives. But | would have trusted yon anyway, if t hado't konown a thing about you. Say. vour father is ram paging proud of you, isn’t he?" “1 don't know,” Freckles. “He's so proud of you he is ali swelled up like the toad in Aesop's fa bles. If you have ever had an arm hurt Illke this and ean do anvthing why. for pity sake do it! She turned back her sleeve, holding out to I'reckles an arm of palest cameo Freckles unlocked his case nnd band ‘aged the ugly. ragged wound. He worked with trembling fingers and =n | face tense with enrnestness “Is it feeling any better?” he asked. “Oh. it's well now!” cried the angel. “It doesn't hurt at all nny wore.” The velvety touch of her warm acm was tingling in Freckles’ finger tips, Dainty Juces and tine white stuffs peeped through tier torn dress. ‘There were beautiful rings ou her fingers. Every article ahout ber was o* the finest material and in excellent taste. There was the trembling Limberlost guard in hix coarse clothing, with his cotton rags and bis old pail of swamp water. [Freckles was sufficiently ac- customed to contrasts to notice them and sufficiently fine to be hurt by them always. He lifted his cyes to hers with a shadowy pain in them and found them of serene, unconscious purity. “We must go and find the carriage,” said the angel, rising. Freckles led the way, sharply watch- ing every step. He went as near the log as be felt that he dared and with a little searching found the carriage. “This is a shame!" said Freckles. “You'll never be coming here again.” “Oh, yes, I shall!” said the angel. Freckles barely escaped crying out for joy. “Then don’t you ever be torturing answered the dazea | to think about you while you are Freckles smiled quizzically. “Freckles?” she guessed, with a peal of laughter. "And mine is"— “I'm knowing yours,” {interrupted Freckles. “l don't believe you do. What is it?" asked the girl. “You won't be getting angry? “Not until I've bad the water at least.” It was Freckles’ turn to laugh. He whipped off his big, floppy straw hat, stood uncovered before her and said in the sweetest of all the sweet tones of his voice, “There's nothing you could be hut the Swamp Angel.” The girl mughed happily. Once out of her sight Freckles ran every step c¢f the way to the cabin. Mrs. Duncan gave him a small bucket of water, cool from the well. He car ried it in the crook of his right arm and a basket filled with bread and butter, cold meat, apple pie and pickles in his left hand. “Picklex are kind o' cooling,” said Mrs. Duncan. The angel was on her knees reach- ing for the bucket as he came up, “Be drizking slow.” he cautioned her. Freckles stood blinking in the daz- zling glory of her smile. “Mercy!” she exclaimed. “1 think 1 had best be naming you ‘the angel'— my guardian angel.” *Yis,” sald Freckles. "1 look the character every day, but today most emphatic!” “Angels don’t go by looks," laughed the girl. Your father told us you had been scrapping. But he told us why I'd gladly wear all your cuts and bruises if | could do anything that would make my father look as pea- cocky as yours did. He strutted about proper. | never saw any one look prouder.” “Did he say he was proud of me" marveled Freckles. “He didot need to.” answered the angel. “He was radiating pride from | every pore’ The unzel spread the lunch on the carriage seat. The daintiest parts sue could select she carefully put back into the baskei. ‘The rest she ate. As ne watched ber with famished eyes Freckles told ber of his birds, flowers and books. Suddenly the angel cried. "There comes the Bird Woman!" She was staggering under a load of cameras and paraphernalia. Freckles took all be could carry and helped her into the carriage. Soon they were out of the swamp. Then he showed them how to reach the chicken tree from the outside, in- dicated a cooler place for the horse and told them how the nest time they came the angel could find bis room while she waited. “Were you forgetting Little Chick. en's picture?’ Freckles asked the Rird Woman. “Why do you call the baby vulture ‘Little Chicken? * she asked “Twas Duncan began it.” said Freckles. “You see, through the fierer cold of winter the birds of the swamp were almost starving. It is mighty lonely here. and they were all the com pany | was having. [ got to carrying seraps and grain down to them. Dun can was that ginerons he was giving me of his wheat and corn from his chickens’ feed. and he ealled the hirds me swamp chickens Then when these big black fellows came, Mr. M- Lean said they were our nearest kind to some in the old world that they called ‘Pharoah’s Chickens. and he ralled mine ‘Freckles® Chickens.” “Good enough!" cried the Bird Wo. man. “Yon must shoot something for | them occasionally, and I'll bring more | food when I come. If yon will help me k»sep them until 1 get my series. I'l! give you a copy of ecacl study | make. mounted in a book." “I'll he doing me very hest,” prom- ised the boy, and from the deeps he meant it. “1 wonder if that other egg is going to hatch?’ mused the Bird Woman. “l am afraid not. It should bave been i angel. “What's your name? |[ want | out today. Isn't it a beauty? I never | saw either an egg or the young before. | They are rare this far north.” i “So Mr. McLean said,” answered | Freckles. ! The Bird Woman gave him her hand . at parting, and Freckles joyfully real- | ized that here was going to be another - person for him to love. Freckles | couldn't remember, after they had | driven away, that they had even no- _ticed his missing band, and for the | first time in his life he had forgot- | ten it. | When the Bird Woman and the an- | gel were well on the home road the: angel told of the little corner of para- ' dise into which she had strayed and | of her new name. “Did you know Mr. McLean had a son?” asked the angel. *Isn't the little accent he has and the way he twists a sentence too dear? And isn't it too old fashioned and funny to hear him call his father mister?’ “It sounds too good to be true,” said the Bird Woman, answering the last question first. “I am so tired with these present day young men that patronizingly call their fathers ‘dad, ‘governor,’ ‘old man’ and ‘old chap’ that the boy's attitude of respect and deference struck me as being as fine as silk. There must be something rare about that young man.” But she did not find it necessary to tell the angel that for several years she had known the man who so proud. Iy proclaimed himself Freckles’ father to be a bachelor and a Scotchman. his angel, and he was dreaming of naught but blind, silent worship. He finished the happiest day of his life, and that night he went back to the swamp as if drawn by a magnet. That Wessner would try for his revenge he knew. That he would be abetted by Black Jack was almost certain, but fear had fled the happy heart of Freck- les. He bad kept his trust. He had won the respect of the boss. Nobody could ever wipe from his heart the flood of holy adoration that had welied up with the coming of his angel. At the edge of the clearing he came out into the bright moonlight, and there sat McLean on his mare. Freck- les hurried up to him. “Is there trouble?” he asked anxious- “That's what 1 wanted to ask you,” said the boss. *I stopped at the cabin to see you a minute before I turned in and they said you had come down here. You must not do it. Freckles.” Freckles stood combing his fingers through Nellie's mane, and the dainty creature was twisting her head around to his caresses. He pushed back his bat and looked up into McLean's face “It's come to the ‘sleep with one eye open. sir. I'm not looking for any- thing to be happening for a week or two, but it's bound to come. and soon If I'm to keep me trust as I've prom ised you and meself. I've to live here mostly until the gang comes. You must be knowing that. sir.” i “I'm afraid it's true, Freckles.” said McLean. “And I've decided to double the guard until we get here. It will only be a few weeks now, and I'm so anxious for you that you must not be left alone further. If anything should happen to you. Freckles, it would spoi: one of the very dearest plans of my life.” Freckles heard with dismay proposition to place a second guard “Oh! no, no, Mr. McLean.” he cried “Not for the world! | wouldn't be hnv- ing a stranger around. scaring me birds and tramping up me study and disturbing all me ways for any money’ I am all the guard you need: 1 will he faithful! 1 will turn over the lenxe with no tree missing—on me life, | will! Oh, don’t be sending another man to set them =aying | turned cow ard and asked for belp. It will just kill the honor of me heart if you de it. The oniy thing I want is another gun.” McLean handed a shining big revo! ver down to Freckles. who slipped it beside the one already in his belt. “Freckles.” he said at last, “we never know the timber of a man's soul until something cuts into him deeply and brings the grain out strong. You've the making of a mighty fine piece of furniture, my boy. and you shall have your own way these few weeks vet. Then if you will zo | am going to take you to the city and educate you, and you are to he my son, my Iad-my own son!" Freckles twisted his fingers in Not lie’s mane to steady himself » “But why should you he doing that clr? he faltered. MeLean slid hix arm down about the boy's shoulders nnd gathered him close to him : “Because | love vou, Freckles" ne said simply. McLean tightened his clasp a second longer. then he rode away down the trail. Freckles lifted his hat and faced 1h sky. The harvest moon looked down sheeting the swamp in silver glory. The Limberlost sang her night song The swale softly rustled in the wind Winged things of night brushed his face, and still Freckles gazed upward trying 10 fathom these things which had come to him. To oue above the sky he must make acknowledgment for these miracles. His lips moved and he begun softly: “Thank you for each separate good thing that hus come to me,” he said. “and. above all, for the falling of the feather, for If it didn't really fall from an angel its falling brought an angel, and if it's in the great heart of you to exercise yourself any further about me, oh, do please to be.taking gooll care of her!” [Continued next week.) ne Strangest of Birds. The German emperor was lately the recipient of a pair of very curious birds from the East Indies. The spe- cies is nearly extinct, and it is said that an effort will be made to prevent their becoming entirely so by enfore- ing the laws against hunting them. These birds always travel in pairs and are hardly ever separated. The beak of the male is short and strong, while that of the female is fine, long and curved. The male's work is to break with his strong bill the tough bark of trees in order that his mate may introduce her pointed beak into the holes dug into the trunk by in- sects and so extract food. When the male detects an “Insect haunt” he lays it bare and the female pulls forth the prey with her beak, divides it in two, gives the male his portion and eats the other, continuing the process un- til both have had enough. Consequent- ly the death of one or the other means starvation to the survivor, the female being unable to break the bark of 'rees and the male to take out the prey when its presence is exposed.— Harper's Weekly. | He Got It. “My nephew,” says the bespectacled | pan, “entertained me most generously while I was in New York. He took ne almost every evening to one res- Aaurant or another and I heard several nost lively songs.” “What were they?” asks the other. | “I do not remember them definitely | mt one of them had a refrain which | egan by stating ‘Everybody is En. aged in a Similar Occupation at the | | ! ALAS } Ys TST NE of the most valuanie | ae \/ - 0 ¢. Nl BALI LEP BRC i EB qualities of the housekeeper | is an accurate sense of the proper | amount of material to order or to pre- | pare for a given meal. This sense of | quantity is the basis of successful cater- | ing, professional or domestic. ~Janet M. Hil, | A FEW USES FOR LEFTOVER FRUIT. Ripe fruit is so perishable that a! large supply should never be bought. An orange that shows signs of soften- ing is not fit for food. It should never | be canned or preserved. Perfectly fresh fruit is the only safe kind to can. ' If there is a small dish of canned | fruit with juice, rub the fruit through | a gleve, thicken with cornstarch and | sweeten If necessary, and use as a | sauce for puddings. | Bits of fruit, either fresh or canned, | if put through a sieve may be added | to ice cream when partly frozen, or | poured over It as a sauce when It is | served. A small amount of fruit may be stirred into muffins or small cakes be- fore baking. Often fresh fruit, if a small quantity, is allowed to spoil be- cause there is not enough to go | around. Two or more kinds may be | mixed together very acceptably as a | salad or fruit to serve as a dessert: with cake. i Fruit Whip.—Put a little crushed sweetened fruit in lemonade glasses, | fill up with sweetened whipped cream and serve as an evening dessert with light cakes. | Emergency Salad.—Cut a few bits | of cheese into neat cubes; chop six or eight olives. Break a few English | walnut meats in pleces, a few grapes, seeds and skins remoyed: a banana and orange, a sour pickle cut in thin | slices. Mix all together and fill apple | cups. Cut the stem end off carefully, | scoop out the pulp and fill with the | salad after mixing with mayonnaise | dressing. Put on the lid and serve ! on a paper doiley covered plate. | Lemon Cups for Dressings or Cock- | tails.—When making lemonade save | the best halves by putting them into | cold water. In this way they will keep for several days, and are nice ! to use for hard sauce receptacles or cocktails or fish sauces; any number of ways may be thought of to use them. Lemons may be prepared into lemon sirup and kept indefinitely and are al- ways ready for a quick, cold drink. To a cup of water add a half cup of | sugar and a cup of lemon juice; boll | for ten minutes and bottle for use. | Keep in a cool place. ett hupurcte.. ' HEN ABINET wer - YF +t N ORDER to live efficiently, we must keep ourselves physi- cally freshened and mentally poised. The struggle for mere possession of objects should not master completely our time and strength. The daily routine of work may be our immediate interest, but it Is not the goal, for all work, play, rest and hospitality should combine to make of the home a suitable fortress of strength to the community, standing for wholesome living, clean ideals and un- selfish public service.” LEFT.-OVER FISH. Cold cooked fish may be served in as acceptable a dish as it was In the fresh state. Any bits of fish In too small quantities to use alone are an addition to a salad of potato or other vegetable salads. Mock Lobster~—Melt a tablespoonful of butter in a saucepan or chafing dish, add a cup of stewed tomatoes, one and a half cups of fish shredded, two tablespoonfuls of crumbs, a table- spoonful of butter, salt, paprika and a little Worcestershire sauce. Baked Fish in Pepper Cages.—Care- fully remove the skin and bones from any baked fish and season with salt, pepper and onion juice. Mix with an equal quantity of left. over stuffing, or coarse crumbs, moistened with butter. The mix- ture should be quite moist, if not, add a little milk. Cut lengthwise as many sweet green peppers as needed, remove the seeds, parboil five minutes i and fill with the fish. Put into a ba- king pan, surround with hot water or fish stock and cook until the cases are soft but not broken. . Fish Loaf.—Flake the remnants of any baked fish. To two cups of fish add one cup of the stuffing, or one cup of bread crumbs moistened with melt- ed butter and one beaten egg. Sea- son with salt, pepper and parsley or minced pickle. Turn into a buttered: mold, place in hot water and cook in. a moderate oven for half an hour. Un- mold on a hot platter and serve wit a white sauce, adding a few cooked’ peas or two hard-cooked eggs chopped. Fish and mushrooms is a combina- tion liked by many. Fish hash and fish balls are other dishes which may easily be prepared from cold fish. At the Bird Store Window. The bird store window is an unfail- ing attraction to many people. Per- haps it attracts men more than wom- en, but it is a magnet that draws all | children. Let small boys or girls discover a bird store and they halt and linger | long, wondering over or admiring the strange or beautiful feathered crea- | tures within, and children walking ! with their mother if they should spy | this window are sure to tug her to- | ward it to give them a chance to look in. The bird store window interests ! all children, as it appears to interest | also many grown men who may be | drawn to it by a natural fondness for birds and animals, or be attracted by | the novel or striking character of the exhibit on view. Here, for instance, in this window is a white peacock, a remarkable bird seen with its plumage in whatever form. As with characteristic delibera- tion it walks about with its long tail feathers folded and trailing people stop to look at it, and then let it raise and spread its great white fan ana many more halt and gather in a crowd around the window.—New York Sun. Hurt in the Sequel. Graham Ferguson has just returned after an absence of six months on “the other side.” Fergie did not spend all his time abroad at the home of his Ayrshire ancestors; he visited Swit. zerland and Italy and did not neglect Paris. It was in this famous city that he witnessed a famous sight. “When 1 was in France,” he told a newspaper friend Sunday, “I saw a duel.” “Oh! One of those French duels. eh? Nobody was hurt, I presume?” “You are wrong there. One of the contestants was seriously injured.” “One of the contestants? Surely you mean, a bystander or a second or a surgeon?” “No, sir: one of the duellsts. had a rib broken.” “You astound me! One of those toy rapiers could not smash a rib, surely?” “Rapier, nothing! The brave man's rib was broken in the embrace with his opponent, after the duel was over.” | —Cleveland Plain Dealer. He i 1 . Thick. i “How far is it to the next town?" | inquired the traveler in the mud be- spattered buggy. “'Bout ten mile, mister,” said the farmer by the roadside. “Long miles, 400, [ suppose.” “No, sir, they're not so very long, but vou'll find them pretty blamed "hi oe tank-wagon WAVERLY OIL i 57-25-3m. Casters Need Oil. Oll your casters once in a while and sea how much more easily large pieces of furniture may be moved. Do this at airy rate at housecleaning time, and take care to wipe off any superfluous oil, not only because it would collect dirt if allowed to remain, but also be cause it might drip a little and stain the carpets or rugs. Delicious Dish. Serve pumpkin pie with whipped cream and pecan nuts over the top for a change. To Mothers. Most women suffer both ‘in mind and body during the periods of gestation and confinement. Such suffering can almost invariably be avoided by the use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. [It makes Weak women strong and sick women well. “I will take the opportunity,” writes Mrs. Sarah Keefer, of Johnstown, Som- erset county, Pa., to write to you of the benefit | derived from your good medi- cines. [ took two bottles ot Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, and [I am well again. | took some medicine of our home doctor, but it did not help me. When [ was confined I was not sick in any way: I did not suffer any pain.” Hood's Sarsaparilia. Loss of Appetite Is loss of vitality, vigor or tone. and is often a forerunner of prostrating disease. It is serious and especially so to . that must keep up and doing or get hindhand The best medicine to take for it is the great constitutional remedy, Hood's Sar- saparilla, which purifies and enriches the blood and builds up the whole system. “Since I began taking Hood's Sarsa- rilla my aj ite has greatly increased. Po Denes A I recommend this medicine to all who are suffering from in Sifestion. nervousness or impure blood." m Bell. Jr., 623 Lafayette Av.. Brook vn, N. Y. There is no real substitute for HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA Get it to-day in usual liquid form or chocolated tablets called Sarsatabs. —30.tf Medical. It's A Cure That's Sure FOR- RHEUMATISM, GOUT. SCIATICA. AND LUMBAGO Wi have cured Thousands with JONES BREAK-UP AND IT WILL CURE YOU Always mn stock at SioNEY KRUMRINE, Druggist. Bellefonte, Pa. Wo S— NN oils. WORKS CoO. independent Refiners, PITTSBURG, PA. Also makers of Waverly Special Auto 0il and Waverly Gasolines St. Mary's Beer. The sunshine of lager beer satisfaction radi- ates from every bottle of ELK COUNTY BREWING COMPANY'S EXPORT. glass is a sparkl- exquisite taste any brewer’s sibly create. Our ment is equipped latest mechani- and sanitary de- the art of brew- cently installed a ment ranking Our sanitary ilizing the bottles filled, and the of pasteurizing has been auto- guarantees the our product. We at the brewery tles, as exposure to light Every ing draught of and is as pure as skill can pos- entire establish- with the very cal inventions vices known to ing, having re- bottling equip- second to none. methods of ster- before they are scientific process the beer after it matically bottled lasting purity of bottle our beer in AMBRE bot- injures flavor. ElK County Brewing Company ST. MARYS, PENNSYLVANIA 57-27-14t The Pennsylvania State College. erate. middle of The : Pennsylvania : State : College EDWIN ERLE SPARKS, Ph.D, LL. D., PRESIDENT. Established and maintained by the action of the United States Government and t joint on he FIVE GREAT SCHOOLS—Agriculture, Engineering, Liberal Arts, Mining, and Natural Science, offering thirty-six courses of four years each—Also courses in Home Economics, Industrial Art and Education—TUITION FREE to both sexes; incidental charges mod- for Teachers about the third Monday of catalogue, bulletins, announcements, etc., address Ime eve ; second semester the first ag is CL