coe Bellefonte, Pa., October 25, 1912. 0 FRECKLES By Gene Stratton- Porter COPYRIGHT. 1904, BY DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO. 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. Heo resolves to get books and educate himself. palr 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 Freckles’ honesty saves a precious tree, He finds the nest of the vultures and is visited by a beautiful young girl. 8he calls Freckles McLean's son. Freckles calls her “the angel” and helps the Bird Woman in taking photographs. McLean promises to adopt Freckles. Freckles and the angel become very friendly. Assisted by the Bird Woman, they drive Wessner and Black Jack, tim- ber thieves, from the Limberlost. McRean fears more trouble, but Freckles insists upon being the sole guard of the timber. Freckles calls upon the angel's father. The angel receives him as her equal, and her father is kind. Mrs. Duncan has ex- citing adventures in the Limberlost, The Bird Woman and the angel again visit Freckles, and Freckles falls in love with the angel. The angel kisses him. Freckles is bound and gagged by Black Jack's gang, and the timber thieves start feliing a very valuable tree. Wessner is to kill Freckles after the tree is stolen. The angel makes a daring effort to save Freckles and the tree. McLean's men, notified by the angel, rush to save Freckles. All the timber thieves except Black Jack are captured. Freckles guards the angel against Black Jack's vengeance. He tells McLean of his hopeless love for the angel. Black Jack is killed by a rattlesnake. The Bird Woman gets a photograph of the baby vulture. Freckies and the ange! find & valuable tree. [Continued from last week.] “Dear Freckles,” she said, “there Is a story In your eyes this morning, tell me?” Freckles drew a breath. “Angel,” he begged, “be generous! Be thinking of me a little. I'm so homesick and worn out, dear angel, be giving me back me promise. Let me go?” “Why, Freckles!" faltered the angel. “You don't know what you are asking. ‘Let you go [I cancot. 1 love you better than any one, Freckles, 1 think you are the very finest person 1 ever knew. 1 have our lives all planned, I want you to go to be educated and learn all there is to know about sing: ing just as soon as you are well enough. By the time you have com pleted your education I shall have finished college, and then 1 want,” she choked on it a second. “I want you to be my real knight, Freckles, and come to me and tell me that you—like me—a little. 1 have been counting on you for my sweetheart from the very. first, Freckles, | can't give you up unless you don’t like me. Rut yon do like me—just a little—don't you, Freckles?" Freckies lay whiter than the cover- let, his eyes on the ceiling and his breath wheezing. ‘I'he angel awaited his ahswer a second, and when none came, she dropped ber crimsoning face beside him on the pillow and whis- long, wavering pered: “Freckles, I-I'm trying to make love to you. Can't you help me just a little bit? it's awful bard all alone! 1 don't know how, when | really mean it, but Freckles, I love you. 1 must have you, and now 1 guess—I guess maybe I'd better kiss you next.” She bravely laid her feverish, quiv- ering lips on his. Her breath, like clover bloom, was in bis wostrils, and her hair touched his face. “Freckles,” she panted, “Freckles! 1 didn’t think it was in you to be | mean!" “Mean, angel! Mean to you?" gasp- ed Freckles. “Yes,” sald the angel, “downright mean. When one kisses you, if youn bad any mercy at all you'd kiss back, Just a little bit. Now, I'm going to try it over, and | want you to help me a little. You aren't too sick to help me just a little, Freckles?” — CHAPTER XXI. -- She hair and held water to his lips. t seemed an age before he reached for took his hand and leaned upon It, “Teil me, Freckles,” she whispered He becomes interested in a huge’ “If 1 ean.” sald Freckles, in biting agony. “It's just this. Angels are from | tbove. Outcasts are from below You've a sound body and you're bean tifulest of ali. You have everything that loving, careful raising and money can give you. | have so much lesg than nothing that | don’t suppose | had any right to be horn, It's a sure thing—nobody wanted me afterward, 80, of course, they didn’t before Some of them shoulda have been telling you long ago.” “If that's all you have to tell, Freckles, I've known that quite awhile,” said the angel stoutly. “Mr. McLean told my father. and he told me. That only makes me love you more, to pay for all you've missed.” “Then I'm wondering at you.” said Freckles, in a voice of awe. “Can't You see that if you were willing and your father would come and offer you to me, | couldn't be touching the soles of your feet, in love—me, whose people brawled over me, cut off me hand, and throwed me away to freeze and to die! Me, who has no name Just as much because I've no right to any. as because 1 don’t know it. When 1 was little, | planned to find me father and mother when I grew up. Now | know me mother deserted me, and me father was maybe a thief and surely a liar. The pity of me suffering and the watching over me has gone to your head, dear angel, and it's me must be think. : for you. If you could be forgetting me lost hand, where I was raised, and that 1 had no name to give you, and if you would be taking me as 1 am. some day people such as mine must be might come upon you. I used to pray ivery night and morning and many times the day to see me mother. risk the sight of her. possible, angel! your dear head. Oh, do. for mercy sake, kiss me once more and be let- ting me go!" “Not for a minute!” cried the angel. '"Tain’t no ways “Not for a minute, if those are all | the reasons you kave. There are thousands of young couples who come to this country and start a family with none of their relatives here. Chi- cago is a big city, and grown people could be wiped out in a lot of ways. and who would there ever be to find to whom their little children belonged? It's all so plain to me. Oh, if I could only make you see!" She buried her face in the pillow and presently lifted it. transfigured. , “Now I have it!" she cried. “Oh. dear heart! I can make it so plain! Freck- les, can you imagine you see the old Limberlost trail? Well, when we fol- lowed it, you know, there were places where ugly prickly thistles overgrew the path, and you went ahead with your club and bent them back to keep them from stinging through my cloth- ing. Other places there were great shining pools where lovely, snow white lilies grew, and you waded in and gathered them for me. Oh, dear heart, don’t you see? It's this! Everywhere the wind carried that thistiedown. oth- , er thistles sprang up and grew prick- les and wherever those lily seeds sank to the mire the pure white of other lilies bloomed. But, Freckles, there was never n place anywhere about the Limberlost. or in the whole world. ‘where the thistledown floated and sprang up and blossomed into white lilies! Thistles grow from thisties and lilies grow other lilies. Dear Freckies, think hard! You must see it! You are lily, straight through! You never, nev- er could have drifted from the thistle patch, “Where did you get the courage to £0 into the Limberlost and face its ter- rors? You inberited it from the blood of a brave father, dear heart. Where did you get the pluck to hold for over a year a job that few men would have taken at all? You got it from a plucky mother, you bravest of hoys. You wad- ed single handed inte a man almost twice your size and fought ike u demon, just at the suggestion that you could be deceptive and dishonest. Could your mother or your father have been untruthful? Here you are, so hungry and starved out that you are dying for love. Where did you get all that capacity for loving? You didn't inherit it from hardened. heartless people who would distigure you and | purposely leave you to die, that's one sure thing. Yet you will spend miser- able years torturing yourself with the idea that your own mother might have cut off that hand. Shame on you, | Freckles! Your mother would have done this"— The angel deliberately turned back | the cover, slipped up the sleeve and ! laid her lips on the scars. “Freckles.” she cried. “come to your senses! Be a thinking, reasoning , man! You just must see it! Like breeds like in this world! be some sort of reproduction ot your parents, and | am not afraid to vouch for them, not for a minute. “And then. too, if more proof is needed here it is: Mr. McLean says that you are the most perfect gen- tleman he ever knew, and be has i traveled the world over. ‘Then there's your singing. | don’t believe there ever was a mortal with a sweet- er voice than yours, and while that doesn’t prove anything there is a point that does. Just the iittle train- cent and ease with which you sing. Somewhere in your close blood is a marvelously trained vocalist: we every one of us believe that, Freckles. “Why does my father refer to yon constantly as being of fine perceptions and bonor? Hecause you are, Freckles. Why does the Bird Woman leave her precious work and stay here to help look after you? | never heard of losing any time over | any ome it's because she loves her else, Now | I only pray to dle quickly and never | It's a wildness of | | cried. you. And why does Mr Mclean turn all of nis valuable business over io hired men and watch over you per i sonally? And why is he bunting ex- | cuses every day fo spend money on | you? My father says Mclean is fui | Scotch close with a dollar. He is on | hard headed business man. Freekies, | and he is doing it becanse he finds | You worthy of it. Worthy of all wo can all do ana more than we know how to do. dear heart! Freckles, are | you listening to me? Ob, won't you see it? Won't you believe it?" “Oh, angel,” chartered the bewil- dered Freckles, “are you truly mean- ing it? Could it be?” i “Of course it could.” flashed the an- | gel, “because it just is!” “But you can’t prove it” wailed Freckles. “It ain't giving me a name or me honor!" “Freckles,” said the angel sternly, “you are unreasonable!” Why, I did prove every word | said! Everything proves it! You look here! If you knew for sure that 1 could give you your name and your honor, and prove to you that your mother did love you, why. then would you just go to breathing like perpetual motion and bang on for dear life and get well?" A great light leaped into Freckles eyes, “If | knew that, angel,” he said sol- | emuly, “you couldn't be killing me it you felled the biggest tree in the Lim- | berlost smash on me!” “Then you go right to work.” said | the angel, “and before night I'll prove one thing to you: I can show you eas- fly enough how much your mother loved you. That will be the first step, and then the rest will all come.” i Freckles caught her sleeve, l “Me mother, angel! Me mother!” he ! marveled hoarsely. “Did you say you | could be finding out today if me moth- | er loved mer How? Oh, angel! All! the rest don't matter, if only me moth- | er didn't do it!" “Then you rest easy,” said the angel, | with large confidence. “Your mother didn’t do it. Mothers of sons like you don’t do such things as that. I'll go to | work ht once and prove it to you. The first thing to do is to go to that home where you were and get the little clothes you wore the night you were left there. | kmow that they are re- quired to save those things carefully. We can find out almost all there is to know about your mother from them. Did you ever see them, Freckles?” “Yis.” said Freckles. The angel literally pounced on him. “Freckles, were they white?” she | | { “Maybe they were once. They're all yellow with laying, and brown with blood stains now,” said Freckles, the old note of bitterness creeping in. “You can't be telling anything at all hy them, angel.” “Well, but 1 just can!" said the an- gel positively, “But how? Angel, tell me how!” “Why, easily enough. 1 thought you'd understand. People that can af- ford anything at all, always get white for little new bables—linen and lace. and the very finest things to be had. There's a young woman living near us who cut up her wedding clothes to have fine things for ber baby. Moth- ers that love and want their babies make fine seams, and tucks, and put on lace and trimming by hand. They sit and stitch, and stitch-little, even stitches, every one just as careful. Their eyes shine and their faces glow. When they have to quit to do some- thing else, they look sorry, and fold up their work so particularly. There isn’t much worth knowing about your mother that those little clothes won't tell.” A new light dawned in Freckles’ eyes. “Oh, angel! Will you go now? Wil you be hurrying?’ he cried. : “Right away,” said the angel. “1 won't stop for a thing. and I'll hurry with all my might.” She smoothed bis pillow, straight ened the cover. gave him one steady look in the eyes. and went quietly from the room. Outside the door, McLean and the surgeon anxiously awaited her. Me- Lean caught ber shoulders. “Angel, what have you done?" he demanded desperstely. The ange! smiled defiance. “What bave | done?’ she repeated. “I've tried to save Freckles.” McLean “What will your father say?” he eried. “It strikes me,” said the angel, “that what Freckles said would be to the point.” “Freckles!” burst out McLean. “What could he say?’ “He seemed to be able to say several things,” said the angel sweetly. “| fancy the one that concerns you most at present was, that if my father would offer me to him he would not have me.” A “And no one knows why better than 1 do,” thundered McLean. “Every day be must astonish me with some new fineness.” He gripped the surgeon until he al- most lifted him from the floor. “Save him!” he commanded. “Save him!” he implored. “He is too fine to be sacrificed.” “His salvation lies here” said the surgeon, stroking the angel's sunshiny hair, “and | can read in the face of her that she knows how she is going to work it out. She will save him! The angel sped iaughingly down the ball, and into the street, just as she was, “I have come,” she sald to the matron of the home, “to ask if you will allow me to examine, or, better still, to take with me, the little clothes thst a hoy you called Freckles, discharged last fall, wore the night you took him in.” The woman eyed ber In greater astonishment than the case called for. “Well, I'd be glad to let you see haven't them. made some mistake. | was theroughly convinced. and so was the superinten dent. We let his people take those things away yesterday. Who are vou. nd what do you want with them?" The ange! jooked at the matron dazed and speechless. ——— | them," she said. “but the fact is we | I do hope we haven't | “There couldn't bave been a mis- | take,” she continued, seeing the girt's distress. “Freckles was here when 1 took charge, ten years ago. These people had it all proved piain as day that he belon%ed to them. They had him traced to where he ran away down in Illinois last fall, and there they completely lost track of him. I'm sorry you seem so terribly disappointed. but it was all right. The man was his uncle, and as like the boy as he could possibly be. He was almost killed to go back without him. If you know where Freckles is, they'd give big money to find out.” “Who are they?” stammered the an- gel. “Where are they going back to?” “They are Irish folks. Miss,” said the matron. cago and over the country for the last three months, hunting him everywhere, They have given up and are starting home today. They" — “Did they leave an address? Where could | find them?" burst in the angel. “They left a card. and 1 notice th> morning paper has the man’s picture “They have been in Chi. and is full of them. They've adver- | tised a great deal in the city papers. It's a wonder you haven't seen some- thing.” “Trains don't run right. get Chicago papers,” snapped the an- We never | gel. “Please give me that card quick- | Iy. simply have to catch them!" The matron came back with a card “Their addresses are on there,” she said. “Both here in Chicago and at They may get away from me. || their home. They made them full and ! plain, and 1 was to cable at once if 1 | got the least clew of him at any time If they've left the city, you can stop them in New York. You're sure to catch them before they sail—if yon hurry.” The matron caught up a paper and thrust it into the angel's hand as she rushed for the street. (Continued next week.1 —*“So there's another rupture of Mount Vociféerous,” said Mrs. Partington, as she put on her “The paper tells us about the burning lather running down the mountain, but it don’t tell how it got afire.” Medical. Feel Like Giving Up? THE HS BSE For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. 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