TR Bellefonte, Pa., November 15, 1912. C—m— FRECKLES By Gene Stratton- Porter ‘COPYRIGHT, 1904, BY DOUBLEDAY, PACE & CO. [Concluded.] ‘I'he next morning the man of af- fairs, with a heart tilled with misgiv- ings. undertook the interview on which Freckles insisted. His fears were without cause. [reckies was the soul of honor and simplicity. “Have they been telling you what's come to me?’ he asked without even waiting for a greeting. “Yes,” said the angel's father. “Do you think you have the very worst of it clear to your understand- ing?" . Under Freckles’ earnest eyes th man of affairs answered soberly, “1 think T have, Mr. O'More.” That was the first time Freckles heard his name from the lips of an- other man. One second he lay over come. the next great tears filled his eyes, ant he reached out his hand Then gp angel's father understood. and he clasped that hand and held it in a strong. "nrm grasp. “Terence, my boy.” he said, “let me do the talking. | came in here with the understanding that you wanted to ask me for my omy child. 1 should ike, at the proper time, to regard her marriage, if she has found the man whe desires to marry, not as losing all 1 have, but as gaining a man | can delight that he was unspotted by his | you for a year or two. until you were | early surroundings and his desire to | fit to enter Ann Arhor or the Chicago | visit the Limberiost with Freckles be- | university in good shape. Then | fore they sailed. He said they were | thought we'd finish in this country at anxious to do all they could to heip | Yale or Harvard, and end with @xford, A ——————————————————————————————————— | ted of Freckles’ rapid recovery, of his | best to met a private tutor to eeach Pealowls” Winter Roost. Tha hereditary habit of the peacocks | of roosting for the night in trees some- times forces upom them considerable discomfort. After selecting a roosting place the birds return to it each bind Freckles’ arrangements with the to get a good all round flavor.” angel, as both he and Lady O'More | regarded her as the most promising | girl they knew and one that could be | fully fitted to fill the high position in | which Freckles would place her. | Every word he uttered was pungent | with bitterness to McLean. The | swamp had lost its flavor without Freckles, and yet as Lord O'More talked McLean fervently wished that | he was in the heart of it. All the tan and sunburn had been washed from Freckles’ face in sweats of agony. It was a smooth, even | white, its brown rift showing but | faintly. What the nurses and Lady O'More had done to Freckles’ hair McLean could not guess, but it was the most beautiful that he had ever seen. Fine as floss, bright in color, waving and crisp, it fell about the white face. They had got his arms into and his chest covered with a finely em- broidered pale blue silk shirt, with soft white tie ar the threat. Among the many changes that had taken place during his absence, the fact that Frec- kles was most attractive and barely escaped being handsome remained al- most unnoticed by the boss, so great was his astonishment at seeing both | cuffs turned back and the right arm in view. Freckles was using the! maimed arm that heretofore he had al- ways hidden. “Oh, Lord, sir. but I'm glad to see you!” burst out Freckles, almost rolling from the bed as he reached for him. “I'm picking the angel's ring stone that me Aunt Alice ordered. It's an emerald—just me color. Lord O'More says. Every color of the old swamp | is In it. 1 asked angel to have a little | shamrock leaf eut on it, so every time | 1 saw it I'd be thinking of the love. | truth, and valor of that song she was | teaching me. Ain't that a beantiful | song?’ { if you really were endowed for =u H night; apparently the same ones with- Is that all?” asked Freckles. out ever deserting the site. Usually “No: that's leaving the music out. I|iyo tn the samse tree. Once during a intended to have your voiee tested. and | haavy snowstorm Dr. Blair di rected my attemtion to two male pes- fowl that had selected a big oak tree place. The smow had fallen during feathers and formed a tiny coronet of Ice on their heads. As we watched them they stood erect as if to lean: {just what the prospect of moaning might be. The effort probably cen vinced them that an attempted flight to the ground meant a tumble and not a fly, for they promptly settled down again far another nap—Dumh Ani mals. Women and Economy. Mrs. Pearl White of Michigam, writ- ing to Farm and Home, has this to say on the subject of womem praec- ticing false econcmy: “Many a wom- an will walk half a mile or more to borrow a pattern that is not even the right size, tru:ting to her ingenuity and good sense to make it 8t, but the chances are that the time alone which she could save wonld more than equal the 10-cent expenditure for a new pat- tern, besides securing a better fit and style, and considerable saving of nerves.” “DEAR ROSS, DEAR FATHRR, DON'T BE DO ING THAT™ career as a great musician, and had inclinations that way. I wished to have you drop some of the college work and make music your chief study. Finally. 1 wanted us to take a trip over Europe and clear around the circle together.” “And then what?” queried Freckles breathlessly. “Why, then,” Oh, Learned Judge. A California judge decided that there is no judicial authority to keep a man from maxing love to his wife, although it could stop his beating her. The remarkable cause of this remark- able decision was that a woman in said McLean, Los Angeles had applied for an injunc. “you near his office window as a perching. | the night to a depth of about 10! inches, forming a wall on each side of | the sleeping Wirds, which completely | ! arched over their backs As the heat ' jo their bodies melted the snow the | water gradually saturated their lighter | Freckles tilted about a tray of unset | know that my heart is hopelessly in stones that would have ransomed sev- | the woods. I will never quit the tim- eral valuable kings. | ber business while there is timber to depend on to love as a son and to take “1 tell you I'm glad to see you, sir,” handle and breath in my body. 1 he sald. “I tried to tell me uncle what charge of my affairs for her when I | retire from business. Bend all of your I energies toward rapid recovery, and from this hour understand that my daughter and my home are yours.” i “You're not forgetting this?” | Freckles lifted his right arm. : “Terence, I'm sorvier than I have words to express about that,” said the man of affairs. “But {if it's up to me to choose whether 1 give all 1 have left in this world to a man with a band off his body or to one of these gambling, tippling, immoral spend- thrifts of today. with both hands and feet off their souls and a rotten spot In the core, I choose you, and it seems that my daughter does the same. Put what is left you of that right arm to the best uses you can in this world. and never again mention or feel that it Is defective as long as you live. Good day, sir!" “One minute more,” said Freckles. “Yesterday the angel was telling me that there was money coming to me from two sources. She said that me grandmother had left me father all of her fortune and her house because she knew that his father would be cutting him off, and that me uncle had also set aside for me what would be me father's interest in his father's estate. “Whatever the sum is that me grandmother left me father, because she loved him and wanted him to be having it. that I'll be taking. 'T'was hers from her father. and she had the right to be giving it as she chose. Any- thing from the man that knowingly left me father and me mother to go cold and hungry and into the fire in misery when just a little would have made life so beautiful to them and saved me this crippled body—money that he willed from me when he knew I was living. of his blood and on char- ity among strangers, 1 don't touch, not if 1 freeze, starve and burn too! If there ain't enough besides that and ! can't be earning enough to fix things for the angel" — Phd “We are not discussing money!” burst in the man of affairs, “We don’t want any blood money! We have all we need without it. If you don't feel right and easy over it, don’t you touch a cent of any of it." “It's right 1 should have what me grandmother intinded for me father, and | want it,” said Freckles, “but Pd die before I'd touch a cent of me grandfather's money!” “Now,” said the angel, “we are all going home. We have done all we can for FFreckies. His people are here. He ' needs to know them. They are very anxious to get acquainted with him. We'll! turn him over to them and go ' home. When be is well, why, then he will be perfectly free to go to Ireland or come to the Limberlost, just as he chooses. We will go right away.” McLean bore it for a week, and then he could stand it no longer. Commun- ing with himself in the long, soundful nights of the swamp, he had learned to his astonishment that for the last i year his heart had been circling the Limberlost with Freckles. He started for Chicago, loaded with a big box of goldenrod, asters, fringed gentians and crimson leaves that the angel had carefully gathered for Freckles’ room, and a little, long slender package. He would not ad- mit it even to himself, but be was un- able to remain longer away from Freckles and leave him to the care of Lord O'More. i 4 1 In a few minutes’ talk, while Mec- Lean waited admission to Freckles’ feom, his lordship had geniatly chat | uy mother. I had an idea it would be oS I wanted, but this ain't for him to be mixed up in, anyway, and I don’t think I made it clear to him. I can be telling you, sir. I told him that I would pay only $300 for the angel's stone. I'm thinking that with what he has laid up for me, and the bigness of things that the angel did for me, that seems like a stingy little sum to him, I know - he thinks I ought to be giving a lot more, but I feel as if 1 just had to be buying that stone with money I earned meself, and that is all I have saved of me wages. 1 don't mind paying for the muff, or the dressing table, or Mrs, Duncan's things, from this other mon- ey, and later the angel can have every last cent of me grandmother's, if she'll take it, but just now—obh, sir, can’t you see that I have to be buying this stone with what I have in the bank?” “In other words, Freckles,” said the boss, “you don’t want to buy the an- gel's ring with money. You want to give for it your first awful fear of the swamp, You want to pay for it with the loneliness and heart hunger you have suffered there, with last winter's freezing on the line and this summer's burning in the sun. You want the price of that stone to be the fears that have chilled your heart —the sweat and blood of your body.” | Freckies' face quivered with feeling. “Dear Mr. McLean,” he said, reach- ing up with a caress over the boss’ black hair ‘and along his cheek. “Dear boss, that's why I've wanted you so. 1 knew you would know. Now you will be looking at these? 1 don’t want | emeralds, because that's what she gave me." Freckles heaped the pearls with the emeralds. He studied the diamonds a long time. The diamonds joined the emeralds and pearls. There was left a little red heap, and Freckles’ fingers touched it svith na new tenderness. “I'm thinking here's me angel's stone.” he exuited. “The Limberiost, ' and me with it, grew in mine, but ' it's going to bloom, and her with it, | in this! There's the red of the wild poppies, the cardinal flowers and the little bunch of crushed foxfire that we found where she put it to save me. There's the light of the camp fire and the sun setting over Sleepy Snake creek. There's the red of the | blood we were willing to give for ! and the swamp so confused In me mind | eyes, gold hair, and red lips, and, it's thought if yon didn't make a profes. | sion of music, and had any inclination | my way, we would stretch the partner- ship one more and take you into the | firm, placing your work with me.” ! Freckles lifted anxious and eager | eyes to McLean. i “You told me once on the trail, and | again when we thought I was dying. | that you loved me. Do these things that have come to me make any dif- | ference in any way with your feeling toward me?" | “None.” said McLean. “Nothing | could make me love you more, and you | will never do anything that will make me love you less.” | “Glory be to God!" burst out | Freckles. “When I'm educated enough, | we'll all—the angel and her father, | the Bird Woman. you, and me—will | go together and see me house and me | relations and be taking that (rip. ! When we get back, we'll add O'More to the lumber company, and golly, sir, but we'll make things hum! Good land, sir! Don't do that! Why, Mr. McLean, dear boss, dear father, don't | be doing that! What is it?" ' “Nothing. nothing!” boomed Mec- | Lean's deep bass: “nothing at all!” | He abruptly turned away and hur- ried to the window. “This is a mighty fine view,” he said. . i “I'll be glad to see Ireland,” said Freckles, “but 1 ain't ever staying long. All me heart is the angel's, and the Limberlost is calling every minute. “Me heart's all me Swamp Angel's, and me love is all hers, and I have her I never can be separating them. When 1 look at her, I see blue sky, the sun rifting through the leaves and pink and red flowers, and when 1 look at the Limberlost 1 see a pink face with blue the truth, sir, they're mixed till they're one to me! “I'm afraid it will be burting some, but I have the feeling that 1 cam be making my dear people understand, 80 that they will be willing to let me come back home. Send Lady O'More to put these flowers God made in the place of these glasshouse ilegancies, and please be cutting the string of this little package the angel's sent me.” As Freckles held up the package, the each other. It's like her lips and like lights of the Limberiost flashed in the the drops that dried on her beanti-' emerald on his finger. On the cover ful arm that first day, and I'm think- | was printed: “To the Limberlost fog it must be like the brave, tender, : Guard!” Under it was a big, crisp, clean, red heurt of her.” ! iridescent black feather. Freckles lifted the ruby to his lips and handed it to McLean. “Freckles, may | ask you some- thing?" he said. “Why, sure,” said Freckles. “There's nothing you would be asking that it wouidn't be giving me joy to be telling you.” McLean's eyes traveled to Freckles’ right arm, with which be was pushing the jewsls about. “Oh, that!" cried Freckles with a merry laugh, You're wanting to know where all the bitterness is gone? Well, sir, ‘twas carried from me soul, heart and body on the lips of an an- gel. Seems that hurt was necessary in the beginning to make today come true. ‘The wound had always been raw. but the angel was healing it. If she doesn't care, 1 don't. May 1 be asking you a question? Well, then, if this accident and all that’s come to me since had never happened, what was it yon meant to do with me?” “Why, Freckles,” answered McLean, “lI figured on taking you to Grand Rapids and putting you in the care of | of the degree to which the rivers were The Fleod Loss. ‘The present year has been an un- usual one for floods. In the early spring the whole of the Mississippi valley suffered most severely because swollen. Now the reports from Ohio, West Virginia and Pennsylvania tell of a large loss of life and of great financial losses because of midsum- mer floods in those states. This is unusual, at this time of year, but scarcely a spring passes without re- ports of damage in these three states nd West Virginia would face the nen of ort | wad this cause. If Ohio, Pennsylvania b! build a system of storage reservoirs, as a provision against such disaster, the initial expense would be very large, but it would not need to be re- peated. The loss of life would be. eliminated and so would the loss of | property. There is little for \ states not taking Some tion will make such floods impos le.~Boston Advertiser. tion to restrain her husband from in- sisting on being attentive to her. This jndge was not a Solomon, but he real- ized that only a Solomon could be trusted to rule upon the whims and Inconsistencies of womankind. Unnecessary. Gruff Customer (looking up from the menu card)—Have you brains? Timid Waitress (confused)—No, gir, That's the reason I'm working hero.~- Judge Medical. Back-ache is a Warning BELLEFONTE PEOPLE SHOULD NOT NEGLECT THEIR KIDNEYS. signal of sick or weakened kidneys. To cure the pains and aches, to remove the lameness must reach the cause—the and pains meh WR or sale by all dealers. Price 50 I Ruy Sat Hardware. ..JDOCKASH.... - | Counts. Dockash Stoves always please. You re- duce your coal bills one-third with a Dockash. - OLEWINE'S ardware Store, Quality H S28. 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