LJ ‘pound you to a jelly: Bellefonte, Pa., September 18, 1914. EE ES The Story of Waitstill Baxter [Continued from page 6, Col. 3] “No, Ivory didn't tell me. seen him lately.” “I said if the big brother kept schooi the little brother ought to keep house ” laughed the boy. “He says I can hire out as a cook pretty soon! Aunt Boyn- ton’s ’most always up to. get dinner and supper, but 1 can make lots of things now—things that Aunt Boyn- ton can eat too.” “Qh, 1 cannot bear to have you and Ivory cooking for yourselves!” exclaim- ed Waitstill. the tears starting again from her eyes. “I must come over the next time when you are at home, Rod. and I can help you make something nice for supper.” “We get along pretty well,” said Rodman coutentedly. “I love book learning like Ivory, and I'm going to be a schoolmaster or a preacher when Ivory’s a lawyer. Do you think Pat- ty ’d like a schoolmaster or a preach- er best, and do you think I'd be tou young to marry her by and by, if she would wait for me?” “] didn’t think you had any idea of marrying Patty,” laughed Waitstill through her tears. *'Is this something new?” > “It's not exactly new.” said Rod. jumping along like a squirrel in the path. ‘Nobody could look at Patty and not think about marrying her. I'd love to marry you. too. but you're too big and grand for a boy. Of course I'm not going to ask Patty vet. Ivory said once you should never ask a girl until you can keep her like a queen. Then after a minute he said: ‘Well, maybe not quite like a queen. Rod, for that would mean longer than a man could wait. Shall we say un- til he could®keep her like the dearest lady in the land? That's the way he said it. You do cry dreadfully easy today, Waity. I’m sure you barked your leg or skinned your knee when you fell down. Don’t you think the ‘dearest lady in the land’ is a nice sounding sentence?” “l do, indeed!" cried Waitstill to herself as she turned the words over and over trying to feed her hungry heart with them. “1 love to hear Ivory talk. It's like the stories in the books. We have our best times in the barn, for I'm help- ing with the milking now. "Our yel- low cow's name is Molly and the red cow used to be Dolly, but we changed her to Golly ’cause she’s so trouble- some.” “We had a cross old cow like that once.” said Waitstill absently. loving to hear the boy’s chatter and the eter- nal quotations from his beloved hero. “We have great fun cooking, too.” continued Rod. ‘*“When Aunt Boyn- ton was first sick she stayed in bed more, and Ivory and I hadn't got used to things. One morning we bound up each other's burns. Ivory had three fingers and 1 two done up in buttery rags to take the fire out. Ivory called us ‘soldiers dressing their wounds aft- er the battle.” Sausages spatter dread- fully. don’t they? And when you turn a pancake it flops on top of the stove. Can you flop one straight, Waity?” “Yes, I can; straight as a die; that's what girls are made for. Now run along home to your big brother. and do put on some warmer clothes under your coat. The weather's getting colder.” “Aunt Boynton hasn’t patched our thick ones yet, but she will soon. and. if she doesn’t. Ivory’ll take this Satur- day evening and do them himself. He said so.” “He shall not!” cried Waitstill pas- sionately. ‘It is not seemly for Ivory to sew and mend. and 1 will not allow It. You shall bring me those things that need patching without telling any one, do you hear, and 1 will meet you on the edge of the pasture Saturday afternoon and give them back to you. You are not to speak of it to any one. you understand. or perhaps 1 shall You'd make a sweet rose jelly to eat with turkey for Thanksgiving dinner, you dear, com- forting little boy!” Rodman ran toward home, and Wait- still hurried along, scarcely noticing the beauties of the woods and fields and waysides, all glowing masses of goldenrod and purple frost flowers. Patty was standing under a little rock maple, her brown linsey-woolsey in tone with the landscape and the hood of her brown cape pulled over her bright head. She looked flushed and excited as she ran up to ber sister and said: “Waity, darling, you've been crying! Has father been scolding you?’ “No, dear, but my heart is aching to- day so that I can scarcely bear it. A wave of discouragement came over me as I was walking through the woods, and I gave up to it a bit. I remember- ed how soon it will be Thanksgiving day, and I'd so like to make it happier for you and a few others that I love.” Patty could have given a shrewd guess as to the chief cause of the heartache, but she forebore to ask any questions. “Cheer up, Waity!" she cried. “You can never tell. We may have a thankful Thanksgiving, after all.” I haven't CHAPTER XX. Phoebe Triumphs. RS. ABEL DAY had come to M spend the afternoon with Aunt Abby Cole, and they were seated at the two sit- ting room windows, sweeping the land- scape with eagle eyes in the intervals of making patchwork. “The foliage bas been a little mite too rich this season,” remarked Aunt Abby. “I blieve I'm glad to see it thinnin’ out some, so ’t we can have some kind of an idee of what's goin’ on in the village.” “There's plenty goin’ on.” Mrs. Day answered unctuously, “some of it above board an’ some underneath it.” “An' that’s jest where it's aggravat- in’ to have the leaves so thick and the trees so high between you and other folks’ houses. Trees are good for shade, it’s true, but there’s a limit to all things. There was a time when I could see ’bout everything that went on up to Baxters' and down to Bart’s shop and, by goin’ up attic, consid’able many things that happened on the bridge. Bart vows he never planted that plum tree at the back door of his shop—says the children must have hove out plum stones when they was settin’ on the steps and the tree come up of ! its own accord.” “Men are an awful trial,” admitted Mrs. Day. “Abel never sympathizes witk my headaches. I told him a-Sun- day I didn’t believe he'd mind if I died the next day, an’ all he said was, ‘Why don't you try it an’ see, Lyddy? He thinks that's humorous.” “I know. That's the way Bartholo- mew talks. I guess they all do. You can see the bridge better’'n I can, Lyd- dy. Has Mark Wilson drove over sence you've been settin’ there? He's like_oue o' them ostriches that hides their heads in the sand when the bird | catchers : are --comin' along. - thinkin’ ‘cause they can't see anything they'll never be seen. He knows folks would never tell tales to. Deacon Baxter, whatever the girls done. They hate him too.bad. Lawyer Wilson lives so far away he can't keep any watch o’ Mark, an’ Mis’ Wilson's so citytied an’ purse proud nobody ever goes to her with any news. bad or good; so them that’s the most concerned is as blind as bats. Mark's consid’able stid- “Patty’ll be Mrs. Wilson or nothin’,” was Mrs. Day’s response. dier'n he used to be, but you needn’t tell me he has any notion of bringin’ one o' that Baxter tribe into his fami- ly. He's only amusin’ himself." “Patty °’ll be Mrs. Wilson or noth- in’, was Mrs. Day’s response. ‘Both 0’ them girls is silk purses, an’ you can't make sows’ ears of ‘em. We ain't neither of us hardly fair to Pat- ty. an’ 1 s’pose it’s hecause she didn’t. set any proper value on Cephas.” “0h, she's good enough for Mark. I guess, though I ain't so sure of his in- tentions as you be. She's nobody's fool, Patty ain’t; 1 allow that, though she ‘did treat Cephas like the dirt in the road. I'm thankful he's come to his senses an’ found out the diff'rence between dross an’ gold.” : “It's very good of you to put it that way, Abby," Mrs. Day responded gratefully, for it was Phoebe, her own offspring. who was alluded to as the most precious metals. *‘T suppose we'd _better have the publishing notice put up in the frame before Surday? There'll be a great crowd out that day, pat ‘at Thanksgiving service the next ursday too.” “Cephas says he don’t care how soon folks hears the news, now all's set- tled,” said his mother. “I guess he’s kind of anxious that the village should know jest how little truth there is in the gossip ’bout him bein’ all upset over Patience Baxter. He said they took comsid’able notice of him an’ Phoebe settin' together at the harvest festival last evenin’. He thought the Baxter girls would be there for cer- tain, but I s’pose Old Foxy wouldn't let ’em go up to the Mills in the even- ir’ nor spend a quarter on their tick- ets.” “Mark could have invited Patty an’ paid for her ticket, I should think, or passed her in free, for that matter. when the Wilsons got up the enter- tainment; but. of course, the deacon never allows his girls to go anywheres with men folks.” “Not in public; so they meet ’em side » the river or round the corner of Bart's shop, or anywhere they can. when the deacon’s back’s turned. If you tied a handkerchief over ~Wait- still's eyes she could find her way blindfold to Ivory Boynton’s house, but she’s good as gold, Waitstill is, She'll stay where her duty calls her every time. If any misfortune or scan- dal should come near them two girls the deacon will have nobody but him- self to thank for it, that's one sure thing!” “Young folks can’t be young but once.” sighed Mrs. Day. “How'd you like that Boston singer that the Wil- sons brought here, Abby? Wait a min- ! ute, is Cephas, or the deacon tendin’ ! store this afternoon?” “The deacon; Cephas is paintin’ up to the Mills.” “Well, Mark Wilson’s horse an’ bug- gy is meanderin’ slowly down Aunt Betty Jack’s hill, an’ Mark is studyin’ the road as if he was lookin’ for a four leafed clover.” “He'll hitch at the tavern. or the Edgewood store, an’ wait his chance to get’ a word ‘with Patience,” said Aunt Abby. “He knows when she takes milk to the Morrills’, or butter to the parsonage; also when she eats an’ drinks an’ winks her eye an’ ketch- es her breath an’ lifts her foot. Now he's disappeared an® we'll wait. * * * Why. as to that Boston singer, 1 don’t know how high she went, but 1 guess there wa'n't no higher to go!" “It made me kind o’ nervous,” al- lowed Mrs. Day. “Folks said she sung runs and irills better’n any woman up to Boston.” : [Continued next week.] To Clean a Refrigerator. When white spots appear on the refrigerator lining take all the food out and rub the zinc with kerosene. Leave the refrigerator open for sev- eral hours, then wash .with ammonia and warm soapsuds and let dry thor- oughly. Medical. ~ Doubly Proven. BELLEFONTE READERS CAN NO LONGER DOUBT THE EVIDENCE. This Bellefonte citizen testified long ago Told to quick relief—of undoubted benefit. : The facts are now confirmed. Such testimony is complete—the evidence conclusive. It forms convincing proof of merit. James H. Rine, 239 High St., Belle- fonte, says: “Doan’s Kidney Pills are certainly a wonderful kidney remedy. Ten years ago firs tused them and at that time I told in a public endorse- ment of the benefit I had had. That statement holds good. I have often advised my friends to try Doan’s Kidney Pills and in every case where my advice has been followed, relief has been had from kidney trouble.” Price 50c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mr. Rine had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N.Y. 59-37-1t One baby in arms, a couple of others tugging at her skirts as she moves about the house, no help, and yet this woman manages to sweep and cook and sew. Is it any wonder that she wears out fast? Is it any wonder that her nerves areracked? Hardly a woman is exempt from “female trouble” in some form. It 1s upon the woman of many cares, the woman who cannot rest, that the disease falls the hardest. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip- tion comes to every weary, working woman, vexed by woman's ills, as a boon and a blessing. 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