6 THE UNCROWNED KING. Or God or Mammon, as he serves Straight in his goal he cuts his way. Perhaps (111 joule \ast continent His hand was closed but yesterday. "Aye. yesterday," you say. "But Death—" Because one died is alt life done? The uncrowned monarch never dies. The sun hath set—there springs the sun! Nor shall his power he the less If in his childhood's bygone peace The gutter cradled him, nor may A statelier birth his strength increase. Sli» Is. For good or ill. lie is; And woe to those who blindly cling Unseeing to the ancient thrones. And reck not of the Uncrowned King! —Clinton Dangerfield, in the Century. rose ofm NORMANDY By WILLIAM R. A. WILSON L 11 1 CHAPTER XVII .—Cox ri n V kn. This resolute action and brave words changed the frightened soldiers, who came forward and begged her to com mand them. She accepted their serv- j ices and ordered them 10 fire the can non, not only to prevent the savages j from storming the walls, but also to | warn any outlying settlers. The In-: dians, always loath to attack a forli- . i'ed place and not knowing the pre cise strength of the garrison, lingered near the edges of the clearing. She then quieted the women and children, and. choosing four of the former, fur nished them with long sticks and bade them walk up and down just inside the palisade with the end of the stick showing above, to deceive the enemy into thinking them to be sentinels. All seemed to become enthused with her spirit. She was everywhere, one moment encouraging the sick, another giving directions for the defense, an other superintending the preparation of food for her tiny garrison. Luck ily one of Ihe cows, escaping the In dians, came to the gate and lowed for admission. This was a great acquisi tion, as she would furnish milk for the sick and the children, and, if the siege were prolonged, would insure a supply of meat sufficient to last a considerable period. Just at sunset a canoe appeared from the river, containing one of the farm ers and his family, who had eluded the redskins. Some reinforcement must •be sent them, but Renee could prevail upon neither of the soldiers togo, so after leaving them at the gate she marched boldly down to the landing place. The savages, thinking this to >be some ruse intended to draw them onto an attack, remained quiet. On the way back the boldness with which MARCHED BOLDLY DOWN TO THE LANDING-PLACE, the party marched overawed them in to thinking the garrison must be very strong, so they gained the gate in safe ty. Elated with the success of her au dacious act. Renee decided to assume the offensive and gave orders to fire upon the enemy whenever they showed themselves. As night fell the sky was i overcast and threatened rain, which i soon appetyed. Even Renee to lose heart; only for a moment, how ever. Summoning her force, which now numbered six men ami boys since the new arrival, she addressed them j resolutely. "Kear nothing. Ood has 1 cared for us this day and will do so ' further, it we but do our part. To j show you that I am not afraid I am i going to mount guard myself to-night | on one of the bastions." Then turning j to the two soldiers and the man who had come with his family, "You, La Borne and Gachet, and you, Pierre | Fontane, goto the blockhouse with the women and children. It is the strong- | est place. If I am taken do not sur render, iv n though I be cut to pieces before your eyes. If you flght well the enemy cannot hurt you there." She then placed the old man and the two boys on three of ihe bastions ami took 1 lw* fourth herself. And through j the ram and nu ht the answering cries of thu eon wan h reached the ears of the hidil u savages. The place seemed to th'-m lull 01 soldiers aud they post poned ihe intended attack. Affair: went on thus for a week, Ihe t»raw- little ,< ueia» directing ami sup porting h< r forces, giviiiK them each a share of sleep, but taking lit lie for l|e| elf At list the hostile.-* bet nine Impatient .1 being thus balked of their prey, ami 1 rout ittelr raaewsd activity It was evldi nt that le supreme mo men' would hooit art.ve All day they >uUi D Ut dry wood and piling thorn up ready to be placed Along the outside of tho pal isade and then ignited. Once more Hence was called upon to exert all of her influence to keep alive the waning courage of the garrison. One counselled that they all try to slip away in the darkness, another suggested anew his plan of assembling in the blockhouse and perishing to gether by exploding the magazine. To all of these Renee presented a scorn ful reply. "Are you men and fear to die when you have all the means of de fense about you? And you," she cried to the women, "have you no faith? Are none of the prayers we have daily offered to avail anything? Surely le bon Dieu would not have allowed us to escape the destruction the rest have met with, only to deliver us into the hands of the enemy at last. Have courage, mes amis! Help will yet come." She had scarcely spoken when one of the boys called out that there were six large canoes coming rapidly down the river and that the savages were already retiring. "It must be that the siegtieur has heard of our plight and has sent us help from Montreal," cried one. Whoever it was, they were friends. As they landed and ap proached the fort the garrison crowd ed about the opened gate with glad ness to welcome their deliverers. Renee, proud and smiling, stood amongst them. As the party drew near, the leader, a young man, stepped forward. "Grace a Dieu! We have arrived in time. Where is your commander?" Imagine his surprise when the figure of a nun, wearing a man's ha! and still holding her gun in her hands, stepped forward with a sparkle in her eye gave a stiff military salute, saying, "1 am he, mon general." Then as a feeling of unrestrainable weariness seized her frame, "the garrison is relieved; I re sign my post; receive my arms." She attempted to hold out the gun to him as he approached, but her eyes closed, her body swayed, and she fell. The young man sprang forward with a glad cry of "Renee, my beloved!" as he caught her falling figure. But the ears of the brave defender of the seigniory were dulled, so that she could not hear. CHAPTER XVIII. DEALS MAINLY WITH A C.A.MR OP CHANCE IN WHICH FRONTKN'AC SHUFFLICS THE CARDS. Tonti was welcomed by Frontcnic with great rejoicing. The many tales of death and disaster, industriously circulated by I.a Salle's enemies, had caused many moments of anxiety to the comte's mind, and he had come to fear lest, after all, they might be true, and he had lost both friend and fu ture fortune. Accordingly after dinner, Ihe nisht of Tonti's arrival, they drew near ihe table, on which was laid the only map that Frontenac possessed of the west ern wilds. Having spread this out carefully before him, he turned to Tonti, saying: "Come, mon ami, to your narrative! I am consumed to know each step of your perilous journey." Then did Tonti commence and re late in full all that had happened to the hapless party in its wanderings, pointing out from time to time on the map the course of their progress. Frontenac interrupted him often with eager questionings, with exclamations of rage and alarm at moments of peril, and with chuckles of delight and roar.? of giant laughter as he learned how difficulties had been overcome or ene mies duped. "Parbleu!" he exclaimed, "a worthy blow! And with your iron fist. A Mohegan chief?" "Yes, beset in the street at Montreal by a .half score drunken Iroquois as La Salle and I passed by. They went too far in their tormentings and tried to cut his ear with a hunting knife. I could not stand it and went to his aid. They fled, spitting out broken teeth as they ran, leaving the Mohe gan brave with us. He begged permis sion to accompany us. It. is he, Akiesko by name, who, with Pompon, has braved the dangers of our return to Quebec." "That droll Pompon! His wit and cunning must have helped you many times." "Certainoment! Had it not been for him we should never have returned. His quick eye it was that saw some thing was amiss on Christmas eve, as we sailed from Fort Frontenac across the lake, and perceived the rocks the treacherous pilot, bought with Duches neau's gold, was driving us straight upon. Ho it was who, following La Salle's tracks in the snow, found him gazing at the great falls with the as sassin creeping close behind him, and who fired the shot that pierced the brain of the wretch and sent him tumbling into the abyss as he was about to strike our leader his death blow. He it was, too, when on the banks of the river of the lllini La Salle informed us that one must re- j main and hold the fort with the ! men, while the other two must force their way back to Quebec for aid, that volunteered to accompany me. 1 can ' also witness to his cunning when, our journey eastward half completed, we were caught by the liurons and would have perished miserably, both he and I and Akiesko, hud he not had tin lucky thought of feigning madness and leading the whole tribe a merry dance about the village, affording us an op portunity to escape. Ma fol! at times I believe he holds something more than brains within his head; niethlnks he lias a devil! ll<- also anointed his face that night with phosphorus paste so thai when thu savages followed him Into the woods he turned upon them, his P-aiuie* all aidnw la the dark, and they lli-d, giving him tiniu lo rejoiu us. Then, too, the content of hia leather pouch afforded an anti dote to the poison La Halle had eaten with his food, placed there by another of the luttnuaul'a accur&ed u£>uts €••« .mm, JUT Ul< It." CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1905. 'Peste! what villainy will not that! rascal sloop tc in order to nain his; < 1 niih! Put how about our nobln friend ; La Sail'?? You say you lel't liini ai, j this point on the river of the illini, i after buildin;; a fort you named 'Crew ooeur?' Why rail it the Fort of the | Breaking lie-art?" "Ah! ninn ami, our commander named it that, out of the depths or his own grief an.l discouragement, after i overcoming dangers and difficulties i that would have turned back any other man a dozen times, ivlon Dieu! now that you have me upon the subject of the friend I have learned to admire and love as my own brother, I can tall: all night without stopping. What think you, after the final wreck of our little vessel and its stores at the mouth of the Niagara river by our unfaithful pilot, and the desertion of a goodly portion of his men, did he despair? Mordioux! no. A shrug of the shoul der, a firm pressure of the lips, a straightening and stiffening of his body, as though to withstand an at tack, were all the signs of the disap pointment he showed. His voice was the gayest and the load upon iiis back was the heaviest of us all as we climbed up the steep bank and through the snowdrifts, bearing what remained of our supplies to a place of safety. Treachery met him at every hand; the very men whose burdens he had tried to lighten and whom he had watched and tended through sickness and starvation turned against him, thwart ing h's plans and crippling his re sources. Even now, while I sit here, he is grappling with danger and disas ter. Is it any wonder that for such a leader Pompon, Akiesko, and myself gladly risked our lives to return to Quebec for aid? "With the eye of a general he has planned the winning of all that great land for the king and holy church, and has decided upon the spot to be first seized and held. A short distance up the river from the point where I left him is a giant rock, impregnable If once securely fortified, that will serve as the beginning of a new empire for France, and will preserve it against Indian and white man alike, besides forming the center of a vast trading <•nterpri.se. This plan, if successfully carried out, will give us the key to the whole situation. Ah! Oielo! M. le Oottverneur, if you do not give me aid. and that soon, his great heart will break. When final disappointment comes to natures such as his, there is no other end." Tonti spoke with feeling as he leaned toward Front:man in his earnestness. "Bravo!" cried the Comte, and his huge hand came down with a clasp up on Tonti's as it rested on the table. "You do not disappoint my first esti mate of you. You are indeed a worthy associate for the courageous La Salle. With a score of men like you two, I could conquer and hold the entire now world." Thus they talked and planned to meet the great demands that the emer gency required for the successful is sue of the great enterprise until day dawned. And as lliey strove, the pa tient heart of their comrade alone in the wilderness with a handful of mu tinous men yearned for the succor so desperately needed, and his eyes be held above the forest tree-tops the breaking of another day of hope and endeavor undismayed. Meanwhile Renee was welcomed heartily by the nuns, who attributed the intense nervous excitement under which she was laboring to the dan gers to which she had so recently been exposed. She quickly sought solitude in order to think out some plan of ac tion. She had learned from one of the women standing by all that had oc curred at the gate of the seigniory aft er she had fainted, and her heart was filled with rage and shame. The poi soned lie told by Madame Bizard had done its work. Tonti, the ideal, the hero; Tonti, the gallant and brave; Tonti, the fairy prince, the possible lover the chance of meeting whom had rendered her exile bearable, was de throned, and she saw in him only an ordinary man, impure, base, deceiv ing, an enemy to be avoided. Although no words of love had passed between them, yet the remembrance of the budding passion that she had recog nized within her breast scorched her brain anew. As long as he was far dis tant she had been able to try bravely to overcome her disappointment, hut his proximity had aroused within her a sense of danger and a desire to fiee Banished from her home through a peril she could not combat, she found herself surrounded by fresh hazards. She had fled to the convent fo escape the Comte tie Miron, and now like a hunted animal she sought a new refuge as another enemy appeared in view. The rumored presence of the es caped comte as leader of a band of the murderous Iroquois rendered her tin- ' safe except while under the direct protection of Frontenac. The arrival : of Tonti, whom her unsettled imaglna- < tion pictured to her as having aban doned liis comrades in the wilderness, was a menace even under the shelter- 1 ing walls of the fort. That night Kho attended a meeting ! of all the ntinn and heard a lett«r read • from one of tho priests at Michlli mackinac brought by a messenger who 1 hail Joined Tonti at Fort Fronlena.;, t in which was depicted the pitiful con dition i* tho Indians and whites who were suffering from an epidemic of smallpox, and Imploring tho aid of < two ii'ir. <. to .i • the time already j I there. The tin -tage, frank though It ' i wan in r> latiiig the hardship and dan- I 'er Inevitable to ono responding tu i t this Macedonian cry for help, cttmu to i her a the trumpet-call to duty as well ( , a» au avenue of escape. The superior i announet.il that they would bf able to i spare but one nun for the work, ami 1 i would apptul to the domiees for a vol- i uutior (o a< ei/mpany her. Only one , r» ponded. It wan Itenee, who KruM j I and offered le r.n-lt for the st-rvle#. > • tibu UuirKuly Mought Front'nau tho < ! n«xt morning to obtain his consent. , She found liini busily engaged at his i desk, biit he brushed everything aside | as she entered and aro3e to meet i with a smile. "Bon jour, ma chore mademoiselle," | lie exclaimed. "I am relieved at. having you back once more; undi r my eye. I was wrong to expose you to the peril that you have so fortunately escaped, j 1 promise you I shall he more careful ' in the future and shall keep you safe beneath the guns of Quebec anil allow no more pilgrimages into the wilder ness." "Pardon 1110. my protector, if I seem wilful," responded Itenee. "but I have one boon to ask of you that you must grant or i die," and she fell upon her knees, stretching forth her hands ap peal ingly. "Ma foil my fair petitioner, it would ill become my strength to refuse aught tf> one in such extremity. But come," he continued In a kindly tone, as he raised her, and leading her to a chair, insisted on her being seated. "Tell me of your troubles, for that you are in great distress I can well see. Remem ber I am devoted to your interest, and you may need an older head to solve some of your problems." The fatherly note in his voice, his gentle insistance, came as an infinite relief to Renee's troubled mind. Here was strength for her weakness, coun sel- for her perplexity. The extreme tension she had been under rendered her woman's heart susceptible to these kindly words, and she buried her face in her hands and wept violently. Frdntenac drew his chair near and strove to quiet, her with compassionate words and light stroking of her hair, as a father would comfort an unhappy child. Gradually the sobs ceased, and Renee told him of her decision. "Men Dieu!" he exclaimed in aston ishment, "leave tlie security of the fort for the thousand perils of the wilder ness? Impossible! It would be the rankest folly." [To Be Continued. 1 Tilt* Itlfilli Thiiiji;. "A village client of mine had been trying through me for seven years to collect a claim against the govern ment," said the lawyer, "and at last t lie claim was allowed and 1 received aeheckfor SS,OOO. As the man was poor, I knew that this would be a great wind fall for him, and it was with consider able exultation that I put, the check in my pocket and started for the house. Tiie man himself was away somewhere, but as his wife answered my knock, I showed her the check and called out: " 'At last, Mrs. Davis —at last!' "'What is it?' she asked. " 'The claim has been allowed, and hero is a check for $8,000.' " 'Yes, I see,' she answered, 'but please don't talk quite so loud or you will wake the baby up!'"—Cleveland Plain Dealer. The Secret ol' liit|»|»iiieitn. The man who can drill his thoughts so as to shut out everything that is depressing .and discouraging and see only the bright side even of his mis fortunes and failures, has mastered the secret of happiness and success. He has made himself a magnet to draw friends,cheer, brightness, and good for tune to him. Every one is pleased to meet him. His presence is like a sun beam 011 a dull day. There is no accom plishment, no touch of culture, no gift which will add so much to the al chemic power of life as the optimistic habit —the determination to be cheer ful and happy no matter what comes to us. It. will smooth rough paths, light up gloomy places, and melt away obstacles as the sunshine melts snow on the mountain side. —O. S. Marden, in Success Magazine. Wild the Kcul Dad Man. Prof. O. L. Waller, the government's irrigation expert, has traveled over almost every foot of American soil, and in this way lias gathered together many reminiscences of odd places and odd persons. "A vanishing type," said Prof. Wal ler recently, "is the bad man of the middle west. We rarely meet with him now. He is almost extinct "It was some years ago that I came upon my last bad mam He sat on a small stone under a tree. "Where is your house?" I said to him. " 'House?' the bad man snorted. 'Do ve think I'm 0110 o' that sort? I sleep in the prairie. I eats raw buffalo and I drinks out of the Mississippi."—Fuel. I'ut'M \ islor. Seeing no other way of earning a livelihood, Pat look to highway rob bery. He bought a pistol, and meet ing a traveler, stopped him with the correct formula, "Yer money or yer lifs." Soring Pr.t was ereen, the traveler, paid: "I'll tell you what I'll do. I'll give you all my money for that pbitol." "Agreed!" replied Pat, who forth with handed over ihe pistol and re ceived the money In exchange. "Now," said the traveler, "hand back that money, or I'll blow your brains out!" "Blaze nway, my hearty!" replied tho Irishman, "niver a taste o' i>owder j there's in it."—Minneapolis Journal. Tlie Good Old Time*. A> cording to ono of the old Fuglish chronicle*, royalty, in 12.'!t. had notli in>' for a bed but a sael of straw. Even in the time of Queen Elizabeth at least half of the population of London slapt on boards. Bloi ka of wood served as pillows. The hi* ping chamber of the queen was dally strewn with fresh rushes. Carpi '* were unknown. Hen ry VI. Immediately on arising teasel off a cup of wine. Tea, eoffi e, and chocolate were, of cnurse, unheard of at that time. Sugar wai to be had only In drug stores, and then by the ounoa. Tin >n wire the sgood old tluiea. —del- eutilie American. I Balcom & Lloyd. j | B H 0j m HI "WE have tlio best stocked fe general store in the county j] p and if you are looking for re liable goods at reasonable jj prices, we are ready to serve | you with the best to be found. Sj p Our reputation for trust- d U worthy goods and fair dealing 1 p is too well known to sell any iJ; but high grade goods. =jj I | 0 p Our stock of Queensware and ; |f Chinaware is selected with H 1 I ■ fn great care and we have some hy [\ of the most handsome dishes I® Bl i • u ever shown m this section, fll both in imported and domestic H »112 I makes. We invite you to visit n| fp us and look our goods over. J | ilJi fii II I I n! I 1 I Balcom & Lloyd. | ImJ** * ** ****iMk *d* itffc Jt% MkMk JSSt £\ £3k JOt XSk ii% 4Sk Xfc 4 j iJ LOOK ELSEWHERE BUT DON'T FORGET M THESE PRICES AND FACTS AT M■- - M :! j LaBAR S li H I- _ *4 55 . .J I* d We carry in stock , ** fcij the largest line of Car- . -gfli-" 1 jfi' fcl 0 B»^TkS d s %r "»■! U f vcr br °"B'" '?, this Mill)]I || town. Also a big line rj *2 of samples. N Avery large line ol "FOR THIS) r "u|| jj|jj Lace Curtains that can li COMFORTABLE IS fcf Art Squares and of fine books in a choice library jf? Rugs of all sizes and select the Ideal pattern of Globe kind, from the cheap- Wernicke "Elastic" Bookcase. jf* est to the best. Furnished with bevel French M . . plate or leaded glass doors. I Dining Chairs, =AL= C* M Rockers and GEO. J. LaBAR, ** Jjtjj Chairs. Sole Agent for Cumeron County. IfcjM £J A large and elegant L H line of Tufted and Drop-head Couches. Beauties ;nd at bargain prices. JjjJ N|3o Bedroom Suits, (fir ?40 Sidebt ;ud, i.uar- On £!» solid oak at JUvJ UmUak... vfiOU N J* S2B Bedroom Suits, COl sll-Sidebc aid, quar- CIC H 8 solid oak at 4/tfi ttred cak -SJ.D J* 9 «ii $25 Bed room Suits, CTn f'J2 Pidchcaid, quar- (T'C N solid oak at SZU j tered 0ak,... l« A large line of Dressers from ] Ch flbniors of all kinds und N feS up. all prices. w$ —— ii k« lite finest line of Sewing Machines on the market, |j the "DOMHSTIC" cr.d "I II RU CK.» All dicp f - heads and warranted. PJ A fine line of Dishes, common grade and China, in £2 sets and by the piece. Ml *1 As 1 keep a lull line of everything that goes to 5<3 M make up a good I/urnitiue store, it is useless to entim- 0(1 erate them all. JJ 112 Please call •and see f»»r vmirstlf that lam telling }{| M von the truth, and if yon don't buy, there is no harm Mdone, it is no tnatbh to slu \v vooils. DC ■I GEO. J .LaBAR. »