Barnwell sentinel. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 185?-1925, September 25, 1919, Image 2
BARNWELL SgNTtNEL, BARNWELL, tfc- 0
iffrtjSfce looked It it* with tfaubtfui
scrutiny In her eyw, and then"’TTus'
toned rnftke^amends ' for doub’lng
me. "Of"course, Paul. I* '
If/there had
j^J/een you could not have known. Rut
though I "know my Jieart is Tree— H -
(here was nobody—-why, let us go. for-
'A pebble fulling In the brook
Hhh turned the ^iiihb «if ninny s.
streaip
there will he no 'cause there to septi
rate us, niy dear. 'So let us go on."'*"
J’Ycs, let us go on.” I muttered dully
—rSbe leaned hrfck against m.v shoul
der and held out Titer hands to the fire-
IlghU She,had talfhn off'her left gloye.
and’now-acain I saw the \veddiHjt>ing,
upon her'finger.'
I rals'etTSher In my afins and carried
her Jnside^ ther tent. She did not
waken hut only stirred and murmured,
my name drowsily. '
The de\v-drop tianslng'on a shoot.
Mas warped the giant oalt forever. 1
-CELERY COMBINATIONS.
Celery is S(iid to be especially gooC.
for sufferers from neryhusiiess and
B rheumatism/' It is a veg ;
etable fotmd In ihe.mar
ket’ all the year and Is
uftiMtJly reasonable In
good as a salad vege r ,
tattle-nnd «-ond»hH*s-- j with
all vegetables and fruits
Wrrnise—-of. .*+t8 tin tty
fresh, crisp' jgJIsh it Is
perhaps at Its boKt. "^t'lTrled by cut-
.ting small stalks in t\yo-theh lengths
and fringing the ends; It makes a most
attractive garnish. Let the celery
stand in cold wafer for a time and the''
i fringes win cttrk The ways of combin
ing celery with other-foods is numl^er-
i less. The follnwiniz..-«r«''c'ii<vt*.A;»i,?a •
CHAPTER IX
The Fungus and Snow Blindness.
My rest was miserable. In a succes
sion of .brief dreams I fled with Jacque
line over a wilderness of Ice.':while In
the distance, evwr drawing nearer, fol
lowed I.orowx Lacroix amA-Pere ’/Tr*
toine. " ; ^
I must hava, n»i>n sound asleep at
Copyright W. O. Chapmaa
Paul Hewlett, loitering‘at flight
In Madison square. - New York, Is
approached by an Eskjmo dog. He
follows the dog to a gambling house
and meets the animal's mistress
coming out with & large amount of
money? She is beautiful and in dis
tress and^p* follpjva--her After
ftroiertlng her from two assailants
Tie takes her In charge, and puts
her In his own rooms for thj^j;est
of the night. He retuYHl"4'little
later to And a murdered man In his
rooms and Jacqueline dazed With
her memory gone He decides to
protect Jacqueline, gets rid of, AW
body and prepares jp, taWTieV to
Quebec in a search for her home.
Simon I^eroux. searching for Jac
queline for some unfriendly pur
pose. finds them, but Hewlett
upon Its furry coat. The dogs loveti
her and she seemed always to under
stand their needs. * — v —
there Is something wrong
•vades 1dm. Hewlett cSHs‘the girl
clustered JToge
er upon the . ground
his sister In Quebec he learns that
she is the'daughter of a recluse In
the wilds. (iharles- Dtichalne Fere
Antoine, tells Hewlett Jacqueline Is
married and fries to take her away
Jacqueline is spirited away and
Hewlett Is knocked out.- hilt both
escape and arrive at St. Boniface. —v
with th^m/’jthe said, her hand still ca
ecs season with salt und
werCthe bodies of our dogs. All were
resslng the mane of the great'beast,
who looked at her with puthetic eyes
In deep faj and drain on brown paper.
Serve hot”. - ' •
Creamed Celery in a Cheese Shell.—
l T so the shell of a pineapple or Kdara
cheese for n receptacle. Cook the
celery until teWler; atld It to a rich
t^cam sauce with^u'cupful of parboiled
Jacqueline sank down upon the
ground and sobbed ns though her heart
would break. I stood ffiere wqtrhing
my hre+n paralyzed by- the shriek of
the discovery:'-'-- \
Then I went hack to the sleigh, on
the rear of which the frozen flsh was
piled* .1 noticed that. ..It, bad. a faluL
slightly aromatic odor. v I flung the
hard masses aside and scooped up t
powder^ substance with my.'hands.
Mycology had. been a hobby of
mine, and It was easy to recognize
what fhat substance wa&.
It was the amanita, the deadliest
and most widely distributed of the
fungi, and the direst of nil vegetable
"What Is wrong with them, Jacque
line?” I asked. -
She raised her head and looked sad
ly at me. "It is I, Raul," she an
swered.
/“You Jacqueline?”
"Yes, it la'll!’ she cried with sud
den, pass!onatF~yFfiernerice. "Tt tSTT
who rial— wrong and' have brought
trouble on you. Raul, I do noC even
krnHv how you came. Into my life, nor
who I am. nor anything that happened
to me at any time before you brought
me to Quebec, except that my home
Is there." She pointed northward.
“Who am I? Jacqueline, you say. The
name means nothing to me. 1 I am a
Wool furs, dr fur fabrics, have hc-.jup better. Manufacturers christen
come thoroughly established staples v their new productions with new names,
that manufacturers of suits and top- for the convenience ofTmyers, hut*the
coats reckon with each fall In making public prefers to call them by the
up their lines of practical garments. , names of the furs they resemble.
Where wool furs undertake'.tn look , A sonart -new. suit of.d-mvetuvslum n
like the pelts they Imitate they are *o 1 in tlte picture above.-is trimmed wlfh
marvelously close to the original that i furfelt that looks like sealskin^. The
It requires a cqfeful inspection to dls- coat model Is one of the itiosi success- _
tingulsh between them... Sealskin is * fill that the season^ has presented, with-
Imitated In wool fuj, that keeps one close-fitting body amj u basque that
guessing, unites it iv-rrlmnst within falls in ripples at the sides. Rows of.
arm’s length, and there-fire furs almost narrow silk braid appear on the Imwtue *,
as successfully imitated. Rut some- and on the sleeves. In iiamdng.Tt may
times the manufacturere-of wool fur be noted 'that this form.dYMl^enration
use a genuine fur only_jis an lnspl-J has made a triumph this season, ap-
CHAPTER VIII
Dreams of the Nightr
- Jacqueline and I were together, The
only human beings within a score of
miles. We were seatedjside by side
In the sleigh at which the dogs pulled
steadily. -
The mystery of Jacqueline’s rescue
by Captain Dubois had been a simple
one. The young man with the|tnutr-'
tache was a certain Rhlllppe Lacroix,
well known to Duboto, a member of a
good family hflt of dissolute hablta—
Just such a -one as Leroux found It
convenient to attach to his political
fortunes by timely financial aid,
doubt that he had
erb<h crumbs and bake yntil the
poisons .to man tint! beast alike. The
woman without"past fixture, w
ration and Itlferpret It Jn u fabric 1 pearing persistently on tin* best mod
alkaloid which it cbtrtgins takes effect
shadow that falls across your life,
Raul. And I could perhaps remember,
but I know—I know—that I must
never remepjber.”
I took her hand In mine. "Dear
Jacqueline," I answered, “It Is best to
forgel these things until the time
comes -to remember them. It will
come. Jacqueline. Let us he happy
till then. Do you not remember any
thing about your home, Jacqueline?"
She clapped her hands to her head
and gave a.little terrified cry.
^L-^-thtnk—so, 11 shg-murmured.—"But
I dare riot remember, Raul.”
"I Uav«^ jdreamed of things,” she
went on In agitated, rapid tones, “and
then I have seemed to remember ev-
of mayonnaise in the center ami serve
Well—c-hiJled.
Scrambled Eggs With Celery.—Melt
one tuhlfKMMnnftti- of butter, add four
tuhles|M>onfuls t>f chopped celery ;Vook
slowly for 15 minutes; atld four eggs,
a half cupful of inilft.eea-u: until set,
season with salt, r ,pepper mild butter
and serve at once.
Celery parboiled and used as an
escnlloped dislL withWhite foince and
cheese is a dish good chough to serve
more frequently. , /
; els In frocks and suits. The rows of
braid on tire sleeves terminate in large
bone buttons. The coat buttons, up
the .front and looks very cozy and
! trim with a high choker collar of the
-wool fur. The belt Is Interesting and
! pleasing. ^ It- 4s very narrow rind fas
tens at -the front With a, most unex
pected little bow tie of the material,
instead of the usual button or buckle.,
that is handsomer than the original.
This Is what has been done in. the
ense of the material- t-ltut resembles
the natural 'Tfiuskrrit pelt, which Is
used so much for coats.
As a trimming for. cloth suits wool
furs provq more practical than real
furs, from the Standpoint <»f service,
rind a handsome wool fur Is better
looking than a cheap fur. It stands
only some hours after its* Ingestion,
when it has entered the blood streams
and begun Its disintegrating action
upon the red corpuscles. The dogs
must huve partaken of.it on the pin-
ceding afternoon.
I knew this was Leroux’s work. He
* ’ I'lMu I-. <
had Tricked life again. I was marL-with
anger. I meant to kill the man now,
and without mercy. I would be as un
scrupulous as he, lie would be in this
place by the afternoon; I would wait
for him outside the trail. My pistols—
Jacqueline was looking up Into my
face. In terror. The sight of her re
called me to my senses. I.eroux after
ward—first my duty to her!
"Paul! What Is the matter, Paul?"
she cried. "I never saw you look like
that hefore."
I calmed myself nnd led her awgjr.
nnd presently we were standing before
There was no
been In New York with T>roux, nnd
that they had hatched the plot*To kid
nap Jacqueline after I had been struck
down.
Fortunately for us. Lacroix, Igno
rant, as was Leroux himself, that the
two ships had exchanged roles and du
ties. took Jacqueline aboard the
Salnte-ViergP'. where Oft pram Dubots,
wha was watching In antirtpHtion- of
• Juat such a schejiio, seized him and
marched him -at pistol point t<? the
house on Raul street, It) which Lacroix
was kept a prisoner by friends of f>u-
bols until the Salnte-Vlerge had sailed.
Dubois left us at St. Ronifaee with
a final caution against Leroux, nn<J
proceeded along the shore with his
hafir~a£~mHll; but first he had a satis
factory conversation with M. Danton
concerning us.
Danton, who of course knew Jacque
line, took the opportunity of assuring
me flint her father, though n recluse
and a misanthrope who had hot left
Style Features of Girls’
People who dovwK^jj*' time to eat
and sleep, presf-ttHg-jUjeobllged to take
time to. die. People who from false
notions of economy live upon improper
food.^are shortly pat to the greater
expense of a funeral —Olive Green.
"Oans’t tell how an oyster makes hfs
■hell? No! nor Lneither.”
‘A DOZEN OF DIVINE POINTS”
“Jacqueline." I said. “It Is easier ta
go on than to turn back now."
She watched me like a lip reade*.
"Yes, Paul; let us go on.” she an-
swered.
So we went on. Rut our Journey
was to be very different now. Thera
‘ May Is the spawning season for
oysters nnd in June, July nnd Augijst
.. ' they are never as
good,‘Talking fla-
vor, which is na-
ji Hire’s way of pm-
^ her own.
• -Ot tiir ways of
‘.r N ] cooking and serv-
A ing . aysM‘_rs there
was no possibility of taking much bag
gage with us7 lVe took a few. things
out of our suitcases-and - disposed them
about-w? irs best ue could.
• We must‘have covered at |e»st-,.a
.dozen miles or mo *e, when we .stopped
for a brief miltday tneal. I was a tittle
fatigued from carrying the pack "and
my ankles, ached from the snowshoes ;
-but Jacqueline, who had eyidenjRy been
-accustomed to their use, was its fresh
as when she started.
Suddenly we emergetL from among
the trees upon an almost barren pla
teau, and there again We bulb'd for a
breathing spell. /
I resolved to take niy bearings accu
rately. and' telling Jacqueline to wait
for me a few minutes at the base of a
hill and setting down my pack, 1 began
the ascent alone. The climb was
longer -than I had anticipated: My
eyes were aching from the glare of the
rinow. I had left my colored glasses
Itehind me In the tent .and June on,
saying nothing, though I had realized
my loss wherf I was onty a mtt*vor sc
to be a man of heart and would un
doubtedly forgive us. lie was clearly
under the Impression t-hat we were
married, and since Dubois hg.d not en
lightened him on this point I did not
do -SO: —
M. Danton had his sleigh and eight
fine-lopking dogs ready for us. I pur
chased these outright in order to carry
no hostages. We took with us several
days' suppLvs of food, a little teat,
sleeping bags und frozen fish for thC
animals.
It was a strange situation. It might
easily have become tin impossible one.
But it was sacred comradeship, refined
above the love of friend for friend, of
lover for lover, by her faith, her help
lessness and need.
I think that she liked host to sit be
side me in the narrow sleigh and lean
\agninst my shoulder, her physical
Weariness the reflection of her spirit
ual unrest. She did not want to think,
and she wanted me to shield her.
But even In this solitude feivr drove
ine on, for I- knew that a relentless
enetny followed hard after us, camp
ing where we had camped and reading
the miles between us by the smolder
ing ashes of our old fires. .
At nightfall I would pitch the tent
for Jacqueline and place her sleeping
bag within, and while she slept I would
He by the huge fire near the dogs, and
*we kept watch over her together.
So passed three dhyjt and nigtits.
The fourth short day drew towurd
its end a little after four o’clock. I
remember that we ca toped late, "for'"
-the sun had already dipped to the lev? 1
horizon and was casting black. Tulle-
long shadows across the £.now. .
T hamrflWM! in the pegs and built a
fire with dry boughh. collecting a quan
tity of wood sufficient to last until
morning. Then Jacquelipe made tea
and we ate our supper and crept Into
our sleeping bags and lay down.
! could not still my mind. The un
certainty ahead of us, the knowledge
of Leroux behind tried me sorely, and
0*1 J Jacqueline’s need sustained my
light supper, served from The chafing
dish, they seem especially adapted.
Royal Stew.—I’lace ,the oysters in
the ‘hating dish "with enough *at»the
llqtit r to float them in the pan. Chop
tC bend of celery, add a heaping table- i
spoonful of chopped red pepper. As;
the liquid in the pan| is hen ting, add i
two tahlespoofrtils of butter, stilt and
pepper to season, and when thorough
ly hot, fill tin* pan witb—Sweet milk.-
Add the celery and pepper and When
bdllingf hot and well blended add a
spoon fill of currant Jelly nnd serve at
once.
Oyster Toddle.—Dice .one-quarter of
1 R-4)pu.ui.l of salt pork and cook slowly
Add one pint of
All Were Dead.
until w*ell tried out
sliced raw potatoes, cover nnd cotdf
In ihe fat uiUil tender. Rour in a
pint of hot milk, thicken with a table-
spoonful ‘each .of butter and flour
rooked together. Add a pint of
oysters and when the edges curl, sea
son nnd serve at once. - .
^r T r^»te^^>vgte>8.—-Melt two table-
spoonfuls' of butter, add a slice of
onion minced, and cook until -a pale
yellow. Add a tenspoohful of flour
erything. Rut when I wake I have for-^
gotten, and it is bemuse I know that
I must forget. Raul, I drt*am of a dead
man, and men who hate®and are fol
lowing us. Was there—ever— a driad
man. Paul?” she asked, shuddering.
I placed orte arin around her.
"Jacqueline, there never was any
dead tuan," I sai<L “It fs not true.
Some day 1 will tell you everything—
some duy-r” 1 caught her in my arms.
* T l~loye / you. 'Jacqueline!*' I CH'ed.
"And^od^you?”
Sfm fhJ-ust her hands out and turned
her face away. There was an awful
fear upon it. "Raul," she cried, "there
Is—somebody—who— * -
-- *'"T*hnve known thnt v ” she wpnt on
In a torrent of wild ^’ords. ‘T hrive
known that always, ami It Is the most
The point that Ik mainly interesting it there are pliiin box.plaits pressed-In
about coats for girls and misses lies Jn and reaching to tin* bottom of the
their new style features, for they are coat at each side of thi*"Trnnt. The
developed-ijjLrin of the soft, limp coat- small cape-collar Vs edged with nutria
ings that lend themselves to druping and thri'belt Is made, of lht**~«ta.tnrip-I
and a eimful of Tomato. When well
Antoine rescues him
or smocking or shlrrlngs. Vebrnrs or
cooked add a pint of drained oysters
and cook until the edges, curl. Add a
<frop~7Tf "Tabasco sauce, one-half tea-
spoonfuHof salt, one^tablespoonful of
chopped parsley and serve on toast.
Oyster Short Cake.—Make a short
cake baked in thimw layers than the
regular cake...-Split and butter gener-
Curl the Ays-
duyetyn. and Similar cloths with new'
names, make variety in the choice of
coatings hut do not provide a great
amount of dissimilarity, so that it Is
design and style that must serve to
Resides these hand-
dj.stingulsh them
some and dressy, fabrics there are the sleeves.nml a skirt-that narrows in to-
dependable t\yeods-and homespiins In I „ Mr( j tfM , bottom.^ There"to a long
sturdy* corit?Jor school, that are prq- shawl-collar.and deep' flaring cuffs tc
sented Trj-trtmamLcomfortable models. (pi s very .dignified and grncefuR"
. Something new’ In design In coats wrap. Large buttons are ‘ sparingly
for the “Junior miss”—which Is the used and picely placed for use and for
•new and dignified nnme l>y which the ornument, two of them on the narrow
flapper now finds herse’'’ placed—Is belt, two on the overlapped seams he
shown In the picture above. With It' Low the sleeves, and down the stftilghl
osltjes on the location of « foriner
sugar* mill on the Island of Trfhldnd.
The plant has since^beeti reduced tc
ruins and Is overgrowtJr wtUj vegeta*
tioh. 'The old solid chimney Is intact
and up through its center pne of the
quick growing trees of the tropics has
sprung, spreading its branched out of
the fop of the huge chimney and is
now In full bloom. '
ouslv as soon as baked
terrible part of all!
In their own llquoT and arrange
ters
them on the Vske; cover and pour
Thickened white sauce. usIrTtr
I laid a finger on her lips.
“There Is nobody;-.1 acquellne,” I said
again, trying to control- my trembling
voice. ‘There was never anybody but
me. and there'shall never be. For to
morrow we shall turn hack toward St,
Boniface again, and we shall tafk* the
boat for Quebec—and from there 1
shall take you to a land where there
shall be no more grief, oelther—”
over a
the liquor nnd milk or creamWith
butter and flour cooked^togettiFF for
thickening.
Fried Oyatera.—Try dipping the ojs
tet-s In milk instead of egg.and then In
crumbs arid fry In hoTWuiter; the
Rod Over, Bdl, Ye«?re 8n#rln$.
Man. say the scientists. Is the only
living thing that ever steeps on Ha
back. Perhaps jt to from a feeling of
pride that some of as make so mac#
ooise when indulging la this accon.
But very sweetly she rallied her head
and spoke to me.
‘‘Paul. dear. If thert never was aaj-
oao-fcf It 'la nothing hat a drag*— 1
it I was on the point of dropping
leap I heard a loot wolf hoy I from
Rr. and Instantly the pack took' up
• mt- Oat at tw act*. • «r«t
■ »* i
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MB